Impact of Digitalisation on Bank Tellers and Their Jobs
Prime Minister's OfficeSpeakers
Summary
This question concerns Mr Desmond Choo’s inquiry regarding the impact of bank teller reductions due to digitalization and the support measures for affected employees and older residents. Deputy Prime Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam explained that while technology reduces branch demand, it creates new roles in areas such as cybersecurity, data analytics, and software development. He highlighted that the Monetary Authority of Singapore and its partners have committed to retraining 3,500 employees over three years through the Professional Conversion Programme. Currently, over 800 staff have begun training, with 450 successfully redeployed into new roles such as relationship management, quality assurance, and digital marketing. The Government continues to collaborate with unions and employers to provide pre-emptive reskilling and consumer education to help Singaporeans navigate the evolving digital banking landscape.
Transcript
46 Mr Desmond Choo asked the Prime Minister in light of the announcement by a major bank to reduce the number of bank tellers by half (a) whether there will be similar changes across the banking industry; (b) what are the measures in place to help older residents migrate to digital banking; and (c) how is the Ministry helping bank tellers who are at risk of losing their jobs as digitalisation persists.
Mr Tharman Shanmugaratnam (for the Prime Minister): Technology is changing the way that financial services are being provided and used. Consumers in Singapore, as in other countries, are increasingly making use of their smartphones for electronic payments and other banking transactions. This reduces the demand for physical bank branches, and for bank tellers. However, this also means new jobs are created in areas, such as service ambassadors, software development for banking apps, data analytics for consumer insights, and cybersecurity.
The opportunities presented by technology are immense. But the upside is limited by how much we can retrain and reskill employees to take on new roles, and to educate and help consumers to embrace technology.
On the first1, the approach taken by the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) is to work closely with the banks and unions to pre-emptively reskill and redeploy affected employees into new job roles.
Specifically for jobs in consumer banking, the National Trades Union Congress (NTUC), MAS, Workforce Singapore, the Institute of Banking and Finance (IBF) and the banks have put together a professional conversion programme to reskill bank tellers and customer servicing staff to take on new roles in relationship management, quality assurance, process redesign, data analytics and digital marketing. Through the programme, the major consumer banks have committed to retrain 3,500 employees over the next three years under the Professional Conversion Programme (PCP). To date, more than 800 employees have commenced training, of which over 450 have successfully completed their training and have been deployed into new roles. PCPs are in the works for three other areas in banking, namely, operations, technology and wealth management.
In the case of the bank which the member asked about, as announced by the bank earlier, it has committed to retrain existing customer service officers at branches to take on these new roles, and does not expect them to be retrenched.
Digital banking models will become more ubiquitous in the years ahead. This is a trend not just in banking, but across industries. With close collaborations among the Government, unions and employers, we will do our best to educate and help consumers, and to retrain workers, so that Singaporeans can ride the wave of the digital revolution.