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by SHAUQI WAHAB
INDUSTRY experts are cautiously optimistic with Malaysia’s plan to expand 5G coverage and accelerate the adoption of artificial intelligence (AI).
They say the vision is promising — but only if key gaps in infrastructure, talent development and governance are addressed promptly.
Universiti Teknologi Mara (UiTM) AI manufacturing expert Dr Yupiter HP Manurung believed that in the next five years, Malaysia will see rapid advancements in technologies such as digital twin systems, predictive maintenance and additive manufacturing – all of which rely on fast, stable connectivity.
“These are long-term investments that can boost national resilience, but only if matched with strong local capabilities,” he said, as quoted by The Sun.
The National Tech Association of Malaysia (Pikom) also welcomed the digital transformation goals outlined under the 13th Malaysia Plan (MP13).
Pikom chairman Alex Liew applauded the government’s commitment to building a future-ready digital ecosystem that accelerates adoption of AI and 5G, empowering businesses and communities alike.
“However, visionary planning alone is not enough – successful execution and robust monitoring are critical,” he said.
He stressed the importance of closing infrastructure and digital literacy gaps to ensure inclusive participation across different segments of society.
According to him, inclusivity must remain a core principle – guaranteeing equitable benefits across all demographics.
He also encouraged the government to treat GovTech — digital technologies in the public sector — as a collaborative process involving a wide array of stakeholders.
“To realise Malaysia’s ambition as a leading AI-driven nation, GovTech must involve the quadruple helix collaboration (a concept of interaction between major segments of the society) in which the government, industry, academia and civil society are co-creators of public digital services,” he added.
To make this a reality, Liew called for structured collaboration between the public and private sectors, open innovation strategies and agile policy reforms, particularly in areas like service interoperability and public procurement.
The digital initiatives aim to extend 5G coverage to 98% of residential, industrial and rural areas — part of Malaysia’s broader push to build a strong digital foundation that supports AI integration.
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The post Experts urge focus on execution, inclusion of AI, 5G ambitions appeared first on The Malaysian Reserve.