Surveys show there is little evidence that AI steals jobs
An opinion piece examining why survey data consistently fails to support the narrative that AI is destroying jobs.
Op-eds, commentary, and public writing on sustainability, corporate governance, financial crime, and technology.
An opinion piece examining why survey data consistently fails to support the narrative that AI is destroying jobs.
A commentary on why Taiwan’s sustainability disclosure regime now needs stronger verification, clearer legal liability, and credible tools to detect greenwashing.
Opinion commentary on why tuition-centre distinction claims need fuller context to be interpreted fairly.
Generative AI promises to transform audit, but its tendency to hallucinate poses unique risks. How should auditors manage this new technology?
A practical guide to measuring corporate environmental commitment through job postings.
Mandatory Scope 3 emission reporting is only a matter of time. But will it drive companies away from Singapore’s exchange?
AI is a co-pilot, not an auto-pilot. Our research shows that AI adoption leads to more auditor hiring, not less.
Silent directors cannot keep silent when seeing red flags. Singapore must crack down on nominee directors who turn a blind eye to suspicious activity.
The global IT outage exposed how our digital infrastructure depends on a handful of security providers. What happens when the guardians fail?
Biofuels sound green, but the reality is more complicated. Land use, food security, and carbon accounting all raise questions.
Businesses making environmental claims must be transparent and accountable. The current state of emissions reporting invites manipulation.
A new metric based on job postings can help investors identify which companies are genuinely committed to environmental goals.
Banks face a fundamental tradeoff. Every convenience feature creates a potential attack surface for fraudsters.
Singapore talks about sustainability, but are companies actually hiring for it? Our data reveals the answer.
Companies are making environmental claims they cannot substantiate. Regulators need stronger tools to hold them accountable.
Firms should not outsource their environmental and social responsibilities to someone else by buying carbon credits.
What separates a good sustainability report from a bad one? Data-driven, verifiable, comprehensive, and accountable.
What our research on criminal background checks reveals about predicting financial misconduct.
When every ticket price is a negotiation, the joy of spontaneity disappears.
Some companies are using inflation as cover to raise prices beyond what costs justify. How can consumers and regulators respond?