FILE PHOTO: Figurines with computers and smartphones are seen in front of the words "Artificial Intelligence AI" in this illustration created on February 19, 2024. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
ARTIFICIAL intelligence (AI) is rapidly reshaping the Malaysian workplace and employees are adopting it at a pace outstripping global peers.
The Ernst&Young (EY) 2025 Work Reimagined Survey shows that 93% of Malaysian employees are using generative AI (GenAI) at work, with 81% reporting significant time savings and 76% citing improved work productivity.
Yet a contradiction is emerging.
Even as national statistics show an improving macro picture, with labour productivity per hour worked rising 3.8% to RM45.10 in the third quarter of 2025), the EY survey revealed that two-thirds of employees say their workload has increased, even as productivity rises.
Work is moving faster, but pressure is building.
For AI to deliver its full value, employers must work with employees so that benefits are shared and understood.
A workforce ready to move faster
The EY survey also reveals that Malaysians are embracing AI more actively than their global counterparts, with daily usage nine percentage points higher than the global average.
Employees are integrating AI into routine tasks, decision-making and collaboration, contributing to faster delivery and better outcomes.
This readiness is supported by high trust in leadership.
As 82% of Malaysian employees believe their leaders have a clear vision for AI, 80% also feel confident their organisation’s next transformation initiative will succeed.
These foundations enable Malaysian companies to innovate quickly and stay ahead of regional competitors.
However, early enthusiasm is only an advantage if sustained.
The EY survey also highlights capability gaps that, if not addressed, may slow Malaysia’s progress.
Bridging the capability gap
Only 12% of Malaysian employees receive sufficient AI training to fully benefit from its capabilities.
Although interest is high, structured training has not kept pace with adoption.
Organisations continue to focus more on human skills development rather than the deeper technical competencies employees increasingly want.
The skills gap matters because the talent most prepared for the future is also the most mobile.
Working with the latest technology has become one of the top reasons Malaysians consider changing jobs, surpassing traditional factors like work location.
Although unemployment is at a decade low of 2.9%, yet skill-related underemployment continues to pose challenges, reinforcing the need to redeploy and upskill workers for higher-value roles.
National research reinforces the urgency
TalentCorp’s Impact Study of AI, Digital, and Green Economy for Malaysian Workforce estimates that around 620,000 jobs could be significantly affected by AI in the next three to five years, while identifying 60 emerging roles, majority tied to AI and digital capabilities.
Furthermore, initiatives such as the MyMahir National AI Council for Industry aim to align industry demand with training pathways, so that Malaysians become not just job-ready but future-ready.
Avoiding the productivity paradox
Despite time savings from automation, many employees feel busier. A total of 68% report increased workloads, suggesting that saved time is being reinvested into new tasks without thoughtful redesign.
Broader market research echoes this urgency.
According to Microsoft’s 2025 Work Trend Index, 83% of Malaysia’s workforce say they lack sufficient time or energy to complete their work, while 86% of leaders express confidence in using AI agents to expand workforce capacity.
This highlights both the current strain and the appetite for accelerated automation.
This is a sign that organisations have not yet restructured work for a world where humans and machines operate together.
Without rethinking job scopes, decision flows and handoffs, AI could risk accelerating pace without improving sustainability or wellbeing.
Resetting the employee value proposition
The survey also highlights a disconnect between employer assumptions and employee realities.
Employers overestimate how satisfied employees are with their compensation and rewards by a gap of 25 percentage points.
Even with improved retention trends, one in four Malaysian employees still plans to leave within the next year.
Opportunities to work with modern technology, including AI, have become a major motivator for job moves.
Policy intervention offers an important lever.
Malaysia’s newly implemented Progressive Wage Policy enters full rollout with a RM200mil allocation under Budget 2025, targeting 50,000 workers and tying wage growth to skills and productivity.
Participating employers receive RM200 to RM300 per employee monthly for 12 months, alongside training requirements.
This directly reinforces AI-linked upskilling and strengthens the employee value proposition.
Culture as a catalyst for sustainable transformation
The survey shows that organisational culture in Malaysia is trending positively.
A total of 73% of employees say their culture has improved, 67% feel trusted and empowered, as well as 81% feel connected to their teams.
Innovation, efficiency and quality are emerging as the top cultural priorities for the year ahead. AI can support all three if leaders foster open communication, experimentation and cross-functional collaboration.
Culture remains one of the strongest predictors of successful transformation because it builds confidence and curiosity in adopting new tools.
Malaysia has high adoption, strong trust and a workforce eager to learn.
To sustain this momentum, organisations must deepen skills, redesign work and recalibrate rewards for a digital age. If firms can turn productivity into progress and technology into meaningful work, 2026 may be remembered as the year AI elevated not just how Malaysians work, but how they grow and compete.
Low Choy Huat is Malaysia people consulting leader and partner of Ernst & Young Consulting Sdn Bhd while Anil Shivadas is partner, people consulting. The views expressed here are the writers’ own.
