Singapore’s manufacturing hits 21.6% of GDP as high-value tech takes lead
The city-state led the region in advanced manufacturing readiness.
Singapore’s manufacturing sector contributes about 21.6% of GDP, anchored by advanced manufacturing activities that prioritise high-value output over mass production, according to Eurogroup Consulting’s report.
The report shows Singapore leads Southeast Asia across advanced manufacturing readiness, supported by strengths in semiconductors, biomedical sciences, precision engineering and advanced electronics. These sectors rely on extensive adoption of automation, artificial intelligence, robotics and data-driven production systems, positioning Singapore as the region’s most digitally advanced manufacturing base.
Singapore functions primarily as a regional coordination and innovation hub rather than a large-scale production centre, with about 46% of multinational Asia-Pacific headquarters located in the city-state, the report said.
Its geopolitical positioning, combined with trade frameworks such as the EU–Singapore Free Trade Agreement, has supported foreign direct investment into advanced manufacturing, including Silicon Box’s $2.65 billion semiconductor plant spanning 73,000 square metres announced in 2023.
Government policy under the Manufacturing 2030 strategy targets a 50% increase in manufacturing value-added and services output by 2030, supported by investment incentives, research and development funding and workforce upskilling programmes, according to the report. Structural constraints, including high operating costs and limited industrial land, continue to shape Singapore’s focus on capital-intensive and technology-led manufacturing activities.