NTU Launches GIFTS Institute to Lead AI, Fintech, and Policy Innovation in Singapore

May 30, 2026
NTU Launches GIFTS Institute to Lead AI, Fintech, and Policy Innovation in Singapore
  • GIFTS, led by Professor William Cong, stresses that integrating AI, fintech, and social science is essential to understand decision-making, information processing, and policy design in a digital era.

  • The institute aims to position Singapore as a leader in AI and fintech by marrying technical advances with solid economic, business, and social science insights.

  • GIFTS’ mission spans research, education, industry collaboration, and policy engagement, aiming to translate findings into real-world impact and strengthen Singapore as a trusted financial hub.

  • GIFTS will launch two global research initiatives: the Economic World Models Initiative, creating digital twin–like simulations of economies, and the Global InferenceNet Initiative, training AI models for advanced economic research and providing benchmarks for progress.

  • Minister for Digital Development and Information emphasizes AI decisions must be explainable and contestable, with clear accountability across persons, processes, or institutions, underpinned by law, ethics, and policy.

  • GIFTS will train AI models for research across economics, finance, accounting, management, operations, and information systems, guided by a curated database of social science analyses.

  • NTU unveils the Global Institute of Finance, Technology, and Society (GIFTS) to study how AI, finance, business, and society intersect and to advise policymakers.

  • GIFTS will connect with over 40 global fellows and advisors and serve as the ADEFT network’s headquarters, coordinating international collaborations, conferences, visiting programs, and student exchanges.

  • A core mission is to improve reproducibility, track progress, and train both humans and AI for financial applications.

  • NTU benchmarking shows current large language models aren’t yet reliable for professional-level economic research, an issue GIFTS plans to address through structured workflows and reproducibility metrics.

  • The institution notes that large language models are not yet dependable for high-stakes economic research per NTU benchmarks.

  • GIFTS’ launch coincides with NBS30 celebrations, featuring talks by leaders including Nobel laureate Thomas Sargent and industry figures, culminating in a gala to support NBS projects and student engagement.

Summary based on 3 sources


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