The APAC region is undergoing a shift in business technology investment, with artificial intelligence (AI) emerging as the cornerstone of its digital transformation journey.
IDC's latest forecast reveals that AI spending in the region will surge to $175 billion by 2028, driven by a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 59.2 percent for Generative AI (GenAI).
This significant growth underscores the potential across industries, from healthcare to financial services, as organizations race to harness intelligent automation, predictive analytics, and next-generation customer experiences.
Artificial Intelligence Market Development
Generative AI leads the charge, with its ability to automate complex tasks and generate novel outputs, reshaping operational paradigms. The technology's rapid enterprise adoption is evidenced by a projected tripling of GenAI investments between 2025 and 2028.
Healthcare and education sectors are also accelerating deployments, using AI for personalized medicine, virtual health assistants, and adaptive learning platforms.
Government-backed smart city initiatives further fuel demand, with Southeast Asian nations like Singapore and Malaysia integrating AI into urban infrastructure and public services.
Market Dynamics and Strategic Imperatives
1. Regional innovation hubs: China accounts for nearly 40 percent of regional AI spending, focusing on industrial automation and AIoT (AI + Internet of Things). Japan and South Korea lead in robotics and advanced manufacturing, while India's startup ecosystem drives AI solutions for agriculture and logistics.
2. Talent development: Despite a projected shortfall of 1.2 million AI-skilled workers by 2028, countries like Australia and New Zealand are pioneering industry-academia partnerships to build specialized training programs.
3. Ethical governance frameworks: Singapore's AI Verify Foundation and South Korea's Algorithmic Impact Assessment guidelines set benchmarks for responsible AI, addressing concerns about bias and data privacy.
Challenges and Strategic Considerations
While opportunities abound, enterprises face hurdles in scaling AI initiatives:
- Integration complexity: Legacy systems in manufacturing and banking slow AI adoption, with 58 percent of organizations reporting compatibility issues in hybrid cloud environments.
- ROI measurement: Only 34 percent of firms have established metrics to quantify AI's business impact, risking misaligned investments.
- Geopolitical factors: Export controls on advanced chips and rising cloud service costs threaten to widen the AI divide between tech leaders and emerging economies.
To navigate these challenges, forward-thinking organizations are adopting platform-based AI solutions, with 72 percent prioritizing vendors offering integrated data governance and MLOps capabilities.
Partnerships also prove critical – Thai banks collaborating with fintech startups have reduced loan approval times by 65 percent through shared AI models.
IDC's projections signal four transformative trends:
Edge AI proliferation: By 2028, 45 percent of manufacturing AI workloads will shift to edge devices, enabling real-time quality control and predictive maintenance.
AI-driven sustainability: Energy companies are leveraging AI to optimize renewable grid integration, targeting a 30 percent reduction in carbon emissions by 2030.
Democratized AI development: Low-code platforms will empower 60 percent of non-technical users to build AI applications by 2027, accelerating innovation in SMEs.
Convergence with Web3: Hybrid AI-blockchain systems are emerging in supply chain management, with pilot projects showing 40 percent improvements in traceability and fraud detection.
Outlook for AI Market Growth Potential
The Asia-Pacific AI market's growth trajectory presents a huge opportunity for technology providers, with cybersecurity AI, autonomous systems, and AI-augmented design tools representing the fastest-growing segments.
However, sustained success will require ecosystems that balance innovation with ethical guardrails – a challenge where public-private partnerships will prove decisive.
"AI adoption across Asia-Pacific fosters smarter and more resilient business environments. Companies are integrating AI to enhance efficiency, reduce costs, and strengthen strategic decision-making," said Vinayaka Venkatesh, senior market analyst at IDC.
That said, I believe organizations that strategically align AI investments with industry-specific use cases and regional regulatory requirements will dominate the next phase of large enterprise digital transformation.