
Agentic AI Era Beckons as Indonesia Pushes Firms to Embed Intelligence at Core
Jakarta forum urges shift from AI-enabled to AI-first enterprises, while voices in Latin America caution against overestimating machine cognition.
The next frontier in artificial intelligence is no longer about experimenting with pilot projects but about embedding autonomous decision-making into the very fabric of corporate life. That was the central message from a high-level gathering in Jakarta, where technology leaders declared the arrival of the “agentic AI” era — a paradigm in which intelligent agents do not merely assist humans but actively execute tasks, make choices, and reshape business models. Hans AT Dekkers, General Manager of IBM Asia Pacific, told the forum that the generative AI wave has set the stage for systems capable of independent action, forcing every organisation to rethink how it competes.
Viewed from Southeast Asia’s largest economy, the urgency is palpable. The AI Leadership Exchange 2026, co-hosted by IBM Indonesia and CIO Insight Indonesia, pressed local companies to evolve from being merely AI-enabled — using the technology as a peripheral tool — to becoming AI-first enterprises, where artificial intelligence sits at the operational core. Analysts in Jakarta note that this transition is no longer aspirational but a competitive necessity, as regional rivals and global players alike accelerate deployment of agentic systems that can negotiate, analyse, and decide without constant human intervention.
Yet the enthusiasm is not universal. Across the Pacific, a more sceptical perspective emerges from Latin American commentators. A recent column in Argentina’s La Nación challenged the techno-optimism epitomised by figures such as Anthropic’s CEO Dario Amodei, who predicts AI will soon match or exceed human cognitive abilities, and Elon Musk, who has forecast that artificial intelligence will surpass all human minds combined. The Buenos Aires-based writer countered that AI remains a human creation, and the created cannot logically outstrip its creator — a philosophical stance that resonates in regions where the societal costs of automation are keenly felt.
This trans-Pacific tension frames the next chapter of enterprise AI. While Southeast Asian policymakers and executives embrace the agentic leap as a route to digital sovereignty, sceptics in Latin America and beyond warn against ceding moral and strategic judgment to machines. The coming years will test whether the agentic enterprise can deliver on its promise of unprecedented efficiency without eroding the human oversight that even the most advanced algorithms cannot replicate. For global businesses, the challenge is not merely technical but profoundly cultural: how to harness AI that acts, while ensuring humans still decide what should be done.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 3 languages
The Southeast Asian press frames the shift to agentic AI as an urgent competitive necessity. Businesses are urged to move beyond experimental AI projects and embed intelligent systems at the core of their operations, decision-making, and business models to secure future market leadership.
Latin American commentary adopts a skeptical stance, warning that artificial intelligence should not eclipse human intellect. The narrative emphasizes that AI is a human creation and must remain subordinate, cautioning against predictions of AI surpassing human cognitive abilities.
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