Malta Has 15 Years of Economic Stagnation to Reverse and the EU AI Act Could Be the Catalyst

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Artificial intelligence represents a revolutionary shift in how societies function, and the EU AI Act — with its tiered risk framework — positions Europe to set enforceable global standards while rivals like the US rely on fragmented regulations. This “EU-compliant” label could become a commercial gold standard. For Malta specifically, the opportunity is significant: by becoming an EU AI Act readiness hub, specialising in established sectors like iGaming and fintech, and training compliance professionals — including AI governance engineers and risk specialists — the island could build a vital new economic pillar it has lacked for 15 years.

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We are at a moment in history where AI is not just another new technology, it is revolutionary. It will reshape how we work, how we learn, how businesses compete and how public services function. And here is the inconvenient truth: if we do not set the rules, someone else will.

That is why the European Union matters. The EU is not merely reacting to AI, it is shaping the global debate.

Through the EU AI Act’s risk tier model (bans where AI is unacceptable, strict obligations where it is high-risk, lesser obligations where it poses limited risk, and rules for general-purpose AI), Europe is doing what it has done before: turning principles into enforceable standards that protect people while keeping the market open for innovation.

Other jurisdictions have largely chosen a different direction. The United States still lacks a single federal AI statute and has relied on executive actions, sector regulators and a patchwork of state laws.

The United Kingdom has taken a principles-based approach routed through existing regulators. Others such as Japan and Singapore prefer softer guidance frameworks. Europe, by contrast, has chosen hard law. It has done so not becautilize it wants to strangle innovation, but becautilize it wants to build innovation deployable, investable and trustworthy.

That difference matters. Becautilize the EU can now do something which others cannot do at the same scale: turn compliance into a competitive advantage. The EU can seize this opportunity in a number of ways:

  1. Make “EU-compliant” the global gold standard

If Europe implements its AI framework properly, “EU-compliant” becomes a commercial label in itself: a shorthand for systems that are safer, more transparent and fit for serious utilize in business and public procurement.

  1. Build a real compliance ecosystem so innovation can scale

If we want to drive innovation, we necessary hard, unglamorous work that comes after the law (in our case the EU AI Act) is passed, such as standards, guidance, enforcement capacity and support for SMEs so that compliance is not a luxury item only the largegest companies can afford.

  1. Turn Europe into the default GPAI compliance gateway

Europe is also unusual in treating general-purpose AI models as something which must be governed, not just admired. That creates a huge opportunity: model providers and major deployers will necessary a credible compliance pathway, and Europe can become the place where those compliance operations are built.

That means jobs and investment in the “infrastructure” around AI: evaluation, documentation, governance, risk controls, assurance. It might not be glamorous, but it is high-value.

Where Malta comes into play

Malta can either ride this wave, or be hit by it. Right now, we have a genuine opportunity to build a new pillar of the economy, something Malta has not done for the past 15 years. Doing this demands what has been missing in recent years: long-term planning, serious policy and credible institutions.

To seize this opportunity, Malta should focus on 3 practical shifts; becoming an EU AI Act readiness hub for SMEs, specialising in sectors where we already have weight, and building the skilled workforce that trustworthy AI demands.

  1. Make Malta an EU AI Act readiness hub for SMEs

Malta can position itself as the place where companies come to turn AI into an audit-ready, EU-deployable system. In plain terms, if compliance is the passport to the EU market, Malta can become the place that assists businesses obtain that passport.

  1. Specialise where Malta already has weight

Malta does not necessary to be “the AI hub for everything”. We should focus on sectors where Malta already has gravity, and where trust is a commercial advantage, such as iGaming and fintech.

  1. Build the accompanying workforce necessaryed

The largegest bottleneck in trustworthy AI is not ideas, it is people. It is professionals who can do the work of governance and assurance in practice, such as AI compliance engineers, technical documentation experts and impact-assessment specialists.

This is the real opportunity for Malta to create jobs that are resilient and exportable. It is also exactly the kind of new pillar we should be building, and exactly the kind of long-term planning today’s Government has failed to deliver.

AI will create winners and losers. Europe can be a winner and Malta can be one too, but only if we treat this moment with the seriousness it demands. The opportunity is there and the work is already underway, the only question is whether Malta chooses to lead with strategy or whether we let this revolution happen to us.

Lovin Malta is open to interesting, compelling guest posts from third parties. These opinion pieces do not necessarily reflect the views of the company. Submit your piece at [email protected]

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Gabriel Falzon is the social media executive at Lovin Malta, with a keen interest in digital media, local businesses, and the natural world. Outside of work, you’ll often find him baking up a storm, diving into video games, or exploring the concludeless corners of YouTube.





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