GROW.....Najib
previously said the economy needs to grow by an average of six per cent
annually in order for Malaysia to achieve high-income status come 2020.
By : SHANNON TEOH
KUALA LUMPUR : The World
Bank is urging Malaysia to expedite economic reforms and move beyond “Quick
Wins” if it wants to achieve Putrajaya’s target of being a high-income economy
by 2020.
In its bi-annual East Asia
and Pacific economic update, the bank highlighted subsidy cuts and broadening
the tax base as key initiatives to have stalled over the past year after cost
of living spiked ahead of an impending general election.
The bank warned today that
“downside risks have eased but persist” as Malaysia’s export orientation means
that “ongoing risks to the global recovery constitute risks for Malaysian
growth.”
It said the trade balance
will subtract from growth as “strong domestic demand, combined with moderate
export growth, will lead to faster growth in imports”, resulting in gross
domestic product (GDP) growth coming in at 4.6 per cent for this year and 5.1
per cent in 2013, assuming a continuation of the global recovery.
“The government’s
transformation programmes registered notable progress, but the challenge now is
to go beyond quick wins and accelerate the implementation of more difficult —
but critical — structural reforms that lie at the core of boosting the economy into
high-income levels.
“There is momentum to the
government’s reform agenda, but implementation could be accelerated,” the
report said, referring to the Najib administration’s ambitious Economic
Transformation Programme (ETP) launched in 2010 to double per capita income in
10 years.
The World Bank added that
Malaysia should increase co-ordination of social safety nets and education,
build capacity within the civil service to lead reforms, and work towards
consensus in key areas such as education reform, subsidy cuts and broadening
the tax base.
Although a goods and
services tax (GST) had been mooted soon after Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib
Razak came into power in April 2009, the government has said it will not be
implemented before the general election that must be called within a year.
Subsidy cuts had also begun
last year, but as inflation hit a two-year high of three per cent in March and
persisted until December, Putrajaya’s Performance Management and Delivery Unit
(Pemandu) introduced instead a new key result area under it transformation plan
to deal with cost of living.
The World Bank’s
recommendations come a day after Second Finance Minister Datuk Seri Husni
Hanadzlah said it will be “very tough” to meet the five to six per cent growth
projection from Budget 2012.
The Tambun MP said the
government would instead focus on the central bank’s revised target of between
four and five per cent, which is lower than the growth of 7.2 per cent and 5.1
per cent in 2010 and 2011 respectively.
He said this was due to the
impact on trade arising from China’s suddenly cooling growth amid the
stuttering recovery in the United States and the persistent euro zone crisis.
The three markets make up
three of Malaysia’s top four trade partners. Dismal economic data for April
released last week suggest that China was heading for a sixth straight quarter
of slowing growth, raising alarm bells in financial markets already worried
about a slump in the euro zone.
Bank Negara will announce
the first quarter GDP this evening, with a Reuters poll of economist projecting
a figure of 4.5 per cent, a third consecutive drop since the 7.2 per cent
registered in Q2 2011.
The business wire also
reported that Malaysia’s export growth in the first quarter more than halved to
4.4 per cent from 9.9 per cent in the fourth quarter.
Strong economic growth is
crucial for the Najib administration’s plans to cut the fiscal deficit with
public debt at RM455.7 billion or 53.8 per cent of GDP at the end of last year,
just shy of a statutory ceiling of 55 per cent.
The government has announced
a slew of construction projects for intra-city rail and highways in the coming
years, using infrastructure projects to stimulate the economy.
The government’s New
Economic Model (NEM) forecasts more investments from the private sector
although a number of the companies have Putrajaya’s sovereign wealth funds as
their majority shareholders.
Putrajaya is also betting on
development in the Iskandar region in Johor and various projects around the
country to push Malaysia into the club of high-income nations. (TMI)
Semoga ekonomi M'sia akan meningkat dan jumlah hutang negara dapat dikurangkan.
ReplyDeleteteruskan usaha dalam meningkatkan lagi ekonomi negara
ReplyDeleteUsaha kerajaan dalam meningkatkan ekonomi Sabah harus berterusan secara berperingkat.
DeleteKita percaya kerajaan mampu memberikan yang terbaik kepada rakyat dan negara.
ReplyDeleteSelepas kerajaan BN mendapat mandat rakyat pada PRU13, pasti kerajaan akan terus menerus membela nasib rakyat Sabah.
Deleteada banyak tranformasi ekonomi kerajaan laksanakan sekarang.. dan ada banyak juga tindakan2 kurang matang dan kurang profesional yang dilakukan pemimpin2 pembangkang untuk menjatuhkan negara ini..
ReplyDelete