"Buoyed by optimism of
higher income, Malaysia is cutting fiscal deficit and subsidies but not letting
up in big spending."
IT CALLS for financial
wizardry. Last week Najib Razak, Malaysia's Prime Minister, showed the world
how his country can spend big and yet cut fiscal deficit as he presented a
251.6-billion ringgit ($81.7 billion) budget for next year amid a weakening
global economy.
And he is confident that
higher income can be expected from economic growth that will be able to fund
populist spending such as cash handouts to the poor.
"We have never painted
a pretty picture based on wishful thinking....we make promises, we fulfil
them,” Najib, who is also finance minister, told parliament on Friday.
Government revenue is
expected to rise to 208.6 billion ringgit from this year’s 207.2 billion
ringgit on optimism that the economy will grow between 4.5% and 5.5%. This
year’s growth is expected at between 4.5% and 5%.
Thus Najib can trim next
year’s fiscal deficit by half a percent to 4%, beating most economists’
forecasts including the 4.2% forecast by the United Overseas Bank. In so doing,
he has shown that his government will keep to its target of reducing the budget
deficit to 3% by 2015.
Next year’s expenditure is
down slightly from this year’s 252.4 billion ringgit despite a proposed higher
spending of 15.7 billion ringgit on education, health, welfare, housing, and
fighting crime.
Some 1.3m federal civil
servants will receive a one-and-a-half month bonus. About 4.3m poor households
will receive a second cash handout of 500 ringgit each and 2.7m single people
will get 250 ringgit each. These cash handouts will cost the government 3
billion ringgit.
Najib has also introduced
measures to cool an overheating housing market. He is raising the real property
gain tax (RPGT) by 5% to 15% on sales of properties within five years of their
purchase. The government is also spending 1.9 billion ringgit to build 123,000
houses costing between 150,000 and 400,000 ringgit for those earning between 3,000
and 5,000 ringgit a month.
Sabah is getting 2.2 billion
ringgit of road projects. About 100m ringgit of them will be offered by year
end. It can also expect to get about a quarter of the 140m ringgit to develop a
rice bowl on 5,000 hectares in Kota Belud, about 60km from Kota Kinabalu.
There is 386m ringgit for
Sabah, Labuan and Sarawak to set up 57 more low-price 1Malaysia people’s shops
to help keep consumer prices down.
Najib has reduced sugar
subsidy by 20 sen to discourage people from taking too much sugar. Malaysia has
2.6m diabetics. Nevertheless the government is still subsiding sugar at 34 sen
per kg which costs it 278m ringgit. It pays 1.5 billion on cooking oil
subsidies. However, government subsidies are expect to drop to 37.6 billion ringgit
next year from this year’s 42.4 billion ringgit.
Sabah is expected to table
its budget for next year soon. And it should mirror that of the federal. State
civil servants are expected to get 1.5-months of bonus.
Sabah Chief Minister Musa
Aman has welcomed Najib’s budget describing it as “very caring, honest and
realistic.” (Insight Sabah)
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