By : SELVARAJA SOMIAH
LOPSIDEDNESS is a matter of
perspective. Consider this: 35% of Malaysia’s disposable income comes from the
top six cities. The bottom 1000+ kampongs account for 35% of income. Of the
rest of the income, 30% is in the remaining hundreds of towns.
These are what some
marketing pundits euphorically call the Tier-2 towns, places with perceived
potential for immense growth. Does this Tier-2 layer really exist?
This must be judged from the
headline news “Malaysia’s August inflation seen steady at 1.4%”, “Falling
Inflation”, “Bank Negara and the Malaysian economists celebrate volubly”. Is
this really worth celebrating for all?
I was recently touring
Kundasang, home to South East Asia’s highest mountain – Mount Kinabalu, also
South East Asia’s largest cabbage and broccoli market which I’m very familiar
with, as I was one of the pioneers years ago doing experiments on pesticides
and introducing hybrid cabbage and highland vegetable seeds from Taiwan and
Japan some twenty years ago.
I can’t say people of
Kundasang would celebrate a fall in highland vegetables i.e. cabbage,
cauliflower and broccoli prices. Hundreds of farmers are mourning the crash of
prices, sometimes to even below the cost of production.
The cost of cabbages has
fallen at the farm gate by over 50% over just 6 months! Overall, prices have
deflated over 30%. But it will take years before they could go up again.
Unfortunately, the farmer is
not treated like an investor whose money commands the headlines, and who
reports farm level profitability. No farmer ever computes his ROI (return on
investment) on the land that he owns. It is inherited and comes for free to
cultivate.
If we were to cost up all
farm level production based on the cost of fertilizers, insecticides,
fungicides, weedicides, labour and land, everything will be ten times more
expensive! Not many recognise this, but Malaysian agriculture is highly
subsidised by the farmer who treats the cost of land as free.
Think about the positives of
inflation for a moment. How many people know how inflation is computed
actually? There are 435 articles or commodities across three major groups that
are taken into consideration and given different weights. Milk has the highest
weight (4.4), rice is (2.44), weights for all fruits and vegetables are less
than that of milk.
This raises another
question: how many times do the media complain about the cost of milk? Cabbages
and most highland vegetables have a collective weight of 0.54, jagung (corn)
even less (0.09).
Then, why are corn prices
more of an issue than cabbages? The Malaysian farmer would say that vegetables
and fruits get unfairly low attention in the context of the perceived causes of
inflation. I want to argue that farmers need inflation for a better living.
When I did economics as one
of my first year papers in uni, as a student, I was taught that “a little
inflation is not such a bad thing”. But how ‘little’ is little? The bigger
issue is, 65% of Malaysia that lives off agriculture, will have to suffer from
curtailed income due to deflation. And this clearly takes money out of the
hands of semi-urban and rural people.
Would the Tier-2 story stand
then with just 2% inflation? I would think not.
One also begins to wonder
about the policy-making process and about those who are entrusted with the
hallowed job of policy-making as well. Time and again, we have seen that
Parliament is not where policy is made; it seems as though it is an arena where
political parties stage their differences in acts of one-upmanship.
Policymakers are influenced
heavily by three kinds of people: the man in the street types who just look at
day-to-day gains and valuation; the politicians who do not understand economics
when it is separated from politics; and the global investors who are at best
opportunists and who treat Malaysia like a cell in a game of
snakes-and-ladders.
The point is, good
intentions of a few policymakers are not getting translated into ground reality
at the farm level. There is too much media glare on produce prices than is
required.
There is an urgent need for
a fresh look at the needs of specific businesses in rural Malaysia, in terms of
supply chain infrastructure, training and financial support. One size does not
fit all. Individual ministries must debate thoughts and ideas with commercial
businesses at the grassroots level, to understand the travails and
opportunities.
Meantime, surely the dreams
of Fast Moving Consumer Goods (FMCG) companies and other categories must be put
on hold till the work performed by farmers in smaller towns and kampongs for
their livelihood becomes profitable again. Some inflation is surely good.
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