Will Malaysia’s new economic model work?

KUALA LUMPUR, (Reuters) – Malaysia’s government is  considering proposals to shake up its economic and social  system to boost competitiveness and growth, a government source  told Reuters.

Following is an assessment of the risks to the proposals  that will be presented later this month and formally announced  in June before becoming the 10th Malaysia Plan, an outline of  how the country moves from developing nation to developed  nation income status by 2020.

* INTRODUCING GOODS  AND SERVICES TAX AND

CUTTING SUBSIDIES

Malaysia was supposed to cut its fuel subsidy bill from May  this year as part of the 2010 budget to tackle its budget  deficit which in 2009 hit a more than 20 year high of 7.4  percent of gross domestic product. That measure was withdrawn  as it was “unpopular” with voters.

Similarly, plans to debate a goods and services tax (GST)  in the current parliamentary session were withdrawn due to the  risk of hurting the government’s popularity as were proposals  for electricity price hikes.

These measures are unlikely to be implemented before the  next general election that must be held by 2013 at the latest,  but could come in 2011.

An early election with early implementation by a government  with a strong two-thirds majority in parliament would be  positive for investors. If the government fails to win back the  two-thirds parliamentary majority it lost in the 2008 polls,  unpopular measures such as these could be delayed again.

There are no firm pledges on fiscal reform.

Economic growth targets are ambitious at 6.5 percent by  some unspecified timeframe. In its “Vision 2020” drive to win  developed nation status, then-premier Mahathir Mohamad  projected 7 percent annual growth. The outcome from 1998-2008  was 5.5 percent. Malaysia is Asia’s third most trade dependent  economy relative to its size. Any targets could be rendered  meaningless if there is a double dip global recession or if  demand for commodities or oil declines.
* REFORMS TO SOCIAL

SYSTEM AND SUPPORT

FOR MALAYS

The most controversial area of reforms. How far will Prime  Minister Najib Razak go in unwinding the linchpin of Malaysia’s  political and social system that gives a wide array of benefits  to the 55 percent Malay population?

Although the proposals say that social support will shift  to the poorest 40 percent of families after subsidies are cut,  the issue of how far the rest of the social safety net for  Malays will change has been fudged

The “New Economic Model” planned by Najib is being marketed  as the successor to the decades old “New Economic Policy”  introduced by his father, Malaysia’s second prime minister,  Abdul Razak Hussein, in the wake of race riots in the 1960s.

To please reformers and win back ethnic Chinese and Indian  voters who deserted the National Front in 2008, Najib will have  to embrace deep reform. In doing so, he would alienate Malays  who are the core voters of his United Malays National  Organisation (UMNO), the linchpin of the National Front  coalition.

So far, Najib’s reforms have been welcomed by investors but  have not gone far enough. Najib’s political style was described  as at best “pragmatically cautious” by Bridget Welsh, a  Malaysia expert at Singapore Management University.

Najib already faces a growing tide of Malay concern that  has focused on religion and rights.
“ZERO TOLERANCE”

ON CORRUPTION

Malaysia has long pledged to eradicate corruption, one of  the reasons that voters deserted the government in the 2008  polls. Najib has made some efforts to clean up vote buying in  UMNO by enlarging the franchise in party polls, but there have  been no major arrests on graft charges.

Malaysia has fallen to a record low of 56th place among 180  countries in anti-graft watchdog Transparency International’s  2009 corruption perception index.

A billion dollar scandal over a port free trade zone that  has rattled bondholders has seen a few minor company officials  charged.

UMNO recently ran a state legislature candidate who was a  former cabinet minister suspended from the party in 2004 for  corruption, a move critics said showed it was business as usual  for cronyism.

HIGH QUALIY

EDUCATION FOR ALL

Crucial to Malaysia’s bid to win a stake in the global  knowledge economy is its education system. At present, it turns  out tens of thousands of graduates a year who learn by rote and  are ill-equipped for the new economy.

Malaysia’s tertiary education enrolment ratio lags both  Singapore and Thailand, according to U.N. data. A report from  investment bank Morgan Stanley said its gross tertiary  enrolment ratio and gross tertiary completion ratio are 7  percent and 6 percent lower than the average of economies with  its level of GDP per capita.

Education has become increasingly politicised with the  abandonment of a policy of teaching maths and science in  English instead of Bahasa Malaysia.

It is also an issue that could trigger a racial backlash  against the government.