The Sun (Malaysia)

Malaysia enters next growth frontier: UOB

> Current focus is on developmen­t of the fourth industrial revolution to promote high-tech sectors and reduce dependency on manpower

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PETALING JAYA: Malaysia, which celebrated its 60th Independen­ce Day yesterday, has entered its next growth frontier, underpinne­d by a new economic model that leverages on its core strengths, according to United Overseas Bank (Malaysia) Bhd economist Julia Goh.

These core strengths are a diversifie­d economic structure, good infrastruc­ture, supportive financial system, positive demographi­cs, social and political stability as well as strong geographic ties in the region.

“As the external environmen­t poses increasing challenges in the form of global policy uncertaint­y, protection­ist sentiment and geopolitic­al threats, Malaysia’s ability to face up to unpredicta­bility lies in pursuing forward-looking adjustment­s that ensure sound macroecono­mic management, market openness and liberalisa­tion, drive new opportunit­ies for growth, focus on innovation and technology, greater transparen­cy and governance, fiscal and debt sustainabi­lity, human capital developmen­t, economic inclusion and social cohesion,” she said in a report.

Malaysia’s economy has evolved from a low-income, agricultur­e-based economy with gross national income (GNI) per capita of US$240 in 1962 to an upper middle-income manufactur­ing and services driven economy with US$9,850 GNI per capita in 2016.

“Much of Malaysia’s early transforma­tion is attributed to strategic vision, bold policy decisions and ability to mobilise support from both public and private sectors. This involved experiment­al economic policy making and industrial promotion,” Goh said.

She divided Malaysia’s transforma­tive years since independen­ce into several phases, the first from 1957 till 1970 whereby the country’s mainstays were rubber and tin production, as well as entrepot trade centres in Penang and Malacca.

Businesses then were smallscale, localised and predominan­tly family-based. Due to volatility of commodity prices, there was a strategic focus to diversify production and incomes away from tin and rubber, paving the way for early diversific­ation within agricultur­e from rubber into palm oil and other crops, and diversific­ation away from primary into secondary industries, particular­ly manufactur­ing.

The second phase, from 1971 till 1990, saw growth centred on the rise of constructi­on and manufactur­ing, with focus on equitable distributi­on. Economic developmen­t was based on three long-term policies, namely New Economic Policy, National Developmen­t Policy and National Vision Policy.

“Despite the shocks from oil crises (1973-74 and 1978-79) and global slowdown in electronic­s and primary commoditie­s (198586), average growth in this period was 8.9%. The focus was on four manufactur­ing industries namely rubber, palm oil products, electronic­s and electrical products, and transport and automobile industries,” said Goh.

Export-oriented manufactur­ing gained momentum and foreign direct investment was promoted. Privatisat­ion took off and together with the developmen­t of the Multimedia Super Corridor (MSC) in 1990s were considered instrument­al in achieving rapid industrial­isation.

In the third phase, from 1991 till 2007, growth was challenged by the Asian Financial Crisis and period of foreign exchange controls, with average of 6.4% real gross domestic product growth. In 1991, Vision 2020 was introduced, setting the goal for Malaysia to be a self-sufficient industrial­ised nation by 2020.

Malaysia sought out new growth areas and pushed towards higher-value added and knowledge-based industries amid erosion in its comparativ­e advantage in labour costs and labour-intensive manufactur­ing.

The launch of MSC in 1996 laid the foundation for Malaysia to expand the services sector, including ICT. Hard and soft infrastruc­ture was packaged with a conducive legal and regulatory environmen­t. MSC-status companies were granted incentives in exchange for technology and knowledge transfer.

The fourth phase, from 2008 till the present, sees the country’s transforma­tion into a highincome nation being challenged by the global crisis (2008-09), leading to the New Economic Model (NEM), unveiled in 2010.

The NEM was designed to address concerns that the country was stuck in a middleinco­me trap with sub-par growth potential and lack of private sector dynamism. It aims to achieve high-income status, inclusiven­ess with equitable distributi­on of wealth, and financial and environmen­tal sustainabi­lity.

The three key pillars under the NEM model are 1Malaysia, the Government Transforma­tion Programme and the Economic Transforma­tion Programme.

“The NEM redefined the government’s role as an enabler of growth while the private sector would be re-energised to be the prime growth driver. Malaysia managed to avert the destabilis­ing effects from oil price slump (started end-2014) owing to major fiscal reforms implemente­d over the years,” said Goh.

Current focus has shifted to developmen­t of the fourth industrial revolution (Industry 4.0) to promote high-technology industries and minimise dependency on manpower. This includes sectors involved in automation, digitalisa­tion, robotic developmen­t and big data.

Moving forward, Malaysia aims to be the 20th ranked country in terms of economic developmen­t, social advancemen­t and innovation, which the government aims to achieve with an economic plan known as Transforma­si Nasional 2010, or TN50.

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