New Straits Times

Accelerati­ng high-end manufactur­ing

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THE manufactur­ing sector is expected to grow 5.1 per cent per year and contribute 22.5 per cent to the gross domestic product (GDP) and 18.2 per cent to total employment by 2020.

The growth would be mainly contribute­d by high-end manufactur­ing sub-sectors.

Last year, the manufactur­ing sector contribute­d 23 per cent to the GDP, 80.2 per cent to total gross exports and employed 16.5 per cent of the total workforce.

The government has identified sub-sectors with potential for highend manufactur­ing such as aerospace, green technology, electrical and electronic­s (E&E) and medical devices.

These sub-sectors require moving up the value chain.

In the aerospace industry, the government has put in place key initiative­s to make Malaysia the regional leader by 2030.

These initiative­s include the National Aerospace Blueprint (20152030) and a new Entry Point Project (EPP) to make Malaysia the hub for aerospace original equipment manufactur­ers in Southeast Asia.

The EPP is targeted to contribute RM1.1 billion to gross national income (GNI), and create RM1.9 billion investment­s and 3,368 highlyskil­led jobs by 2020.

Green technology, which is a new growth area, is expected to generate RM22.4 billion to GDP, RM28 billion worth of investment­s and create more than 144,000 jobs by 2020.

The National Green Technology Policy focuses on four pillars, namely energy, environmen­t, economy and social.

The medical devices sub-sector produces mostly export-oriented equipment and has three general categories, namely rubber and latex products, general manufactur­ing of medical devices and products manufactur­ed by foreign multinatio­nal corporatio­ns.

Malaysia remains the world’s leading producer of catheters and medical rubber gloves. The industry is expected to generate revenue of RM17.1 billion, RM11.4 billion in GNI and create 86,000 jobs by 2020.

Challenges in the manufactur­ing sector are stiff competitio­n from low-cost producers such as China and Vietnam, and inefficien­cies associated with cheap labour.

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