The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Malaysia’s 2016-2030 service exports to grow by an average eight pct yearly — HSBC

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KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia’s services exports should rise by an average of eight per cent annually over the next 15 years, with tourism continuing to contribute over a third of its overall growth.

HSBC Bank Malaysia Bhd’s Head of Commercial Banking, Andrew Sill, said India was forecast to be the fastest-growing destinatio­n for Malaysian services exports, with average growth projected of 11 per cent yearly.

“Malaysia’s services export growth would remain dominated by tourism, education and health services,” he told reporters on HSBC’s New Trade Report here yesterday.

Sill said HSBC and research partner, Oxford Economics, from analyses of bilateral trade of 25 key trading nations, found growth in services exports outstrippi­ng growth in goods trade since the global financial crisis.

This was partly due to spending on services being less affected by fluctuatio­ns in economic activities than spending on goods, he said.

He said long-term outlook for Malaysia remained positive with growth supported by favourable demographi­cs and infrastruc­ture investment and urged businesses to explore opportunit­ies linked to services.

On the goods export forecast, the report said, China’s demand for Malaysian goods should remain solid, rising by more than nine per cent annually, with China overtaking Singapore as Malaysia’s largest export destinatio­n from 2016-2030.

As Malaysia moved towards a developed nation status, machinery and equipment would be key drivers of goods trade with import growth forecast to gradually accelerate to average 10 per cent yearly from 2021-2030, it said.

The report said growth would be largely driven by an import surge of about 13 per cent per year from Vietnam, China, India and Indonesia.

Indonesia was forecast to replace South Korea as Malaysia’s fifth top import origin after Japan, US, Singapore and China in 2030, it said.

On the ringgit, Sill said, the bank’s view was that it would hit 4.50 against the US dollar this year.

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