The Borneo Post (Sabah)

What a hung parliament means to economy

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KUALA LUMPUR: The justconclu­ded 15th General Election (GE15) has brought Malaysia to unchartere­d waters with a hung parliament, wherein neither coalition crossed the indispensa­ble line of 112 simple majority to form the next government independen­tly.

The conundrum is not surprising, Universiti Tun Abdul Razak economist Prof Dr Barjoyai Bardai said, adding that it is how democracy works today.

“The new government can be formed without a majority of winning seats, a mixed government of several political parties, and a new coalition emerges,” he told Bernama in an interview.

A total of 220 of the 222 parliament­ary seats were contested as polling in the Padang Serai parliament­ary constituen­cy in Kedah has been postponed to Dec 7 following the death of the Pakatan Harapan (PH-PKR) candidate for Padang Serai, incumbent M.Karupaiya on Wednesday.

The new date for nomination of candidates is Nov 24.

At the same time, voting was suspended at 11 polling stations in Sarawak’s Baram parliament­ary constituen­cy due to flooding, with voters seen standing kneedeep in floodwater­s.

Citing recent developmen­ts in the United Kingdom whereby the then prime minister, Liz Truss, was changed in 45 days a er appointmen­t. It goes to proof that rotating prime minister, swap method that allows the government to exist without the need of one majority party is possible, said Barjoyai.

Liz Truss resigned a er a series of U-turns in its mini-budget, which included cu ing taxes as well as sackings, and resignatio­ns. The pound sterling tumbled as markets were spooked.

Fundamenta­lly, Malaysia’s economy is strong, but the current scenario would somewhat still affect investors sentiment albeit in the short term, said Professor Datuk Dr Shazali Abu Mansor, deputy vice-chancellor of research and graduate studies at i-CATS University College.

Investors would probably adopt a wait-and-see a itude until a new government is formed, he said.

Professor Dr Mohd Nazari Ismail from Universiti Malaya’s Business and Economics Faculty said there are many scenarios, and it really boils down to the outcome of negotiatio­ns between the parties.

GE15 saw three major coalitions, namely Barisan Nasional (BN), Pakatan Harapan (PH) and Perikatan Nasional (PN) versus the previous election which had only BN and PH.

“If one party won, the political situation will be more stable; if the results are even, two parties will work together to form a government, but we don’t know who will cooperate with whom at this point of time,” he said.

The initial expectatio­n was and which the market had priced in is an Umno-led BN plus Gabungan Parti Sarawak (GPS) government.

However, the outcome of GE15 was an upset with BN, having set out with confidence to retake the government in Putrajaya, suffered the worst defeat in its political history when it won only 30 seats out of the 178 it contested.

PH bagged 82 parliament seats and PN 73 parliament seats. It was followed by GPS with 22 seats, Gabungan Rakyat Sabah (GRS) six seats, Warisan three seats, and others four seats.

The Election Commission chairman Tan Sri Abdul Ghani Salleh announced that no political party has been able to obtain a simple majority a er they failed to win 50 per cent out of 219 parliament­ary seats in the GE15.

Meanwhile, PN chairman Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin is willing to collaborat­e with any party, except PH, that can accept its cause and principles in forming a clean and stable government.

He also said that PN had received a le er from the Yang di-Pertuan Agong Al-Sultan Abdullah Ri’ayatuddin AlMustafa Billah Shah and was instructed to finalise certain ma ers by Monday a ernoon.

“There’s no need for me to reveal the content of the le er. The Yang Dipertuan Agong has given a list of ma ers that need to be finalised accordingl­y.

“We need to discuss certain ma ers and we hope to finalise it by tomorrow a ernoon, InsyaAllah,” he said.

On the other hand, PH chairman Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim has claimed to have obtained the support of enough Member of Parliament­s (MPs) to form the new government with a simple majority.

If the GE15 has resulted in a hung parliament, the market may correct on fears over ongoing political uncertaint­y post-GE15, CGS-CIMB have had predicted ahead of the election.

“As the saying goes and cliché as they sound, ‘politics is the art of the possible’ and ‘there are no permanent friends and enemies in politics’.

“We should not rule out the potential scenario of ‘unthinkabl­e’ alliance,” Maybank Investment Bank’s analyst, Suhaimi Ilias, had also said prior to GE15 itself.

He said another possibilit­y is a “minority” Government due to a “hung” Parliament outcome or a stalemate among parties in forming a coalition Government with a simple majority.

No guessing on policy changes and impact of such a scenario. It will be a period of uncertaint­y but discovery for everyone including the economy and the market, he noted.

Regardless of the outcome, fiscal consolidat­ion will remain a priority, although the path could be different depending on which party or alliance that leads the government, said Suhaimi.

In terms of government’s expenditur­e, “people-oriented” measures will continue especially the cash handouts programme that has been in existence since the time of pre-GE14 Barisan Nasional (BN) Government and went through name changes to reflect the Government of the day.

“What we expect - as per the cash handouts – is for other assistance­s to become more targeted such as subsidy restructur­ing to a targeted mechanism from a blanket system and rationalis­ation of various social safety net and welfare programmes.

“We also expect the postGE15 government to proceed with the tabling of the Fiscal Responsibi­lity Act that was mentioned in the Budget 2023 speech.”

He said major infrastruc­ture projects would continue – for projects now under constructi­on – East Coast Rail Link, Gemas-Johor Bahru (JB) Electrifie­d Double Track, JB-Singapore Rail Transit Link, Pan-Borneo Highway and Sabah-Sarawak Link Road - and for projects in which tenders have started – Klang Valley Mass Rapid Transit Line 3.

The expectatio­n is also for a higher share of the Federal Government developmen­t spending allocation to the less-developed states for basic infrastruc­ture.

“The new Federal Government is expected to focus on improving the quality and delivery of essential public services, especially education, training and healthcare, as well as realising higher and quality investment flows to the less-developed states for a more inclusive, equitable and balanced socio-economic developmen­ts.”

With sustainabi­lity being the buzzwords, any Government to be formed a er GE15 will no doubt make sustainabi­lity as key policy agenda especially in realising the United Nations Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals and delivering Malaysia’s commitment­s to address climate change.

Key areas will include renewable energy, electric vehicles, natural disasters impact mitigation, management of natural resources, guiding and assisting society, and micro, small and medium enterprise­s for a just transition towards sustainabi­lity.

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