The Borneo Post

Reopening of more economic sectors reduces national daily losses to RM300 million

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KUALA LUMPUR: The reopening of more economic sectors under the second phase of the movement control order (MCO 2.0) has succeeded in reducing the country’s losses to RM300 million a day compared to RM2.4 billion a day during the MCO 1.0.

Finance Minister Tengku Datuk Seri Zafrul Abdul Aziz said the MCO 2.0 allowed more economic sectors to operate than the previous one to balance between the health aspects of the people and the current economic pressures.

“During the first MCO, our country suffered a loss of RM2.4 billion a day and if it is implemente­d continuous­ly, surely our country’s economic system, including the public health system, will paralyse,” he said in his opening remarks at the virtual 25th Revenue Day of the Inland Revenue Board (IRB) yesterday.

He also said that the country has managed to limit the number of deaths due to Covid-19 to 0.3 per cent ratio, or in the lowest 5.0 per cent category globally.

He said the effectiven­ess of the government’s measures to curb the spread of the Covid19 pandemic had also been recognised by the internatio­nal credit rating agency, Moody’s, which maintained Malaysia’s A3 rating with stable projection­s in January this year.

“Moody’s also expects the Covid-19 pandemic not to have a long-lasting effect on the country’s economic structure.

“Therefore, the current and subsequent waves of contagion will only delay but not hinder the country’s economic recovery towards a higher and sustainabl­e growth path,” he said.

Tengku Zafrul said the success of this rating was driven by a strong economic foundation, good fiscal discipline including the support of economic sector diversific­ation.

However, he said, it depended heavily on the country’s ability to curb the pandemic and also implement continuous recovery in external demand.

Although Malaysia experience­d a contractio­n in gross domestic product (GDP) of 5.6 per cent in 2020, Tengku Zafrul said this figure was better than the initial projection­s by internatio­nal organisati­ons such as the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (-5.8 per cent), the World Bank (-5.8 per cent) and the Asian Developmen­t Bank (-6.0 per cent).

He also said Malaysia’s performanc­e was better compared to regional peers such as Thailand (-6.1 per cent) and the Philippine­s (-9.5 per cent) and other countries such as the United Kingdom (-9.9 per cent).

 ??  ?? Tengku Datuk Seri Zafrul Abdul Aziz
Tengku Datuk Seri Zafrul Abdul Aziz

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