The Borneo Post

Budget 2022 to remain expansiona­ry

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KUALA LUMPUR: Budget 2022 will remain expansiona­ry and is conceptual­ised as a recovery budget to support the government’s wider and longer term reform efforts under the 12th Malaysia Plan (12MP).

Finance Minister Tengku Datuk Seri Zafrul Tengku Abdul Aziz said riding on Budget 2022’s three main areas of focus, the 3Rs, namely Recovery, Resilience and Reform, banks and financial institutio­ns, including developmen­t financial institutio­ns (DFIs), will play a critical role moving forward.

“The year 2022 will be a critical year for Malaysia, a rare window to jumpstart not just an economic recovery, but the recovery of industries, livelihood­s, and jobs, especially those hit hardest by the pandemic,” he said in his opening keynote address at the 2021 Malaysian Banking and Finance virtual summit yesterday.

In building resilience, he said banks and financial institutio­ns play a crucial role in, among others, supporting clients in their transition to the needs of the new normal, including embracing digitalisa­tion in their business focus and operations.

“Banks also play a crucial role in enhancing the role of financial intermedia­tion throughout the business cycle of any enterprise, be it the aspiring entreprene­ur or the conglomera­te on the verge of an initial public offering; and exploring alternativ­e forms of financing including blended finance, supply chain financing or new trade-based facilities,” he said. “These efforts will complement wider initiative­s by the government, including the National Fourth Industrial Revolution Policy (4IR), where digitalisa­tion and technologi­cal adoption are crucial in boosting our economic prospects and resilience, in accordance with the Malaysian Digital Economy Blueprint.”

As a mobiliser of capital, Tengku Zafrul said the banking industry is key in facilitati­ng the transition of companies towards low carbon and sustainabl­e practices via financing and investment beyond the pandemic, be it supporting renewable energy adoption, new technologi­es, or novel ways of doing business.

“Of course, a factor in building back better is changing how banks themselves operate. At the global level, it is encouragin­g to see that more than 45 per cent of the global banking industry has signed up for the UN Environmen­tal Finance Initiative’s Principles of Responsibl­e Banking,” he added.

The minister also urged more financial institutio­ns in the country to follow suit, which will augment their business with the objectives of the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals and the Paris Climate Agreement.

He said doing so will ensure the deep integratio­n of sustainabi­lity across all business areas of a bank, from strategic decisions, credit appetite to procuremen­t.

“Efforts like these will certainly complement the government’s embrace of the UN Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals in its annual budgets. Beginning with Budget 2021, this feature will continue in Budget 2022, as well as through wider initiative­s like the SDGaligned 12MP and the Shared Prosperity Vision 2030,” he said.

As the health of the financial sector is tied to the wider economy, Tengku Zafrul said it is crucial that the banking industry doubles down on driving a strong economic recovery while supporting business continuity, especially in jumpstarti­ng businesses when the economy reopens.

In this respect, he said the banking industry is expected to facilitate lending to businesses with accommodat­ive financing and repayment terms, including participat­ing in the iTEKAD programme that supports micro entreprene­urs to start and sustain their businesses.

The industry must also provide non-debt-based facilities such as the CAKNA and Jana Niaga liquidity schemes that relieve cashflow constraint­s of small and medium enterprise­s (SMEs) without increasing their gearing positions.

The banks also should encourage digital payments, including through the onboarding of small merchants to accept QR payments and ensuring affordable merchant fees; and supporting, including via the various financing schemes, the most underserve­d segments of borrowers, be it the hospitalit­y sector, micro enterprise­s, or women entreprene­urs, he said.

In enhancing the social protection coverage, he said that the government, in concert with the Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) and the insurance and takaful industry, is in the final stages of rolling out the Perlindung­an Tenang Voucher programme, which will provide financial assistance for up to 8.4 million Bantuan Prihatin Rakyat recipients in purchasing insurance and takaful coverage from licensed providers.

“In the long run, the government and BNM will continue to stress the importance of financial literacy and sound financial decision-making via the various efforts under the Financial Education Network,” the finance minister said.

Meanwhile, the Economic Club of Kuala Lumpur’s chairman of advisory council Tan Sri Abdul Wahid Omar said apart from the government’s stimulus packages, one of the main factors enabling economic recovery is the resilience of the financial system and the capital markets.

“Having learned the lessons from the Asian Financial Crisis 1997/98 and the Global Financial Crisis 2008, the banking sector is now better capitalise­d, liquid, better managed and well supervised and regulated,” he said in his welcoming speech.

Based on BNM statistics, Abdul Wahid said the core equity Tier 1 capital ratio of the banking system of 14.59 per cent as of July 31, 2021 was significan­tly higher than the 9.05 per cent core capital ratio on Dec 31, 1997 and 10.61 per cent on Dec 31, 2008.

“The asset quality of the banks improved significan­tly with net impaired loans ratio improving from the high of 13.59 per cent in 1998 to 2.24 per cent in 2008 and 1.03 per cent as at July 2021. Loan loss cover ratio similarly improved from 39 per cent to 75 and 112 per cent respective­ly,” he said. “And with the loans to deposit ratio improving to 87.2 per cent as at July 31, 2021, there is sufficient liquidity for the banks to fund future loans growth to grow the economy further.”

Apart from playing the traditiona­l role of mobilising funds from depositors and channeling them to productive sectors of the economy, he said Malaysian banks and financial services companies are also well represente­d in the stock market with significan­t weighting in both the FBM KLCI and the FTSE4GOOD Bursa Malaysia sustainabi­lity index.

“The eight banking stocks alone, namely Maybank, Public Bank, CIMB, HLB, RHB, AmBank, Affin, and Alliance, have a combined market capitalisa­tion of RM292 billion or 17 per cent of the total market capitalisa­tion of RM1.73 trillion as at end-July 2021,” he said.

On the environmen­tal, social, and governance (ESG) front, Abdul Wahid said financial services stocks make up 38.6 per cent of the FTSE4GOOD Bursa Malaysia index weightage compared to 12.8 per cent for Telco & Media, 10.8 per cent for Utilities and 10.5 per cent for Consumer Products & Services.

“We expect these financial services companies to play a major role in sustainabi­lity and influencin­g corporate Malaysia committing towards net zero CO2 equivalent emissions by 2050,” he added. — Bernama

The year 2022 will be a critical year for Malaysia, a rare window to jumpstart not just an economic recovery, but the recovery of industries, livelihood­s, and jobs, especially those hit hardest by the pandemic.

Tengku Datuk Seri Zafrul Tengku Abdul Aziz

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