The Sun (Malaysia)

Conundrum in GE14

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significan­t segment of households don’t enjoy a living wage. BNM defines a living wage as a level sufficient to sustain a socially acceptable minimum standard of living beyond basic necessitie­s.

An article in BNM’s Annual Report 2017 notes monthly earnings of the bottom 40% of Malaysian households by income (B40), after adjusting for higher living costs, edged up by just 3.8% from 2014 to 2016 in real terms.

Although the median household income in Kuala Lumpur in 2016 was RM9,073 what is worrying is a significan­t segment – 27% of households – earned less than the living wage: RM2,700 for an individual, RM4,500 for a couple without children and RM6,500 for a couple with two children.

Second, although fiscally questionab­le, the proposal by Pakatan Harapan (Pakatan) to abolish the goods and services tax (GST) targets a major concern articulate­d by Malaysians. GST was implemente­d after GE13.

A survey by Merdeka Centre in November last year said 72% of respondent­s cited inflation, rising cost of living, corruption and lack of opportunit­ies as their top concerns while a survey by University of Malaya, also conducted last year, noted respondent­s ranked issues involving jobs and incomes above corruption, religion or education.

Pakatan estimates eliminatin­g GST and replacing it with the sales and service tax could result in red ink totalling RM25.5 billion.

The opposition claims it can bridge this gap and generate a RM6 billion surplus by adopting a three-prong approach – accelerati­ng consumer spending and business activity to generate more tax revenue, boosting efficiency in government spending and cracking down on corruption.

In contrast, BN’s manifesto adopts a scatter-shot approach – promising a multitude of goodies to a dizzying selection of voters. Targeted beneficiar­ies include Felda settlers, taxi drivers, civil servants, mothers and women as well as specific programmes for each state. For the first time, the MCA also launched its own manifesto. extended sanctions against Iran and Syria’s escalating conflict.

In the first quarter of this year, oil prices averaged US$66.70 a barrel, surpassing the Budget 2018 estimate of US$52 a barrel, Deputy Finance Minister Datuk Othman Aziz told Parliament recently. He said every US$1 increase in oil price boosts government revenue by RM300 million.

Third, Election Commission statistics show the 21-29 age bracket account for 17% of the electorate while those in the 30-39 age group comprise 23.9%. Together, these two age groups encompass nearly 41% of eligible voters – a cohort that tends to be antiestabl­ishment.

Allied to youth is the increased use of social media in this country. Malaysian Communicat­ions and Multimedia Commission data show there are 24.5 million internet users in Malaysia or 76.9% of the population. Although Pakatan politician­s tend to be more internet savvy than their BN counterpar­ts, the gap is narrowing.

Fourth, former prime minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad’s decision to contest the Langkawi parliament­ary seat under Pakatan’s banner against a party he helmed for 22 years is a conundrum. Will the feisty 92-year-old win more votes for the opposition from millennial­s?

In short, instead of a certainty, GE14 could prove to be a cliff-hanger.

Opinions expressed in this article are the personal views of the writer and should not be attributed to any organisati­on she is connected with. She can be contacted at siokchoo@thesundail­y.com

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