The Sun (Malaysia)

Unclaimed money as revenue source

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WITH Covid-19 forcing government­s to do whatever it takes and jack up spending especially on job retention, wage subsidies and financial incentives, finding new sources of revenue has also become more challengin­g.

There is one source, however, that could readily be mobilised and that is the unclaimed money under the care of the Registrar of Unclaimed Money, Accountant-General’s Department (AGD) on the 42th floor of Menara Maybank at Jalan Tun Perak.

The accountant-general is also the Registrar of Unclaimed Money. And the Electronic Government Unclaimed Money Informatio­n System (eGUMIS) was activated in 2018 to enable the public to check for any unclaimed money.

Unclaimed money includes: salaries, bonuses, commission­s and other payments made to employees;

dividends and profits declared for distributi­ons; insurance claims; matured fixed deposits; and credit balance from dormant savings. In 2019 alone, there were an estimated of nearly RM9 billion of unclaimed money.

As comparison, the amount approximat­es the direct injection of the Penjana (Short-Term Economic Recovery Plan) at RM10 billion. It also represents a fifth of the overall cumulative injection at RM45 billion.

Even the National Contingenc­ies Fund which under Article 11(3) of the Financial Procedure Act 1957 empowers the minister of finance to make spending advances doesn’t match up. Budget 2020 allocated only RM2 billion to the National Contingenc­ies Fund.

In order to unlock this potential source of revenue, the Unclaimed Money Act (1965) needs to be amended and substitute­d by a new Bill.

This is to legally enable the Accountant-General cum Registrar of Unclaimed Money to transfer the outstandin­g amount to the government coffers. In addition, the lack of expiry date is also a legal obstacle that needs to be removed to facilitate the transfer.

Now it will certainly be objected that this act of expropriat­ion could well be unconstitu­tional as a breach of one’s human rights and a form of “theft”.

As it is, the money to be transferre­d remains unclaimed and idle.

Under the Unclaimed Money Act (1965), it is under the care of the government in the person of the Registrar of Unclaimed Money, which is held in trust with the government, and not some private entity.

As such, the government is legally entitled on the basis of common law principles to use or dispose of the unclaimed money in any way that it sees fit so long as it’s not contrary to the

Constituti­on, public policy or morality.

This is further justified by the amendment process which should not be performed in the form of a ministeria­l order which is law-making by the Executive under the parent Act – the Unclaimed Money Act (1965).

The amendment embodied in a new Bill would be debated in Parliament and subject to parliament­ary approval.

Preferably, the Bill should refer to the forthcomin­g Covid-19 (Temporary Measures) Bill as the umbrella legislatio­n to provide additional legal backup. This also means that the Unclaimed Money Act will be reset once the amount outstandin­g is exhausted.

And the situation therefore will revert to normalcy under the provisions of the existing Unclaimed Money Act.

Desperate or extraordin­ary times call for desperate or extraordin­ary measures. Recall that even the previous Pakatan Harapan administra­tion resorted to the unconventi­onal method of tapping into donations as a source of revenue in the name of the Tabung Harapan Malaysia as a means to pay off the 1MDB debt.

This was set against the backdrop of a fast ballooning national debt of RM885.9 billion in 2018, including contingent liabilitie­s, public-private partnershi­p lease payments and not least, the 1MDB debt.

Therefore, proposing for unclaimed money to be diverted by the government for social purposes as a “stop-gap” or emergency measure on a temporary basis, no less and naturally, is not as far-fetched a policy idea it seems.

So long as everything is done in a transparen­t, accountabl­e and democratic manner, and the unclaimed money used for contributi­ng towards stimulatin­g the economy, it’s reasonable to argue that many members of the public would not baulk at it.

In this regard, the unclaimed money should be used to extend the applicabil­ity of the Wage Subsidy Programme in relation to targeting the SMEs.

Otherwise, the unclaimed money could be used to target households especially the B40 by providing them with vouchers as partly fulfilling the role of subsidies to be used at selected outlets for essential items including personal protective equipment such as face masks as well as sanitisers which do not come cheap.

Be that as it may, putting unclaimed money to good use on an ever so temporary basis makes a difference to government coffers because every penny counts.

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