Bridget Welsh
Malaysiakini
Oct 25, 2013
Malaysiakini
Oct 25, 2013
COMMENT
Malaysia’s Budget 2014 represents the most important economic policy initiative
of Najib Razak’s premiership. After scraping through GE13 and deal-making his
way to an unchallenged presidency of Umno, there are no immediate political
obstacles undermining his ability to implement the economic reforms he has repeatedly
promised investors and international financial institutions such as the
International Monetary Fund.
Najib
has gone on record to claim that he will reduce government debt, tighten
spending and make the Malaysian economy more competitive. International
watchers were initially bought over by all the different acronyms coined by the
government, such as the ETP (Economic Transformation Programme).
However,
they have become increasingly negative with regard to Najib’s financial
management which continued to involve massive overspending and this led to a
negative rating by Fitch in July this year. With debt reaching 54 percent of
gross domestic product, near the 55 percent government self-imposed limit,
Malaysia stands on the precipice of future downgrades.
As
the Budget debate begins, it is important to highlight some of the key issues
and patterns that have characterised Najib’s tenure as prime minister.
A
political adept captive
First
of all, it is necessary to appreciate that arguably more than any other
premier, Najib uses the Budget to win political support. His four years in
office has seen the practice of seeking public approval, time and again. He has
not been willing to make hard decisions, especially at Budget time.
This
deep-seated insecurity of Najib has led to Budget after Budget full of goodies.
This was put down to electioneering. He no longer has this excuse.
This
Budget will test whether Najib is confident enough to make unpopular decisions,
or continue to be beholden to his need to seek public approval. If the Budget
includes additional cash handouts such as BR1M (Bantuan Rakyat 1Malaysia), this
is a sure sign that Najib is still not on firm political ground.
Second,
Najib has been adept at spreading out the pain. His approach to the reduction
of subsidies has been to do it slowly, hoping that the public can be duped by
these initiatives and not lay blame on him. Petrol and gas prices have
increased through this method.
Energy
subsidies are one of the main areas placing great strain on government
finances. They are keenly watched by the public who depend on these subsidies,
especially in states like East Malaysia where incomes are comparatively lower
and transportation costs higher. The approach has been to wean the public off
these subsidies, but without taking blame for doing so.
The
same can be said for other measures on revenue that involve public spending,
such as the recent increase on cigarette taxes. He hides the pain and showcases
the sweet, all of which is a pattern of Najib’s financial management.
Spending
without development
Third,
spending has reached record proportions. Najib has spent much more than any
other premier in real terms and on an annual basis. When one looks at spending
in the last two years, he has shattered records.
Najib
has outspent his own father, Abdul Razak Hussein, Tunku Abdul Rahman Putra,
Hussein Onn and Abdullah Ahmad Badawi and is now going after the record of the
spending of the entire Dr Mahathir Mohamad’s 22-year period.
The
place to look at this is not the Budget speech but the supplementary budget,
which is passed by Parliament often without effective debate to cover what was
spent after the fact. Last month Najib’s government passed a supplementary
budget of RM15 billion! This is the spending beyond what was originally
forecast. Indeed, Najib is a big spender.
Fourth,
the spending has not been targeted beyond seeking political support. Let’s take
the Bumiputera Economic Empowerment (BEE) Agenda. It has no targets, no
timeline, no clear objectives, no parameters for assessment and frankly no
rationale beyond seeking political support.
The
racial basis of BEE is seen by the market as limiting competition and hurting
the development of the Malay community, as it increases their dependence on the
government rather than nurturing globally competitive entrepreneurship.
It
is poised to foster more corruption in a system that is deeply burdened by
graft and is skewed to the elites with access within the system, the
Umnoputras. The RM30 billion in spending for BEE is pure politics.
BR1M
is another measure blinded by politics. How much have people been able to bring
longer security from these short-term handouts? At best it has been a band-aid
on the fiscal challenges on high household debt – also at record levels of 70
percent of household incomes – and the increasing high cost of living. What is
clear is that the spending has centred on short-term initiatives, not long-term
development.
Fifth,
Najib has yet to clearly outline his development priorities. There is little
development planning going on. In fact, the development budget under Najib has
shrunk.
Unlike
Abdullah, who presented a framework to address development and poverty,
including an initiative on rural communities, the broader vision is missing
from Najib’s planning. Abdullah did not meet his targets, but put on the table
initiatives that generated discussion, such as the development of the halal
industry and northern corridors.
All
current indicators are that manufacturing exports are on the decline. The only
industry that seems to be coming out of the Najib government are the
money-making big infrastructure projects such as the MRT (Mass Rapid Transit)
expansion. In fact, Najib’s development model appears to replicate the “big”
projects and spending of Mahathir, with little attention to how this spending
is affecting ordinary people and its long-term implications.
Some
go as far to suggest this big project focus is about making money for the
elite, rather than promoting development. Where ordinary people fit in, and how
Malaysia is to raise incomes, promote jobs and improve the quality of life for
citizens is not fully clear.
Najib
may be be touted as a technocrat by market watchers, but as a leader focused on
development, he has yet to effectively address these concerns.
Managing
the money
The
Najib administration continues to highlight that it knows how to manage public
funds. This claim has increasingly come under scrutiny and raised scepticism.
There
are three issues: First is Malaysia’s fiscal deficit – now at record
proportions as a result of Najib’s spending. The related second is Malaysia’s
revenue shortfall. The third is the excessive government debt.
It
is in this vein that the Najib pre-budget spin has been assuring that Malaysia
will reach a target of 3.5% fiscal deficit and increase revenue through the
introduction of the Goods and Services Tax (GST).
The
reality around each of these measures is clouded by exaggerated estimates of
growth and performance in the economy (which has been slowing and on the
decline), a lack of transparency in how funds are being managed in different
accounts and through different government-linked companies and with less than
clear estimates on actually how much the GST will bring in as a source of
revenue.
There
are no timelines and this creates a void in credibility. The costs of these
measures have not been outlined, as the burden for revenue moves regressively
towards ordinary citizens irrespective of their incomes and backgrounds with
little attention to the real wastage for taxpayers – corruption.
By
most domestic and international measures, corruption has increased under
Najib’s tenure, not decreased. The sources for additional growth in the
economy, especially in light of global uncertainties, are not being made clear.
The pattern is to rest on the past, with increasing dependence on oil and gas
revenue, commodities and government spending to promote growth, rather than
prepare for the future.
The
Najib administration has engaged in spending cuts: these have come from
operating expenditure in the funds to implement policies and carry out
government policies. While directly providing civil servants with more money as
salaries, the budgets they have had to work with have shrunk.
Najib
is the only premier in the history of Malaysia that has repeatedly cut funds
for the implementation of government policy. The effect is that government
departments are now struggling to actually carry out programmes compared to the
past. While everyone can agree that tighter spending can improve efficiency,
butchering cuts in operating funds is not helpful for governance.
This
is one of the ironies of Najib’s spending – he has increased allocations to
salaries which cannot be easily reduced and are in effect permanent increases
in outlays, while simultaneously hurting government programming through cuts to
actual governance. These cuts can be seen in lower funding of maintenance of
facilities, less engagement with citizenry and less funds for training and
improving the quality of the civil service.
Today,
Budget 2014 will be announced. We will see whether Najib uses his ‘victories’ –
however imperfect – for setting Malaysia on a more financially viable track for
quality governance for all Malaysians. The test is whether there is a clear
direction that is putting Malaysians first and looking out for future
generations.
Whatever
happens today – from goodies to the GST – Najib will be showing how he
envisions the country’s development. One can hope that he shows leadership in
making fair decisions, rather than continuing the pattern of trying to play
politics. One can hope that he can come out of the shadow of trying to please
and point to a path for inclusive development for all Malaysians.
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