Malaysia PM inches forward on reform

Author: 
Razak Ahmad & David Chance | Reuters
Publication Date: 
Fri, 2009-04-24 03:00

Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak’s plan to allow foreigners 100 percent ownership of some service companies was greeted with a yawn by markets yesterday, but it may not be the end of the road for the country’s controversial race-based economic policies.

Race-based quotas are the cornerstone of Malaysia’s economic, and social policies, spelling which political party you join, which business you can own and which university you can attend.

In his announcement, Najib avoided using the word Malay or referring to the so-called “bumiputra” policy — which means “sons of the soil” — that says the Malay and indigenous populations must own 30 percent of business equity for fear that he would antagonize his voter base.

He faces a similar balancing act next week when he is due to announce a liberalization of the financial sector and risks incurring the wrath of Malays, the core of his United Malays National Organization party, or pitch less ambitious reform. Najib’s predecessor, Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, backed off reform under pressure from the party and influential ex-Premier Mahathir Mohamad.

“On one hand, he has to grapple with the dire implications of the impending economic recession. On the other hand, he has to keep the party happy,” said Terence Gomez, a professor at the University of Malaya economics and administration facility.

Ideas on financial reform range from opening up the ATM network to foreign banks to allowing foreign insurance companies greater market access. The fact that Najib has to push reform at all is a sign of how tough things have become economically. “The last time a liberalization of this magnitude was announced was during the Asian financial crisis, when the 30 percent bumiputra ownership was scrapped for manufacturing,” said Citigroup economist Kit Wei Zheng. The government that has ruled Malaysia for 51 years has kept a lid on tensions between races in this Southeast Asian country of 27 million people by promising a bigger slice of the economic cake for all.

When the economy has grown strongly, quotas have allowed Malays to catch up with the richer ethnic Chinese population while at the same time ensuring they too grew wealthier. But the cake is not growing as quickly as promised and the country that is Asia’s third largest exporter after Hong Kong and Singapore has been hit hard by the global downturn, with exports dropping 15.9 percent from a year ago.

During the 10 years of the second Malaysia industrial plan to 2005, economic growth averaged 4.6 percent a year compared with a target of 7.9 percent a year as the country was buffeted by the 1998 Asian financial crisis, its last major recession.

The third industrial plan, under which Malaysians have been promised their country will become as wealthy as rich Western nations by 2020, envisioned average annual growth of 6.3 percent.

Former Premier Abdullah backed down on plans to open up services after he was accused of selling the country to Singapore when he allowed unlimited foreign investment in some areas of the multibillion dollar Iskandar development zone.

Iskandar is located in the Malaysian state of Johor, next to the island state.

Given Najib’s low popularity rating, which stands at just 41 percent in the most recent poll, he may have little room for maneuver in a political party that fears its hegemony could end in elections due by 2013 at the latest.

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