Malaysia's new economic model: Making choices
By Professor Dr Danny Quah Published: 2010/04/14
In June 2009, Malaysia's Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak asked if I would serve on his council of economic advisers, the National Economic Advisory Council (NEAC). This council was to come up with a New Economic Model for the country.
It would not be a group that got together every month to fine-tune the economy. This council was not to sift through the entrails of inventory reports, and propose economic policies to lean against the wind.
No, the task assigned by the NEAC was to put Malaysia back on a high-growth path, reinstating Vision 2020 that Malaysia would within these next 10 years achieve the status of a developed nation.
The council was to do this against a post-1997 background of annual economic growth having nearly halved; investment as a fraction of GDP having plummeted to 50 per cent of what it used to be (private investment, to one third); with the economy relying on a workforce of which four-fifths were educated only up to high-school level while over one quarter of the local public university graduates remained unemployed six months after graduation, and with the human capital brain-drain becoming freshly re-energised (350,000 Malaysians in 2008 lived and worked abroad, half of them with university education).
By 2007, Malaysia seemed as far from the World Bank's notion of a high-income economy as a decade earlier, in contrast to economies such as Slovakia, the Czech Republic, and Poland, all of whom had by 2008 broken through that high-income boundary but had earlier been roughly at level with Malaysia.
Yet, Malaysia had been previously identified by the Spence Commission on Growth and Development as one of only 13 countries in the world that had for more than 25 years grown at rates exceeding 7 per cent annually.
At different times since the 1960s, despite having a population not even one-third of the UK's, Malaysia had been the world's largest producer of tin, rubber, and palm oil.
Today, 40 per cent of Malaysia's households earn less than US$15 a day (RM1500 a month), two thirds the World Bank's low-income threshold.
With Malaysia's domestic income distribution what it is, only one million people pay income tax at the highest rate of 26 per cent; there is no goods and services tax.
Oil and gas revenues have, on occasion, provided up to nearly half the government's total revenues; although by 2014 Malaysia is expected to become a net importer of oil. As much as 20 per cent of the nation's public expenditures routinely get spent on subsidies that keep prices of basic goods low but distort reality for Malaysia's citizens.
Certain policy questions - for instance, monetary control and inflation; financial markets oversight, regulation, and development - are outside the NEAC's remit, and rightly so.
In Malaysia, all those issues were taken care of by others, and already attain world-class standards of performance.
The large facts I have just described seemed to me (and many other observers) precisely the ones raising the critical, first-order challenges for economic policy in Malaysia. The problem was how to organise them coherently and understand their resolution.
But there is, further, the other critical, first-order challenge unmentioned so far: namely, Malaysia's 40-year-old programme of affirmative action.
I say unmentioned but of course that is not how the outside world viewed this. The international press emphasised most of all this dimension to Malaysia's policy framework; I will bring this out further in the discussion that follows.
For now, however, I just note that some foreign financial houses I spoke to about NEAC work downplayed the significance of all the other problems I have mentioned. They said to me, "Malaysia needs to fix its affirmative-action programme; everything else follows."
That proposition, by itself, is almost surely demonstrably false. On the other hand, the perception is obviously one that colours the views of many market participants who actually shift significant financial resources.
Article 153 of Malaysia's Constitution, ratified in 1957, requires that the king protect the special position in Malaysia of the Bumiputeras (ethnic Malays and a small number of other indigenous groups). The Article allows the federal government to protect Bumiputera interests by establishing quotas for public scholarships, public education, and the civil service.
In 1971, following racial riots, declaration of a state of national emergency, and suspension of the parliament, the then-Prime Minister Tun Abdul Razak - father of the current Prime Minister - introduced the New Economic Policy (NEP). This policy sought to eradicate poverty regardless of race and to eliminate the identification of ethnicity with economic function.
The enabler for both these goals would be rapid economic growth, the speedy expansion of the economic pie to divide across all Malaysians, so that no subgroup would feel absolutely disadvantaged.
A key feature of the NEP was its effort to raise Bumiputera equity ownership from 2.4 per cent in 1971 up to 30 per cent within two decades.
What has the NEP's progress been? At a fixed absolute income threshold (its exact value holding no significance as long as it's fixed and applies across the board), poverty rates for Bumiputeras declined from 65 per cent in 1970 to 5 per cent in 2007, while that for Malaysians overall, from 49 per cent to 4 per cent; Chinese, 26 per cent to 1 per cent; Indians, 39 per cent to 2 per cent.
Wealth figures are widely disputed but most sources give Bumiputera equity ownership of 2-4 per cent in 1971; official KL Stock Exchange statistics suggest Bumiputera shares of 29 per cent by 1990 and 37 per cent by 1996.
That was the background when in August 2009 Najib delivered his keynote speech at the NEAC's inaugural meeting, asking the council for ideas and direction to transform Malaysia into a developed nation by 2020.
Malaysia, having successfully drawn foreign investment as a low-cost producer was populated with businesses that, at the margin, had neither incentive nor vision to climb the quality ladder.
Infrastructure and expertise in key areas remained under-developed. For Malaysia as a small open economy, the global trading environment has already shown time and again how it could change suddenly, as it had just done during the 2008 global financial crisis, and further looked set to change even more dramatically but less suddenly from longer-term global carbon considerations.
Reforms started in Malaysia by the Central Bank, the Securities Commission, and others were already liberalising capital markets and taking forward expertise and comparative advantage in Islamic Finance. Government transformation work had already begun to introduce meritocracy and performance measurement in the public sector itself.
What could the council do to help Malaysia relocate its strategic position in the global economy?
The New Economic Model
In the ensuing six months, the council met four times in Kuala Lumpur. At these meetings, council members listened to presentations, mapped strategic visions, and debated subtle differences in emphases. Now and then, we would as a group takes such a big-picture perspective that we would form a collective blind spot over the single largest difficulty in whatever we were discussing, completely missing the key concern.
Now and then, we would micro-drill down and heatedly argue over whether the appropriate punctuation should be a comma or a semi-colon. But all of us remained energetic and enthusiastic and committed, and sometime during the 15 hours of meeting each day, or in seemingly interminable rounds of emails 24/7, we would correct course and converge on the right balance.
We agreed our report had to be in two steps: First, to identify, propose, and persuade on the over-arching framework and strategic vision; Second, to steer from that vision, its delivery to be led by the executive branch and implemented by the civil service.
Without successfully convincing on the first, the second would never be executed. Without successfully executing the second, the first would have been in vain.
The single big-picture vision was that Malaysia had to become an advanced economy by 2020. Sure that included the Malaysian economy generating sufficiently high income. But that vision also included a subtext of inclusiveness - so that the poorest and most vulnerable in society would be taken care of and one of sustainability, so that higher economic growth would continue into the future, not at the expense of degrading the environment for generations to follow.
The council concluded many of Malaysia's malperforming situations were inter-linked. Underperformance in one setting was the rational response to underperformance in the next: Why work hard in school if you're convinced it doesn't benefit you afterwards? Why work hard in your job if your productivity is held back by so many unskilled people around you? In these circumstances, what is needed is a big push to break out of that vicious circle of under-performance.
But disruption would be needed not just in your own circle of school-mates and colleagues, but everywhere in the economy. Hence, we emphasised the big push of economic transformation needed to break the logjam of entrenched, special interests. We sought to build momentum and confidence in the mindset of citizens that more positive changes would continue to emerge but all of us needed to keep pushing.
This economic transformation would come with reform along eight strategic initiatives - slightly more concrete but only slightly:
* Re-energise the private sector so it could lead the process of economic growth;
* Re-energise the private sector so it could lead the process of economic growth;* Develop a high-quality workforce;
* Develop a high-quality workforce;* Create a competitive domestic economy;
* Create a competitive domestic economy;* Streamline and make efficient the public sector as facilitator for private enterprise, when in the past large government-linked corporations (GLCs) had been viewed as competitors instead;
* Streamline and make efficient the public sector as facilitator for private enterprise, when in the past large government-linked corporations (GLCs) had been viewed as competitors instead;* Move to affirmative action that is (a) transparent, (b) market-friendly, (c) merit-based, and (d) conditioned on need ;
* Move to affirmative action that is (a) transparent, (b) market-friendly, (c) merit-based, and (d) conditioned on need ;* Build infrastructure for a knowledge base;
* Build infrastructure for a knowledge base;* Enhance the sources of growth; and
* Enhance the sources of growth; and * Ensure the sustainability of growth.
* Ensure the sustainability of growth. Early on, the council decided it couldn't be swayed by arguments about whether it was doing something truly novel or new or different. The only thing that mattered should be whether a proposal for implementation was likely to succeed and whether it would bring the highest benefits to the greatest number. Good ideas are hard enough to come by generally; why straitjacket oneself to not look at certain of them? This isn't an exam: why not copy good ideas however and wherever you find them?
Nonetheless, having come to the end of putting in place the over-arching vision, we nonetheless could see several ways where our approach differed from earlier ones.
First, we focused on growth through enhancements in productivity, not the sheer brute force of capital accumulation. It's not that we ignored the latter - if we had, we wouldn't have expressed concern about the sharp fall off in Malaysia's investment.
Instead, it is that we figured it would be innovative processes and cutting-edge technologies that would provide the surest platform for Malaysia's producing high value-added goods and services in the future.
Second, we envisioned economic growth being private sector-led and market-driven, no longer dominated by large public investment through GLCs in selected economic sectors.
Third, we described the benefits of the government moving towards local autonomy in decision-making. State and local authorities needed to be empowered to develop and support more of their own growth initiatives - without unnecessarily duplicating function or project. While flat-out competition to produce identical public goods, over and over, would be obviously wasteful, a little competition between local authorities is healthy.
Fourth, we wanted to encourage local geographies to emerge - whether in clusters or corridors - as long as they exploited economies of scale and concentration, and thus raised productivity over the long term.
Fifth, we saw the need for continuing government support of private industry, as long as that support was geared towards innovation, entrepreneurial risk-taking, and high value-added goods and services. It would be those general principles that guided support, not past principles of picking winners.
Sixth, we welcomed talent and skills from everywhere: as long as anyone, local or foreign, is able to contribute to Malaysia's transformation to an innovative, high-value added economy, they would be accepted and welcomed.
Finally, we emphasised how the global economy was changing, and we figured Malaysia's strategic position within it needed to re-orient as well. For the entire 20th century, the world's strongest economic powers have been the US, Western Europe, and Japan.
Malaysia, like many others, tuned production and supply networks to service those markets. While we weren't arguing that policy should be based on the economic centre of the world suddenly shifting tens of thousands of kilometers east, we felt that it was reasonable to acknowledge the change in that global landscape, and to develop further new regional networks centred on the fast-growing, Asia-focused emerging economies.
In a nutshell, that's it. That's the New Economic Model (NEM).
After, for now
For a relatively technocratic problem and solution, the NEM announcement on March 30 by Najib attracted unexpectedly heavy attention from the international press. All the major world press worked in discussion of Malaysia's affirmative action programme, both historical and prospective.
The New York Times (March 30 2010) described the revision of Malaysia's policy to focus on need, not race.
The Wall Street Journal ran articles on two successive days (March 30 and April 1 2010), talking about the recalibration of Malaysia's decades-old affirmative action and asserting how "the New Economic Policy has hindered Malaysia's competitiveness in recent years. The US and European Union have singled out Malaysia's insistence on maintaining preferences for ethnic Malay-owned businesses in government procurement contracts for stalling the development of free-trade pacts".
The Journal's Opinion Asia column (April 1 2010) contextualised Najib's speech by observing how "A few years ago it was inconceivable that a Malaysian premier would express dissatisfaction with the 'rent-seeking and patronage' inherent in the country's four-decade-old affirmative action policies and call for a more 'transparent' system based on merit and need. Former Prime Minister Tun Mahathir Mohamad used to label people with such ideas 'extremists'."
Great cynicism continues to be expressed by some of my friends, Malaysian and otherwise, who say they have seen over the years many politician promises made only to be broken subsequently.
Personally, however, I see great optimism instead. Why? I contrast Najib's March 30 speech with what I imagine someone wanting an easy ride through life might have said, in light of both the general scepticism and fervent fear-mongering in the run-up to the event.
Two days before the NEM announcement, Kevin Brown wrote in the Financial Times (March 28 2010) how there was "widespread doubt" that Najib would take any political risk at all of dismantling Bumiputera special privileges, not least in a new economic model that might greatly dilute that historical affirmative action.
James Hookway's Wall Street Journal article of March 22 2010 gave considerable space to Datuk Ibrahim Ali, a right-wing Malay MP, and to Perkasa, the NGO that he founded devoted to defending Malay rights, reporting how "Ibrahim reckons Najib is misreading the depth of anger many Malays feel towards any change in a policy that has given many a leg up and helped to build a large middle class."
The Economist (March 11 2010) extrapolated from their interview with Najib and with others to sub-lead their article, "Najib wavers over undoing affirmative-action policies".
Not least, of course, there is the now-infamous interview Ibrahim Ali granted Al-Jazeera on March 29 2010, the eve of the launch of the NEM, where he gets bleeped three times speaking, with some vitriol, on the position of other races in Malaysia.
Domestic reporting too emphasised the emerging political tensions.
Now, contrast what Najib actually said with what all these observers predicted he would say. Think of the political onslaught, the wavering, the self-protection going on around him.
If Najib had wanted an easy way out, he could have taken it and no one would have been surprised. He didn't. He continues along that difficult but worthwhile path.
One final comment. In this international reporting, by far the greatest attention has gone towards Malaysia's New Economic Policy and its possible adjustment. In the council's work, we knew this was important, but so too were all other seven strategic initiatives.
Affirmative action matters. No significant advanced country in the world gets by without affirmative action programmes of some kind - it is in human nature to take care of the weakest and most vulnerable in our society.
So too for the members of council, where that bottom 40 per cent of the Malaysian population is targeted to receive significant help and attention. But fixing all the other problems matters too: it's one big push for all of them.
The council has now finished Step 1. Step 2 starts. Everyone likes to say, Now the hard work begins - as if I've never heard that one before. But I am energised. I continue to do this work (and, for the record, for practically no pay compared to outside options) because I think things actually are looking up in Malaysia.
The writer is an NEAC council member & professor of Economics at Department Of Economics, London School Of Economics & Political Science.
Read more: Malaysia's new economic model: Making choices http://www.btimes.com.my/Current_News/BTIMES/articles/quah/Article/index_html#ixzz0wiV5vMIT
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Monday, 16 August 2010
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