As expected, Najib's NEM all talk, no action |
PUTRAJAYA - Malaysia unveiled plans on Friday to set up a second sovereign wealth fund, which would invest proceeds from the sales of stakes in government-controlled companies as it seeks to attract investment and boost competitiveness.
However, it offered no clear time frame for the scheme and avoided the contentious issue of economic preferences for the Malay majority.
Prime Minister Najib Razak has pledged to reform an economy whose investment rates have not recovered from the 1998 Asian financial crisis and where foreign direct investment has fallen off a cliff from the heady days of the early 1990s.
"The government should consider capping its ownership of strategic companies to 30 percent of issued shares and adopt less invasive strategic control methods such as golden shares, industry policies and foreign ownership," the National Economic Advisory Council said in a report.
MISSING SOCIAL ACTION, TIMELINE
The report is part of Malaysia's "New Economic Model" which has been unveiled over the past few months. [ID:nSGE659090] and while most of the intentions have been lauded by economists, implementation remains a key barrier.
Missing from the report were concrete measures to reform the New Economic Policy which affords the country's majority ethnic Malays preferential quotas including for businesses, although it did pledge to target aid at the poorest 40 percent of Malaysians, regardless of race.
Investors have complained that abuse of the four-decade old policy has spawned a patronage-ridden economy and eroded Malaysia's competitiveness compared to faster reforming neighbours including Indonesia.
The NEM promised to continue with affirmative action but said that it would "market friendly" and aimed at eliminating "rent-seekers" in the economy to reduce corruption.
The plan also called for the government to implement a goods and services tax, a policy that has been repeatedly shelved for fear of upsetting voters, and to cut back on spending in the medium-term.
SOVEREIGN WEALTH FUND
Government-linked companies (GLCs) which have long been criticised for crowding out the private sector, will be required to divest assets and will see more of their equity sold.
They also will have to work under new oversight to monitor their activities and their budgets, the report said.
Amomg these government companies, Sime Darby was recently hit by huge cost overruns and charges of mismanagement in its energy division that pushed it to losses in the second half of this year and triggered the ousting of its top executive. [ID:nSGE6AF055]
Crucially, the funds generated from the divestment programme will be channeled into a sovereign wealth fund that will be accountable and have to disclose its investments, rather than putting the funds into the state budget or into an existing fund called Khazanah which is under government control.
- Reuters
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