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10 APRIL 2024

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

National car policy a big mistake



Khazanah’s sale of its 43 per cent stake in Proton to DRB-Hicom will close an unhappy chapter for the government’s foray into the production of a so-called ‘national car’.
It was a big mistake from the word go. And millions of ringgit have been lost in the process.
First, we did not have the expertise or comparative advantage to produce cars. The anticipated technology transfer did not take place quickly enough.
The opportunity costs have been tremendous:
- the national car policy indirectly promoted the construction of lucrative tolled highways (and in the case of Penang, tolled bridges and tunnels) for concessionaires; ordinary motorists now carry the burden.
- for a long time, public transport was neglected. We could have had fantastic modern rail, LRT and even tram systems. Instead the development of our train services drew to a screeching halt in the 1980s and today, the train service is reminiscent of the 1970s. And there was little incentive to introduce light rail or tram systems in urban areas outside KL nor was there much political will to introduce bus rapid transit (BRT) systems. In Penang, the ferry service was neglected and the terminal that collapsed on the mainland in the late 1980s was never rebuilt.
- the promotion of the national car, along with easy car loans, led to increasing congestion on the roads, as more and more people relied on private motor vehicles.
- the market was protected and higher import duties for other makes and little competition for Proton meant that Malaysians had to pay a much higher price for imported cars.
- car loans grew to become a significant component of rising household debt.
- the dependence on motor vehicles puts Malaysians at the mercy of higher oil prices.
- the promotion of private motor vehicles is environmentally unsustainable.
- huge investments are needed for road infrastructure, maintenance and widening – money which could have gone into improving our public transport infrastructure and rural transport networks in Sarawak and Sabah.
- hundreds of millions of ringgit have been spent on government subsidies for Proton, investments in Lotus (including Formula One sponsorship), etc.
For all this, one man (TDM) is principally responsible. The national car policy was after all his pet project. And what a tremendous price we have paid. - anilnetto.com

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