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Friday, October 25, 2013

Najib wants more money for shopping

Almost every single sen of extra revenue collected by the government is immediately expended, instead of contributing towards reducing our debt.
COMMENT
By Tony Pua
The budget proves the Najib administration is only interested in cutting subsidies and raising tax without any intent to tighten the government’s purse strings
Stripping the 2014 Budget of its cosmestic makeup, taking away the glossy distractions and analysing the bare bones will provide an extremely clear indication that nothing much will change in Najib Tun Razak’s second term as both the Finance Minister and Prime Minister.
The Economic Report 2013/14 gave the good news that the expected revenue collection for the current year 2013 is RM224.1 billion, or RM14.4 billion higher than the original budget projection of 208.7 billion.
By right, the RM14.4 billion increase in revenue should have resulted in a lowered the projected budget deficit of 4% to a market-euphoric 2.6%. The budget deficit for 2013 should have shrunk from RM39.9 billion to only RM25.6 billion.
However it didn’t. Despite collecting the significantly higher than expected revenue, the deficit for 2013 remained at RM39.3 billion. It means that almost every single sen of extra revenue collected by the government is immediately expended, instead of contributing towards reducing our debt.
What is interesting when you comb through the expenditure figures is that despite the increase in revenue, the actual Development Expenditure of the government was RM2.7 billion lower than the budgeted RM47.8 billion.
Development Expenditure has the larger economic multiplier effects because it represents investments by the government for future higher returns. Development Expenditure includes building schools, hospitals and other public infrastructure.
The lower than budgeted Development Expenditure, the higher than expected Government Revenue meant that the Government’s Operating Expenditure exceeded the budget massively. The government overspent in Operating Expenditure by RM14.3 billion more the original budget of RM201.9 billion.
The above paints a forlorn picture for the government’s public finances because the BN administration has consistently and significantly overspent the Budget annually for the past 15 years.
They are completely impotent in enforcing financial discipline in government expenditure.
A review of the 2014 Budget will show that it is primed for the same inevitable outcome as those of the past.
More money for shopping
Najib is seeking the parliament to increase the operating expenditure further to RM217.7 billion, despite a massive RM7.3 billion cut in the subsidies budget from RM46.7 billion in 2013 to RM39.4 billion in 2014.
Effectively, that means whatever that is saved from the subsidies reduction goes entirely towards other government operating expenditure.
The biggest beneficiary is the government’s expenditure on “Supplies and Services”, which will enjoy a RM2.0 billion increase in allocation to RM36.6 billion for 2014. It is shocking that the government needs to further increase the budget for “Supplies and Services” especially since the budget for it in 2010 is only RM23.8 billion.
That is a 53.8% increase in spending for “Supplies and Services” in just four years.
Why is the government asking ordinary Malaysians to tighten their belts and suffer higher prices, but the government chooses to continue with its big spending ways with “Supplies and Services”?
The subsidy cuts isn’t going toward reducing our debt or deficit, instead it is just providing more funds for the government to go shopping.
It should be noted that the annual scandals uncovered by the Auditor-General – purchases of ordinary products at outrageous prices are all part of this “Supplies and Services” budget.
One can easily tell that this government has its priorities all wrong, when they decided to increase operating expenditure, but at the same time reduce development expenditure.
From a budget RM47.8 billion in 2013, Najib is proposing a steep cut to only RM44.5 billion in 2014. This means that the 2014 Budget has the lowest proportion of Development Expenditure in Malaysian history, of only 17.0%.
In 2003, more than 30% of the national budget was allocated towards Development Expenditure.
The 2014 Budget paints an obvious picture of a government failing to reform despite a “brave” Goods and Service Tax (GST) proposal. Without any attempt to instil financial spending discipline in the government as exposed above, it does not matter how much additional revenue, budgeted or otherwise, the government is going to receive.
The money will be spent and not saved or invested. Worse, the tax dollars will be spent on the wrong priorities.
Hence given the above context, the proposed and much-hyped GST isn’t a policy of reform. Instead, it is a measure of desperation to continue filling the coffers of the government so as to reduce the need for the BN adminsitration to cut down on its excesses.
Using Petronas dollars, the goverment has created and cultivated a bloated bureaucratic monster that has grown so big over the past decade, Najibnomics takes the easy way out by cutting subsidies and raising taxes to satisfy its out-of-control Operating Expenditure.
Tony Pua is DAP’s MP for Petaling Jaya Utara and the party’s national publicity secretary.

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