HomeNewsOpinionMalaysia 2.0 needs more than a booming economy

Malaysia 2.0 needs more than a booming economy

Malaysia is on the cusp of being admitted to a club dominated by the advanced economies whose material wealth it has long aspired to emulate. But from economic inequality and a rapidly ageing society to political instability and huge fiscal strains, the challenges are many. Malaysia would do well to fix them rather than obsess solely on GDP growth at this point

July 11, 2023 / 10:10 IST
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Around 2028, Malaysia is likely to attain the status of a high-income economy, as defined by the World Bank, after spending decades as an upper-middle income player. (Source: Bloomberg)

Southeast Asia’s boom years may be behind it, but the region is steadily becoming more prosperous. Few places exemplify those go-go times with their achievement, and excess, like Malaysia. Now the federation is on the cusp of being admitted to a club dominated by the advanced economies whose material wealth it has long aspired to emulate.

As that moment draws closer, the contortions of a new era are readily visible, and they aren’t comforting. In Kuala Lumpura new skyscraper resembles a hangover from a prior generation of policymaking by boondoggle. The swelling ranks of elderly fret the country isn’t prepared for a looming demographic cliff, while a vital export industry worries a flight of talent will mean key opportunities are forfeited. The challenges represented here point to long-term issues that require tackling. Getting this right is way more important than the technical markers beloved by past leaders, like gross domestic product doing better this quarter than the 5.6 percent growth between January and March. Or whether the new central bank chief needs to squeeze inflation a bit harder in coming months.

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The drive for development was a touchstone for decades. The ethos went to absurd proportions, with braggadocio about building the longest this and tallest that. The country fashioned a leadership role among emerging markets; it could lecture the West and have the economic results to get a hearing. Malaysia burnished this status when it slapped controls on capital during the Asian financial crisis in 1998, contrary to the orthodox approach of the International Monetary Fund, and appeared to pay no penalty. Yet it took blows in later  years: The epic 1MDB scandal, the bungled handling of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370’s disappearance and a political system that has become far more democratic — and chaotic. Five men have been prime minister in six years. Through it all, Malaysia is moving toward prosperity, albeit without the bombast.

This coming phase in the country’s history brings First World trials: an aging society, greater demands on the state at a time of enormous fiscal strain — and calls that the spoils of growth be widely shared rather than distributed to an ethnic majority already enjoying significant privilege. Poor decision-making can no longer be explained away as a byproduct of oppression by big economic powers and nefarious corporate interests thousands of miles away, a spectator sport when the combative Mahathir Mohamad was prime minister in his heyday in the 1980s and 1990s. Long seen as a fence-sitter, Malaysia will also have to find a new way to navigate the commercial and diplomatic rivalry between the US and China.