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One Year in, Mahathir Gets Mixed Result on Malaysian Economy

One Year in, Mahathir Gets Mixed Result on Malaysian Economy

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A year after a shock election win, Malaysia’s government is fighting perceptions that its management of the economy deserves poor marks.

Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad and his team have spent much of their first year pledging to clean up the government’s finances in the wake of the scandal around the state investment fund 1MDB. They were saddled with a bigger fiscal hole than expected and state entities needing more than $5 billion in rescue funds.

One Year in, Mahathir Gets Mixed Result on Malaysian Economy

The jump in sentiment following Mahathir’s win has steadily waned. The government has made slow progress in boosting revenue and identifying new growth drivers for an economy stuck in a middle-income trap.

The administration scored negative or mediocre grades on six of 10 categories across the economy, according to a Bloomberg survey of economists conducted April 23 to May 3. Mahathir’s team received the worst grade for government revenue, with two of 12 economists judging the government “poor” in that category, and seven assigning a “below-average” rating.

One Year in, Mahathir Gets Mixed Result on Malaysian Economy

“Investor sentiments have swung from euphoric to frustration” since the government took power last May, said Hak Bin Chua, an economist at Maybank Kim Eng Research Pte in Singapore. “To be fair, Mahathir inherited a fragile fiscal balance sheet and a ballooning debt burden that was worse than expected,” though the government might have over-promised on what they could deliver, he said.

Voters are similarly disenchanted. For the first time since the Mahathir administration took power last May, a majority of voters sees the country headed in the wrong direction, according to a March 5-11 poll by Merdeka Center, a research company based in Selangor, Malaysia. The random poll includes 1,204 voters aged 21 years and older across all states in the country.

“We are at the moment working on how we can stick to our promises,” Mahathir told reporters in Putrajaya on Thursday. “But at this moment, no final decision has been made."

Here are the main tension points for Malaysia’s weakening economic and investment outlook:

Budget

Mahathir pushed the budget deficit to a five-year high of 3.7% of gross domestic product last year, and projecting it would be trimmed to 3.4% in 2019. While the administration’s scrapping of the goods-and-services tax slashed its revenue, they’re counting on state oil company dividends and a range of fresh taxes to plug the hole.

Moody’s Investors Service -- which affirmed Malaysia’s rating at A3 in December -- sees the economy’s resilience and debt funding as fragile. The government has narrower revenue sources thanks to a credit-negative abolition of the GST, and is now more reliant on oil-related and non-tax revenues, according to Moody’s analyst Anushka Shah. Debt affordability is weak, with interest payments accounting for 13.1% of revenues in 2018 -- far higher than the A-rated median of 5.6%, she said.

Rising oil prices may help to mitigate some of the risks to the budget, but weaker global growth could weigh on Malaysia’s economy and export prospects this year, said Stephen Schwartz, head of Asia-Pacific sovereign ratings at Fitch Ratings.

Investment

Investors have turned more bearish on Malaysia this year, with the ringgit sliding against the dollar and equities among the worst performers in Asia. Bonds have also taken a knock on news that Norway’s sovereign wealth fund will cut emerging-market debt including Malaysian securities, and FTSE Russell warned it may drop Malaysia from its world bond index.

“The stock market’s lagging, the currency’s lagging, the exports are lagging” and there’s “not much going on that’s giving investors confidence,” said Arv Sreedhar, a Singapore-based executive director and general counsel at Atlantic Partners Asia, a financial consultancy and investment firm primarily catering to high-wealth investors.

Mahathir has made a renewed push to lure investors, having pulled back from a hard-line stance on China from earlier in his term and renegotiating a prized $11 billion rail deal along the east coast. He said April 28 that he’s considering Chinese companies’ request for a one-stop center to facilitate investments in Malaysia.

What Bloomberg’s Economists Say

“Exports and investment are already weak spots in the economy. Both would be exacerbated by heightened trade tensions and market turbulence.”
--Tamara Henderson, ASEAN economist
Click here to read the full report

Growth Outlook

The growth outlook has weakened this year on the back of subdued global demand and rising trade tensions, though the government is still betting it can achieve 4.9% expansion in 2019, up from 4.7% last year.

Over the longer term, analysts point to a lack of growth drivers. While expansion in the range of 4.4% to 4.7% might still be “relatively robust,” the government needs policies to lift potential growth rates and boost education and labor markets, said Cassey Lee, coordinator of the regional economic studies program at the ISEAS Yusof Ishak Institute in Singapore.

Inflation has been very subdued in the past year, mainly due to the scrapping of the GST and lower fuel costs, with consumer prices even contracting in January and February. Earlier this week, the central bank cut its benchmark interest rate for the first time since 2016, a preemptive move to help spur the economy.

One Year in, Mahathir Gets Mixed Result on Malaysian Economy

--With assistance from Anisah Shukry.

To contact the reporters on this story: Michelle Jamrisko in Singapore at mjamrisko@bloomberg.net;Cynthia Li in Hong Kong at cli205@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Nasreen Seria at nseria@bloomberg.net;Yudith Ho at yho35@bloomberg.net

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