Thursday 28 Mar 2024
By
main news image

This article first appeared in Forum, The Edge Malaysia Weekly on March 20, 2023 - March 26, 2023

The return of political stability with the formation of the unity government a little more than 100 days ago and the bleak prospects in many markets have placed Malaysia back on the radar screens of the foreign business and investment community.

This has been evident, especially during my visits abroad to promote Malaysia, since being appointed the minister of international trade and industry in December 2022. From Jakarta to Davos, Abu Dhabi to Milan and, most recently, Singapore and Seoul for trade and investment missions, we were met with renewed interest by current and potential investors.

The goodwill is still evident and many international investors have for many years wished for Malaysia to again be one of the top performing economies in Asean, instead of a sliding mid-table nation in the region. Thankfully, Malaysia’s stellar economic performance of 8.7% gross domestic product growth for 2022 — the highest in Asean last year — together with a low unemployment rate of 3.6% in December 2022 and low headline inflation of 3.2% despite global inflationary pressures mean that we must be taken seriously. These numbers also validate the effectiveness of many of our pandemic policy responses and aid measures.

While some international businesses do reminisce about the good old days of the low-cost manufacturing ecosystem, they do understand that this is not sustainable in the long run. Further, given the global inflation and disrupted supply chains that have increased costs, we must work hard to enhance the positive considerations of operating in Malaysia. This is where the Ministry of International Trade and Industry (Miti), together with our agencies, have our reform priorities cut out for us.

Since joining Miti, I have repeatedly stressed to the ministry’s officials and its agencies that we must rethink our strategic approach to align trade, industrial and investment policies if we want to unlock future growth and set our economy on a more sustainable path.

Besides our trade figures (which matter a great deal because Malaysia is a trading nation), what is also at stake is the future of our small and medium enterprises (SMEs), better-paying jobs for countless Malaysians and the well-being of their families: these are our overarching key performance indicators (KPIs). To that end, we have been guided by our priorities, the key ones of which are:

a.     First, to increase trade growth and ensure an inclusive and sustainable global trade environment. When it comes to free trade agreements (FTAs), feedback from all segments of society — government, private sector, civil society and individuals — will be taken into account when conducting cost-benefit analyses. This facilitates more efficient decision-making and ensures the FTAs’ benefits are aligned to our socio-economic priorities such as supporting SMEs, closing rural-urban gaps and fostering gender empowerment. In short, our people remain our top priority in new FTA negotiations, including the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) and the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP), where we have worked closely with our traditional as well as new trade partners.

b.     Second, ESG and digitalisation are key to future-proofing our industries, especially the SMEs. Disregard ESG and our exporters’ market access and businesses will suffer. To prevent that, Miti is currently crafting the National Environmental, Social and Governance Industry Framework (i-ESG), for the manufacturing sector to adapt to ESG. This comprises four components, namely, standards, financial support and incentives, capacity building, and market mechanisms, including carbon trading and carbon pricing.

The return of political stability with the formation of the unity government has placed Malaysia back on the radar screens of the foreign business and investment community.”

On digitalisation, I once did an interview on RTM, where they also invited the founder of Claire Organics, Ms Louise Chu, a government grant recipient who had successfully digitalised and expanded her business during the pandemic. There are many micro, small and medium enterprise (MSME) owners like her who must be supported digitally to scale up, or to partake in the green economy, because these MSMEs contribute 37.4% to our GDP and employ 47.8% of Malaysia’s working population. Our future economic expansion will also depend on our MSMEs’ ability to secure and adapt to green technology.

c.     Third, we must attract high-quality investments that create jobs and encourage reinvestments. The global economy is changing fast and competition for foreign direct investment (FDI) within Asean is intense, so we must create a super-conducive environment, particularly for the focus industries in our New Investment Policy (NIP), that is, higher value electrical and electronics (E&E), medical devices, pharmaceuticals, digital economy, aerospace and chemicals, as well as sectors such as electric vehicles (EV), data centres and food security. We are also determined to move Malaysia up the value chain in manufacturing and services, which is vital for us to transition to a more tech advanced economic model, with a higher complexity.

d.     Fourth, Miti must ensure that Malaysia regains its glory as the investment destination of choice in Southeast Asia. Since December 2022, my team and I have been busy positioning Malaysia as stable, pro-business, pro-investment, and pro-trade. But we know these promises must be substantiated by real policy reforms and the ease of doing business. These include the proposed creation of a one-stop centre via the Miti e-Gov platform; reforming the halal certification process; creating a competitive industry and services ecosystem; ensuring a robust talent pipeline for key sectors; and appropriate skilling, reskilling and upskilling programmes for industries’ human resources (HR) needs.

I have repeatedly emphasised the need to set appropriate KPIs and monitor outcomes of key projects. For example, on FDI and domestic direct investments (DDI) received, we must religiously track, among others, the number of jobs created, tax revenue generated, ESG compliance level and the corporate social responsibility (CSR) contribution to surrounding communities.

On improving the ease of doing business, we must identify and resolve the pain points tracked in the investors’ journey, from the decision to invest right up to the operationalisation of their facilities and beyond. I personally do not perceive a 24-month gestation period between decision-making and operationalisation as acceptable. We can and must do better if we want to keep attracting and retaining high-quality investors!

The logic is simple: investments create economic activities, which create business for SMEs and jobs for our people. For example, the RM264.6 billion that Malaysia attracted in approved investments for the year 2022 are expected to create 140,370 new job opportunities, jobs which pay a decent wage.

With a highly capable team at Miti and its agencies, appropriate strategies and properly monitored execution, I am confident Malaysia can achieve so much more in nurturing industry, expanding trade and attracting investments.

Some of our early efforts are already bearing fruit, through confirmed commitments from major multinational corporations (MNCs) such as Tesla, Intel Corp, Amazon Web Services, Shopee’s parent — Sea Ltd — the Yondr Group, INSEACT, Samsung Engineering, SKC, Lotte Fine Chemicals, Hyundai, COWAY, Lotte Energy Materials and Posco Holdings in the last couple of months. Gaining commitments from these major MNCs validates our belief in Malaysia’s huge potential. For Miti, this is only the beginning, so watch this space!


Tengku Datuk Seri Zafrul Abdul Aziz is minister of international trade and industry

Save by subscribing to us for your print and/or digital copy.

P/S: The Edge is also available on Apple's AppStore and Androids' Google Play.

      Print
      Text Size
      Share