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Malaysia investment slump shows need for structural reforms: World Bank

  • Firas Raad, World Bank country manager for Malaysia, said reforms would revitalise Malaysia's investment credentials and boost growth.
Published March 16, 2021

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia risks falling behind in the regional competition for foreign investments due to longstanding policy and structural issues, as it comes in "striking distance" of becoming a high-income nation, the World Bank said.

Foreign direct investments to Malaysia fell 56% to $3.4 billion in 2020, a government report said this month, as the COVID-19 pandemic battered its trade-reliant economy.

The United Nations Conference on Trade and Development in a January report said FDI into Malaysia fell 68% last year, the worst rate in Southeast Asia.

Foreign inflows should remain subdued as Malaysia lags in reforms to policies that drove its 1970s to 1990s boom, said Richard Record, the bank's lead economist for Malaysia.

"The policies and the tools and approaches that worked well in the past, are probably not the same tools and approaches that will be needed in the future," Record told Reuters ahead of Tuesday's launch of the bank's flagship report on Malaysia.

He said there was uncertainty about Malaysia's vision and what it can offer investors compared to regional peers.

Malaysia last year suffered its worst economic performance since the Asian Financial Crisis, contracting 5.6%, largely due to the pandemic.

In its report, "Aiming High - Navigating the next stage of Malaysia's development" - the World Bank expects Malaysia to achieve high-income and developed nation status somewhere between 2024 and 2028.

However, its "escape velocity" from middle income status is slower than other countries that reached high-income status, partly due to many factors within policymakers' control, Record said.

Malaysia's economy grew on average 4% annually over the past decade, a marked deceleration from the 9% yearly growth from 1967 to 1997, according to the report.

Record said Malaysia needs high quality foreign investment to boost growth, but that requires broad reforms in everything from the education system and labour participation to its investment promotional framework.

Firas Raad, World Bank country manager for Malaysia, said reforms would revitalise Malaysia's investment credentials and boost growth.

"While other countries sprinted into high income and developed nation status, Malaysia is jogging slowly," Raad said.

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