KUALA LUMPUR (May 10, 2012):
Malaysia''s economy is expected to grow by a slower 4.5 per cent this year due
to weaker external demand, according to the United Nations Economic and Social
Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP).
This is in comparison to the 5.1
per cent in 2011 from 7.2 per cent in 2010. ESCAP said the fiscal deficit
remained at around 5.6 per cent of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in 2011
after declining from 7 per cent in 2009 to 5.6 per cent in 2010.
"This was largely due to
wide ranging subsidies on the expenditure side and delayed introduction of the
goods and services tax (GST)on the revenue side, which remains heavily reliant
on oil revenue," it added.
International Centre for
Education in Islamic Finance (ICEIF) Professor Emeritus Datuk Dr Mohamed Ariff
Abdul Kareem said the local economy would be spurred by domestic demand. However,
Mohamed Ariff said Malaysia’s budget deficit is a major concern.
"There are already signs
that Malaysia''s credit rating is under pressure with the risk of downgrading.
"There is a need to rein in
expenditure and increase tax revenue," he added, at the launch and
briefing of ESCAP''s Economic and Social Survey of Asia and the Pacific 2012
here today. Mohamed Ariff said Malaysia''s fiscal deficit at above three per
cent is a concern.
"The large deficit is
attributed to wide-ranging subsidies (four per cent of GDP) and heavy reliance
on oil revenue (40 per cent). "The saving grace is that debt is largely
domestic (less vulnerable to external shocks). But a debt is a debt," he
added.
Meanwhile, ESCAP Economic Affairs
Officer Dr Oliver Paddison said the Asia-Pacific region will experience slowing
growth in 2012 amidst global turbulence.
He attributed this to spillovers
of the euro zone turmoil, global oil price hikes, excess liquidity and volatile
capital flows. "The key long-term challenge is high and volatile commodity
prices," he added, at a media briefing, on the ESCAP survey.
Paddison said growth is forecast
to moderate to 6.5 per cent in 2012 from seven per cent in 2011 in the Asia
Pacific region, with downward pressure from subdued developed economies.
"Despite the slowdown, the
region remains an anchor of stability and growth pole for the world
economy," he added.
He said a major concern is the
insufficient job creation in formal sector in developing countries with a high
young unemployment with the young three times more likely to be unemployed. --
BERNAMA
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