Categories
Economics

[1858] Of price, liberated

Behind every crisis, there is an opportunity as the cliché goes and the opportunity presented by the period of high energy prices has been satisfyingly utilized. Whatever goals scored by economic liberalism in this country, it is definitely one point up:

PUTRAJAYA, Dec 19 – Fuel prices in the country will be determined by the flotation mechanism.

[…]

Consumers, he said, should brace themselves for a managed flotation mechanism for oil prices based on market rates.

Shahrir said that many factors had to be examined before finalising the mechanism which includes generating revenue for the Government and providing stronger purchasing power to consumers. [Shahrir: Fuel prices to be determined by flotation mechanism. The Malaysian Insider. December 19 2008]

It may not be ideal but at least, the direction taken deserves endorsement. Gradual improvement is something I can appreciate.

With fuel subsidy and control over fuel prices have been significantly eroded to incorporate greater liberty and less government intervention, it is time to target other supply and price control mechanism.

Categories
Economics

[1857] Of IJN privatization may create monopoly

Sime Darby is interested to acquire the National Heart Institute (Institut Jantung Negara; IJN) on Jalan Tun Razak from the government.[1] My default position has always been that the government should do what it does best and that is governance. With this, privatization is a natural path to take. However, it is unclear if the deal is desirable.

In many ways, the privatization of the 1980s and 1990s in Malaysia was a baby step into refocusing the government.

As time progresses unfortunately, it is unclear if privatization has continued or ceased with the introduction of powerful government-linked companies in Malaysia. What were privatized long ago are now partly owned by the government indirectly, mostly as the majority or the main shareholder. This is done through Khazanah, PNB, EPF, Tabung Haji and other investment arms of the state.

GLCs notwithstanding, one of the few things that mar many privatization efforts was the creation of monopoly. Monopoly is not necessarily a bad thing but better privatization method could have been employed to encourage competition in the market. Nevertheless, the creation of monopoly through privatization could be defended by resorting to the natural monopoly argument.

Yet, healthcare does not fit the definition of natural monopoly. Competition can exist in the industry. This makes that argument irrelevant to this case.

The proposed privatization of IJN risks of the creation of a monopoly. Not just monopoly but state-induced monopoly. That has to be a double-whammy.

Casual research indicates that the increasingly conglomerate Sime Darby’s existing business does involve healthcare and it does offer services with respect to heart treatments through its Heart Centre.[2] Information provided by The Star does show that IJN and Heart Centre do compete with each other by the virtue of offering the same services.[2a] Without further research, it is unclear how extensive the competition between the two institutions or whether there are other competitors out there; I suspect there is. What is certain is that the merging of the two under Sime Darby Healthcare will undoubtedly grant Sime Darby with market power. Sime Darby, on its own, is already a formidable player in the industry.

In responding to request for comment on the matter, both Prime Minister Abdullah Badawi and his deputy, Najib Razak said that Sime Darby must ensure IJN is accessible to the poor if the deal is to go through.[3][4] How creating a commercial monopoly would do just that would require extensive debate which the PM and the DPM might find it hard to win.

If IJN is to be privatized and if the government really care about making treatments at the IJN affordable, competition is the answer, not monopoly.

There are of course other means to make the treatment affordable even with privatized IJN. Among the methods are government subsidy for those deserving of it or even the creation of a national health system which provides health insurance. I do not endorse these alternatives. By stating the alternatives, I am merely showing there are ways to make IJN private and affordable to the poor. Creating a national health insurance just to address the issues surrounding the privatization of IJN is absurd.

Those alternatives however still do not address the concern for the unnecessary creation monopoly.

In any case, with the proposal in its current form — that is, I assume, a simple acquisition of IJN by Sime Darby — I am not too warm to it. There is no concrete information to show that deal is larger than a simple transfer of ownership from the Ministry of Finance (IJN is owned by that Ministry) to the GLC Sime Darby (in turn owned by the quasi-government PNB).

If IJN is to be privatized, I would prefer for it to be sold to another entity to encourage competition in the market. There are better option out there and the one taken at the moment is not it.

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved

[1] — KUALA LUMPUR: Sime Darby Bhd has expressed interest in taking over the National Heart Institute, or Institut Jantung Negara (IJN), a move that has met with objections from the ministry of health, sources said. [Sime Darby eyes IJN. Lim Shie-Lynn. The Edge Daily. December 18 2008]

[2] — A superior one-stop centre comprising a fully equipped coronary care unit (CCU), cardiac ward and cardiovascular catheterization laboratory. [Heart Centre. Sime Darby Healthcare. Accessed December 18 2008]

[2a] — Fair use. Copyrights by The Star.

Some rights reserved. By Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams

[Sime Darby seeks stake in IJN. K.C. Law. The Star. December 18 2008]

[3] — KUALA LUMPUR Dec 18 – The government will allow Sime Darby to take over the National Heart Institute (IJN) if it can guarantee that the low-income group can still afford treatment there. [PM wants Sime Darby to guarantee treatment for poor if it takes over IJN. Shannon Teoh. The Malaysian Insider. December 18 2008]

[4] — Najib, who is also the Finance Minister, said Sime Darby must pledge its commitment that the poor would not be marginalised if IJN is to be transferred to it. [Najib: No objection to Sime buying IJN stake. Shannon Teoh. Business Times. December 18 2008]

Categories
Economics

[1856] Of government spending as fiscal stimulus is not the only option

Pictures of resignation are all over the wall. It is a resignation among local policymakers that the government will spend amidst the current economic environment. The World Bank recently encouraged governments around the world to spend in order to cushion the impact of the economic slowdown while noting that East Asian economies will not suffer as badly as the rest of the world.

I, however, fear that this might cause panic spending by the government in its eagerness to re-read The General Theory. It is important to note that the expected downturn is primarily caused by the softening of external demand while the export component is almost as large as the Malaysian GDP. As reported earlier, exports for the month of October fell by 2.6 per cent on year-on-year basis. In absolute terms, it means a nominal drop of approximately RM1.4 billion.

The concurrent drop in imports is likely influenced by the drop in exports given that a considerable percentage of imported items are intermediate goods meant for the manufacturing of final goods for export. It is possible that the associated weakening of industrial output is also chiefly due to the trend of weakening external demand. What this means is that internal demand is holding largely steady amid the economic storm.

Proof of resilient internal demand is all around. The retail sector — supposedly the early warning sector of any trouble in internal demand — showed over 25 per cent growth in the third quarter compared to the same period a year ago. The sales of motor vehicles — yet another indicator of internal demand — also registered growth on year-on-year basis. Admittedly, this is likely to fall but as indicated in previous data, seasonal effects due to Eid ul-Adha, Christmas and New Year are likely to prevent any large decrease in growth in these sectors and, in general, internal demand.

Finally, the unemployment rate is still doing fine through it is reasonable to expect it will increase since the export sector is taking a bashing. Increase it might but I do not see how it would increase to an overly alarming rate.

This however is not to say that internal demand will be unaffected at all while the waves are rocking the ship. Not at all. On the contrary, this is to show that the cause of the problem revolves around external demand, not internal.

The differentiation between external and internal demand is important because before any action is taken, the problem needs to be identified first. To move forward without comprehending what is going on is simply a recipe for waste and possibly disaster.

Implication from the identification of the source of economic turbulence in the local economy may indicate the possible ineffectiveness of government spending as fiscal stimulus.

First of all, the emerging trend in the export component of the GDP is likely to continue into the future. How long the trend will persist is anybody’s guess but the magnitude in the drop in exports is likely to be beyond the capability of the government to match in terms of government spending.

In comparison, the 2.6 per cent year-on-year drop for the month of October 2008 is as large as 20 per cent of the RM7 billion fiscal stimulus announced earlier by the Finance Minister. That alone indicates that any serious fiscal stimulus would have to be much larger than the current RM7 billion, simply just to close the gap between the two scenarios of business-as-usual and reduced export. This has yet to even consider the spillover effect on internal demand due to reduced exports.

Consider also the fact that the budgeted government expenditure for 2009 is slightly over RM200 billion with fiscal deficit running at about RM30 billion. Any expansion of the fiscal stimulus will require the government to borrow more extensively. With the current level of fiscal deficit and the health of the global financial sector, any borrowing will come at a great cost.

If somehow the government manages to increase the size of the stimulus, a significantly enlarged government spending will only save the day unsatisfactorily when internal demand is not the issue. An enlarged government spending is likely to increase supply when demand is not there. The act of spending for the sake of spending itself is the path of waste.

How is it wasteful?

During the Great Depression in the 1930s in the United States, in the name of increasing government spending as recommended by the School of early Keynesianism, it was not unusual for anybody to witness a perfectly fine stretch of road being undone and reconstructed.

Already in the RM7 billion fiscal stimulus, RM2.1 billion of the money is being earmarked for refurbishment of police stations, army camps, government quarters, repair of roads, construction of community halls, small bridges and preservation of public amenities, on top of existing budgeted expenditure for the same purpose. Needless to say, the suspicion of this being the act of spending for the sake of spending is there.

Spending for the sake of spending alone could be the sign of panic spending as policymakers come to their wit’s end.

Wit’s end or not though, government spending is not the only option available on the table. Permanent tax cuts have the potential of improving internal demand. Moreover, unlike in the United States and the European Union, Malaysia still has room to maneuver with respect to its monetary policy. With lower interest rates, Malaysia could effectively address its falling exports by indirectly weakening the ringgit.

Others come in form of discouraging savings to encourage investment and spending. And just three weeks ago, economist John Taylor wrote in The Wall Street Journal of the need to have a permanent pervasive mechanism that predictably automatically reacts to changes in the economy. Admittedly, Taylor’s recommendation requires a slightly longer time to execute since it is a structural issue but the point is that the resignation to discretionary government spending is really an overly pessimistic stance to take. The policymakers clearly need a little dose of optimism and creativity to move forward.

Panic spending and other options notwithstanding, government spending does have a role to play in enhancing prosperity. It is important for the government to invest in public goods with a positive spillover effect which rarely attracts the interest of the private sector. Yet, forward-looking spending, or rather investment, in soft and hard infrastructures is not really something suitable for the purpose of fiscal stimulus which almost always concentrates on short-term solutions.

Such investments are supposed to be a continuous effort and not done at a moment’s notice which is typical of any fiscal stimulus with government spending as its pillar. Furthermore, we do not have to wait idle for an economic downturn before spending on among others the education system and communication infrastructures required for long-term growth. These expenditures need to be carefully thought through.

These kinds of carefully thought through investments which bring about returns in the future are the ones Malaysia needs. Government spending must be done with an eye for the future and not simply for the sake of spending.

Another factor which makes such spending unsuitable as fiscal stimulus is the length of time required to begin and complete them. There is a good chance that by the time that government expenditure on these items begins to positively affect the economy, the end of the downturn is already near and thus makes the spending irrelevant.

It is because of this, the need to hasten the effect of government spending in the economy will compel policymakers to divulge in instant gratification by spending on superficial items which could be initiated and completed with a snap of a finger. Spending on these items no doubt will smoothen out the trough but it is meaningless in building a brighter future.

What it does is instead to impose a burden on future generations. Not only will they have to bear the debt due to panic, their cost of borrowing will also be high.

In A Farewell to Alms by Gregory Clark, the author demonstrates how successful societies discount the future only by a small margin. The question is, how much do we discount our future?

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved

This article was first published in The Malaysian Insider.

Categories
Economics WDYT

[1854] Of WDYT: What would you do with 8.75% returns?

ASN declares 8.75% returns for ASB. If you own some of it, what would you do with the extra money?

  • Save it. (57%, 8 Votes)
  • Spend it. (7%, 1 Votes)
  • Damnit! I'm gonna save Detroit! (36%, 5 Votes)

Total Voters: 14

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Categories
Economics Humor

[1849] Of ho ho ho merry bailouts!

[youtube]55xJnIqq9ZI[/youtube]

It is a season of sharing, you see.