Categories
Economics

[2438] Malaysia could have smaller deficit

The 2012 budget is an election budget. From civil servants to police officers to students to teachers to the armed forces, the whole public sector workers, even pensioners, will get their own share of handouts next year if this budget is passed, which it will.

With all the handouts, it got me thinking. We could do better with the federal government’s fiscal deficit. A lot of this handouts with the exception of the 2% annual increase of salary for civil servants and free education are one-off gifts. If those gifts were not made, Malaysia would have smaller fiscal deficit.

I will expand this thought for my column at The Malaysian Insider.

Categories
Economics

[2204] Of beware the tragedy of economic populism

The story in Greece is a result of intertwining plots. One major plot concerns economic populism. It is a reminder that populist measures tend to ignore scarcity. It highlights that the policy of spend, spend and spend and then hoping someone else will take care of it, is risky.

With a brick wall up ahead, the Greek government is frantically trying to change its course. It plans to raise taxes, combat tax evasion and cut the salary as well as bonuses of its bloated civil services. Massive cuts are in order. It has to do this urgently because not only Greece is on a collision course, but also because the International Monetary Fund and European governments have told the Greek government that if the country expects others to save Greece, Greece has to be serious about saving itself.

The policy as demanded by the IMF and EU is harsh, but Greece would not have reached this juncture if it had not spent to please Greek voters with impunity. At so many points, there were so many opportunities for the Greek government to stop indulging in immediate gratification. There were so many chances to cease appealing to crass populism.

But no. They wanted to keep the voters happy. Political expediency was more important than responsible fiscal policy. To finance its spending, Greece even misreported its statistics. Oh, what was that about government as the guarantor of transparency in the markets?

It is all too late now. Only hard choices are on the table. The party is no more.

Greece is in so great a wreck that the possibility of bankruptcy is very real. Funny that even in times of great distress, certain fractions within the Greek society are protesting against plans to address structural fiscal deficit suffered by the Greek government. Shockingly, they want the clearly unsustainable status quo to remain.

The Greek Communist Party for instance staged a protest against the austere fiscal policy, which the IMF and the EU demand in exchange for bailing Greece out. Perhaps, it is unfair to single out the Communist Party in such a manner. The outrage in Greece appears to be one shared by many outside of the Communist Party. It is popular outrage after all.

That popular outrage is a little amusing. Where was the outrage when outrageous demands were made and met? It was this populism that brought Greece to where it is today. Due to that, there is some sadistic value to the whole episode.

The Greek government has shown political will to see through reform that the country needs so far. It has no choice. A capitulation to populism at this point will prove to be more costly than the cost austere fiscal measures. The fact that a left-leaning government — typically a leading proponent of government spending — has now become the leading proponent of the austere measures is telling. They finally realize that their freewheeling spending programs invite disasters. It invited disasters.

Greece is so far away from Malaysia but the story of populism is relevant. Perhaps, a comparison between Greece and Malaysia is an overkill, especially as the memory of the Asian Financial Crisis — which is more or less thirteen years old — fades. Yet, the pressure of populism is present in Malaysia. It is not hard to name these populist pressures.

Expansion of the civil service, demand for special treatments, pork-barreling during election times, opposition to subsidy removal, opposition to introduction of goods and services tax to replace existing sales and services tax, call to nationalize highways and effort to provide water free of charge are among many examples that will surely increase government expenditure without raising the necessary revenue to fund it.

In fact, at least three of the pressures that exist in Malaysia contributed to the Greek fiscal mess.

We are not done with 2010 yet but at the rate Malaysia is going, 2011 is likely to be the 14th consecutive year that the government is running a fiscal deficit. Clearly, Malaysia is suffering from a structural deficit. Needless to say, cyclical spending, which is largely unavoidable, exacerbates the situation.

The size of government in Malaysia is wildly big. Its scope is maddeningly wide. Its cost is incredibly huge. Malaysia needs to address this. This is why the story of Greece is a compulsory reading for all public office holders. Beware: populist measures will not address this concern, even up to the very end.

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

First published in The Malaysian Insider on May 11 2010.

n/b — there are multiple grammatical problems at the TMI article. That is entirely my bad. I was rushing the article through. I know, I look stupid now.

Categories
Economics Politics & government

[2013] Of regretfully, fiscal deficit is a non-issue

The consistent fiscal deficit the federal government currently experiences is an issue far removed from everyday life. For many, it is an abstraction without concrete consequences. Hence, it is highly unlikely that the issue will be able to capture public attention and directly become a determinant in any election. This gives the federal government too much free hand in managing its fiscal position.

Despite the lag in effect, the persistent fiscal deficit presents real challenges to the economy and perhaps, more tangibly, to all taxpayers. It is so because the idea of scarcity is not something that is only valid within the theoretical world of economics.

It is because of scarcity that the concept of deficit exists. It is also because of scarcity that any deficit requires financing.

As far as the fiscal deficit of the Malaysian government is concerned, it is being financed through borrowings. The government issues debts in which market participants — be they individuals living within Malaysia or financial firms based abroad — purchase in return for greater payoff in the future.

So far, the federal government is fulfilling its existing debt obligations by issuing more debts. The situation on the ground at the moment allows that to happen but it does not take a leap in imagination to understand how a snowball may cause an avalanche. Argentina in 2001, for instance, defaulted from fulfilling its debt payments; it borrowed to finance its deficit for the longest time until its repayment requirement became too big for it to comply.

Malaysia still has a long way to go before that happens. Nevertheless, eventually, our deficit has to be attended. There are at least three ways to address the deficit: increase revenue, decrease government spending or default.

For any self-respecting government, defaulting is not much of a choice. The Argentine economy was in ruinous state after it defaulted on its payment; capital fled and dried up, bringing the economy to a screeching halt. Regardless of preference, the current local scenario that includes the maintenance of strong foreign reserves by Malaysia makes the likelihood of default very small.

Decreasing government spending is the policy path that libertarians favor because it necessarily reduces the size of government. Unfortunately, this will not occur anytime soon. Even during the Abdullah administration when the fiscal deficit finally saw relaxation, government spending continued to rise. Keynesian thinking meanwhile reigns supreme in the Najib administration; the government has expressed its intention to spend to stimulate the economy. The two factors set the momentum for the federal government’s fiscal position in the near future.

The third way is to increase revenue. This can happen by having enough growth in either non-tax revenue, tax revenue or both. With a healthy economy, those items can help in balancing the fiscal position. Without a sufficiently healthy economy, however, taxes simply have to increase to meet the gap eventually.

A tax increase is the clearest credible solution because it is increasingly clear that the fiscal deficit is structural in nature, and not cyclical. It is structural because it is arguable that we may have seen or are seeing the completion of a business cycle. In that cycle, the federal government has been running on a persistent fiscal deficit. Year 2009 will be the 12th consecutive year that the government has either failed or refused to close the gap and there is no reason to believe why year 2010 will not be registered in red ink.

A tax hike, however, is an unpopular policy, even when it is a potent tool in arresting the runaway fiscal deficit. Under the current political atmosphere where the Barisan Nasional-led federal government faces a considerable number of hostile voters, raising taxes is committing harakiri. The political situation demands spending.

In fact, the pressure is on Barisan Nasional to continue to spend in order to keep the economy going. More importantly, it has to keep voters happy by shoring up the economy in the short term to push its expiry date farther into the future.

Government spending is not necessarily bad or undesirable even in times of deficit. Yet, unless the government spends the money for the purpose of investment, spending for the sake of spending — as the two fiscal stimulus packages are doing — will further widen the difference between revenue and expenditure. For deficit hawks, the situation is gloomy because between investment and spending, the effect of the latter comes quicker than the former. Naturally, political expediency favors quick wins; quick wins mean the deficit will continue to take a hit.

Given the situation of a structural fiscal deficit, weak economic environment and political unpopularity, the only palatable short-term option is to continue to borrow to finance the deficit.

As a result, the present generation will be free from the burden of increased taxes and so too subsequent generations that are lucky enough to live during times when the economic situation allows the government to keep borrowing to finance its deficit. With the problem being out of sight and out of mind among the current generations, regretfully, there is no pressure to address the issue of fiscal deficit.

Somebody, however, eventually will have to pay those debts. By the time that happens, it is likely that the problem will become too big to handle.

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

First published in The Malaysian Insider on June 15 2009.

Categories
Economics

[1956] Of somebody is raising some money

Have you ever wondered how the Malaysian government plans to finance its stimulus package as well as its fiscal deficit?

Well…

KUALA LUMPUR: The RM2.5bil Sukuk Simpanan Rakyat government bond launched Tuesday is all snapped up. [RM2.3bil Sukuk bonds snapped up in 2 days. The Star. April 17 2009]

How about borrowing from PNB?

Permodalan Nasional Bhd (PNB), the country’s biggest fund manager managing RM76 billion worth of funds, will offer 3.33 billion new units of Amanah Saham Malaysia (ASM) and two billion Amanah Saham Wawasan 2020 (ASW 2020) units, Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak announced today. [PNB offers 5 billion unit trust. Bernama via The Sun. April 20 2009]

Show me the money!!!

Malaysia: The government will today auction 4 billion ringgit ($1.1 billion) of Shariah-compliant bonds maturing in 2012. Bidding closes at 11:30 a.m. local time. The securities yielded 3 percent in pre-auction trading yesterday. Industrial production in February fell for a sixth month, declining 14.7 percent from a year earlier, a government report showed yesterday.

The yield on the 5.094 percent note maturing in April 2014 slipped one basis point to 3.66 percent, according to Bursa Malaysia Bhd. [China, Malaysia, South Korea, Thailand: Asia Local Bond Preview. Lilian Karunungan. Bloomberg. April 10 2009]

Oh, oh, oh…

The issuance of government bonds is expected to leapfrog by 80% this year to a gross amount of RM90bil. [Issuance of govt bonds expected to jump to RM90bil. Yap Leng Kuen. The Star. April 20 2009]

Are you keeping track?

Categories
Economics

[1926] Of mini-budget fails to reduce friction and cost of doing business

Despite being a person who is generally skeptical to the idea of economic stimulus, I did hold high hope for the second stimulus package or the mini-budget as it is called. I thought this would be the time when we would finally do things differently. Like a crystal glass thrown into the air only to meet the harsh earth, that hope of mine was crudely shattered into millions of pieces.

As it turned out, it was business as usual. Same old same old.

I had expected for a new way of managing the economy that reduces cost of doing business by reducing frictions in the economy. This expectation did not come out of thin air. There were signs to rationalize it.

The biggest was the courage shown to reform the outdated fuel subsidy regime which was costing the country billions of ringgit in terms of opportunity cost. Meanwhile, as the world economy slugged it out, out came statement from the Prime Minister urging countries not to fall back on protectionism.

Then there is the Deputy Prime Minister who is expected to assume the Prime Ministeship soon. He is eager to break from the past and start anew. He wants to differentiate himself from the current administration. Even if he did not want to change, local political circumstances demand change. To ignore that demand is to court doom for himself and his political party. He simply has not choice but to change if he is to survive.

That requirement for change was what fueled my expectation of continuous reform of the economy. Unfortunately, the mini-budget contained more than a billion ringgit worth of subsidy to undo reforms of the past. Clearly the lesson of shortage caused by price and supply controls not too long ago has been left unheeded.

The highway toll subsidy is another disappointment. I have no doubt that the inconsistent nature of the current administration is why that particular subsidy is included in the stimulus package. The users of the highway are not doubt happy about it but I am positively not because I now find myself subsidizing those users. That is what I call highway robbery.

The story on subsidy does not end there because somewhere in the mini-budget speech is a section on what is called the private finance initiatives. PFI sounds attractive with so-called partnership between public and the private sector but the more I learn about it, the more I think it is a farce.

In truth, it is nothing more than a subsidy re-branded under a different term. It is just a term to sanitize the idea of government subsidizing businesses. Under the program, the government will in essence subsidize projects that would otherwise be unviable without government intervention.

Malaysia has a lot of these government-subsidized businesses. They are unsustainable and driven by motives which rarely survive economic scrutiny. They pretend to be public goods so that there is moral justification for the subsidization. It is these kinds of projects which impose efficiency cost on our economy but they continue to not only exist, but unashamedly flourish in our country.

This is the reason why I generally prefer to not have economic stimulus and let the market does it job. The only stimulus I make exception for is generally the one that reduces friction in the economy, like tax cuts. I prefer Darwinisn to rid us of unsustainable businesses so that in the long run, even if we would be dead, at least we could leave our children with a better world.

Economic downturn — call it whatever you like — is a time for exactly that. It is a time for spring cleaning. What we have seen so far only amounts to merely sweeping dust under the carpet, hoping that the dust would go away to somewhere.

By the time the business cycle is complete, we will look back and lament the missed rare opportunity to improve the structure of the economy while stimulating the economy: the stimulus failed to reduce transactional cost. The cost of doing business caused by friction in the economy is not removed.

There were tax cuts announced in the mini-budget but it fell far short than how I would have done it. The RM3 billion tax cuts were done in a manner than only profitable ventures would enjoy it whereas the ones in trouble are the ones that are making losses. Reduction or elimination of taxes that contributes to transactional cost is able to address that problem but it is nowhere in sight.

If that bad news does not move you, wait till you read this: not only the cost of doing business sees no reduction, it is being pushed up instead!

Indeed, initiatives of the stimulus like absorption of excess labor possibly regardless of business requirement and restriction on foreign labor recruitment increases cost of doing business.

Surely, in times when revenue is stagnating, the absorption of more people into various such organizations adds drag to their overall health. Of particular note are government-linked companies which are expected to recruit more people into its programs of fanciful acronym.

On foreign labor, it is true that the issue requires urgent address but such restriction as proposed in the mini-budget is hardly necessarily. There is a Malay saying that appropriately describes the restriction: it is akin to burning the whole mosquito net merely cause of an annoying mosquito.

What requires attention is not foreign labor per se but the recruiting agents and the system. These foreign labors are brought legally complete with permits into Malaysia through our suspiciously porous system without any guarantee of jobs. It is only after they reach Malaysian shores will they start scouring for jobs.

A proper system should do things the other way round because if there is no job, there would be unemployment problem among these foreigners. This will further exacerbate the problem we are already facing in Malaysia in light of weak external demand that is hurting the export sector rather badly. Jobs must have to be guaranteed first before permits are given out.

Cost is further pushed up by resorting to the always popular protectionist policies. Yes, despite going to the international stage to reaffirm Malaysia’s commitment to not to fall back to protectionism, there are elements of protectionism in the mini-budget.

The restriction of foreign labor itself is a form of protectionism but two paragraphs in the speech by the Finance Minister said it most clearly. One of the two indicates that the ”Government will continue to support the development of domestic industries through Government procurement. The Government has mandated the use of local materials, products or services and give priority to local manufacturers in Government procurement.”

This seems that government spending will be done without taking into account the question of price and quality. If the origin of the vendors and manufacturers is the only point of concern, it is likely that the cost of various projects associated with the massive government spending to increase unnecessarily. The lack of competition is known to do that. If the fiscal deficit is to go higher than projected, this is likely to be the principal cause of that.

But clearly, the fiscal deficit is not an issue of concern to the current administration. In order to be popular, these protectionist and Keynesian measures are required.

While the next administration is desperate to be popular, they should be warned of the pitfalls of populist policies. Quick fixes like these have its consequences. Much like the now controversial highway concessionaires negotiated under the Mahathir administration, it will bite back.

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

First published in The Malaysian Insider on March 17 2009.