Since March 2008, Malaysians find it
harder and harder to get non-partisan balance and factual point of views. Each time
we read an article whether it is about politics, education, and economics and
even bread it would likely be colored with politics – one side trying to paint
the other as worst as possible and show off that they are the smarter one.
Facts and figures are twisted, half-truths made like solid analysis,
hoodwinking the innocent public. All these have made many Malaysians on the
verge of giving up on politicians and their cohorts.
One such example where half-truth was
made as though it is an intellectually factual economic paper was the recent
writing by ‘an enemy of the state’ who go by the name of Pak Sako. I consider
him or her an enemy of the state because he or she prefers non-peaceful options
like what happened during BERSIH 3 rather than the peaceful and productive
action during #KL112. He or she constantly writes article to create panic,
negativity and hatred. This fella is tarnishing the name of a national laureate
who has left us and the fact is we are not even sure if this person
masquerading as Pak Sako is a Malaysian!
In the article about our national debt (http://www.freemalaysiatoday.com/category/opinion/2013/02/27/govt-debt-to-reach-rm1-trillion-by-2020/
) this Enemy of the State, tried to deceive and alarm readers by focusing on 2
main themes. Firstly, noting our debt in Ringgit so it will look enormous to
the average reader instead of the more exact approach by observing percentage
over GDP and secondly, by forecasting a sharp increase in debt within the next
few years second guessing that the government will continue the current
populist agenda even post GE 13. This Enemy of the State did not even offer any
comparative figures with other economies!!!
I wanted a more non-politically biased
point of view so I asked a close associate who is knowledgeable about economics
and not into politics to explain the economics of debt without any
partisanship.
Just the facts, please.
The following is a balanced explanation.
At the end of the article, I will also provide a comparative debt ratio of
countries all over the world so readers can see for themselves.
Here we go.
If like the US, government is expected
to bail out the banking sector debts apart from its own debt, then we need to compare
how much revenue government has to cover for any banking debt crisis and
government debt crisis. To do that the formula will be as below;
- Malaysia p.a. (3rd qtr 2012 figures)
- Gov. Debt (RM484b) + Private Sector Debt (RM77b)
- DIVIDE BY Gov. Revenue (52b)
So Malaysia has a Debt cover of 10.8x
(times)
How does this debt cover “debt gearing”
as per accounting term compare with other countries?
In 2011, a comparative data with other
country figures are as below;
- Ireland 43x
- Japan 37x
- United States 16x
- United Kingdom 14x
- Spain 11x
- Portugal 10x
- Netherlands 10x
- France 10x
- Germany 9x
- Greece 8.5x
- Australia 8.4x
- Italy 7.5x
So the debt gearing might look high and
of concern, but is almost on par with Germany, France & Netherlands and
even lower than US and UK.
But we may also realise that the problem
countries like Italy, Greece have slightly lower gearing, and we are on par
with problematic Spain.
Are all debt gearing the same?
It all depends on the income
generating capacity and economic efficiency to service that debt. Just like
companies and individuals, we can borrow to fund productive ventures and invest
for income potential or borrow for current consumption i.e. welfare programs by
government or cover large public spending deficits etc.
Example : Greece debt gearing figure may
look good in comparison to Germany, but Greece is having a debt crisis while
Germany is not because Germany has managed to consistently run a current
account surplus (income positive) for the last decade compared to
Greece which has more consistently run a current account deficit (income
negative). So same with Italy & Portugal, even though have similar “gearing
ratio” with Germany.
With Malaysia, as
long as we get more money/trade flowing into the country, the better we are at
servicing our debt. However, since the last 2008 global economic crisis, the
government had to spend more on the local economy to help cover the decline in
current account surpluses, but it has still consistently been in surplus
territory and beginning to show a trend reversal (if CPO prices &
manufacturing export figures recover)
Japan is not in the news for any debt
crisis, even though very high gearing of 37x, because they borrow heavily from
internal country funds rather than foreign (9% of Public Debt), where Malaysia
is even lower at 3.6% of Public debt from foreign sources (BNM). Local sources
like retirement funds and deposits are more stable source than fickle foreign
lenders. And most importantly Japan still consistently runs a current account
surplus (however increasing trend/historical high in foreign borrowing, as more
foreign funds are needed to fund trade surpluses that have shrunk due to CHINA
issues)
With regards to Malaysian banking sector
loans disbursed are for more productive business working capital/loan uses
(52%), compared to US (only 15% business loans – while 35% for real estate
loans etc ).
In terms of government debt as per our
Gross National Production (GDP), our revenue capacity, globally we are
still below the critical 100% level.
And if future trends are a concern, IMF
forecast (2011 figures) suggests that Malaysia Debt per GDP ratio will be
incremental to a still comparatively safe 60% level by 2016 (please refer the
table below).
Conclusion
So as long as we can maintain our GDP
growth, and get business growing rather than hinder it, then we should be okay.
Any thinking and caring Malaysian should want the government to be vigilant with our debt. But the major subject of political discourse in Malaysia should be tackling these enemies of the state who are doing a disservice to the country by deliberately propagating lies and half-truths just to win some votes. Politicians and the rakyat from both sides of the political divide including those non-aligns must not support them.
‘When the facts change, I
change my mind. What do you do, sir?’
John Maynard Keynes
Note :
1. Current
Account
Current
Account is the sum of the balance of trade (exports minus imports of goods and
services), net factor income (such as interest and dividends) and net transfer
payments (such as foreign aid). The balance of trade is typically the most
important part of the current account. And a current account surplus is usually
associated with trade surplus. However, for the few countries with substantial overseas
assets or liabilities, net factor payments may be significant. Positive net
sales to abroad generally contribute to a current account surplus as the value
interest or dividends generated abroad is bigger than the value of interest or
dividends generated from foreign capital in the country. Net transfer payments
are very important part of the current account in poor and developing countries
as workers' remittances, donations, aids and grants and official assistance may
balance high trade deficits.
2. Gross government debt (sortable; in percent of GDP)
Source:
International Monetary Fund, World Economic Outlook Database of
September 2011
Figures can always be 'arranged' to suit a particular purpose, so it all depends on the reader's interpretation to form a conclusion.
ReplyDeleteThere are 2 facts which you did not address but is surely a cause of concern.
1. Like Greece, a lot of government debts have been hidden under private debts to make the gdp% look good
2. Despite the golden years of petroleum and palm oil exports, we were still running a deficit which means servicing these debts in the years to come. Indications are that earnings from this sector is on the decline, so how?
Don't you think the govt has also overspent on opex which does not generate any future income.
Anas, sorry to say but your belief that Malaysia's debt is okay collapses.
ReplyDeleteSee here, in the news - http://www.themalaysianinsider.com/sideviews/article/the-misleading-debt-to-gdp-ratio-pak-sako
There are heaps of unanswered questions that gotta be answered first before it can be said that the debt level is okay.
And the RM1 trillion trajectory - IMF forecast apparently. Wanna go tell IMF they are second-guessing?
Always remember that GDP figures do not necessarily indicate real economic growth or productivity.
ReplyDeleteFor eg, if a huge bomb landed in PJ and created a massive crater, a lot of "economic activity" will be produced to fill up that hole. GDP figures for that year will go through the roof but what has it done for the real economy? Nothing much because the net result is that a hole was merely filled up.