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Malaysia faces revenue crunch as spending mounts on virus woes

The government’s plan on how to cover its expenditure hinges on one key assumption, that tax income will rise as economic activity returns close to normal.

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia will enter 2021 with its biggest spending plan yet to spur its virus-hit economy, but concerns are focusing on how to foot the bill after a sovereign-rating downgrade earlier this month.

The government expects revenue to rise 4.2% next year, counting on higher tax collections – without raising taxes or introducing new ones – coupled with a move to slash its dependence on oil.

The plan hinges on one key assumption, that tax income will rise as economic activity returns close to normal.

“If the economy does not recover as strongly as the 6.5%-7.5% that the government is expecting, any revenue shortfall is likely to manifest” in lower tax revenue, said Wellian Wiranto, an economist at Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp (OCBC) in Singapore.

Finance Minister Tengku Zafrul Aziz.

It’s a big gamble. Finance Minister Tengku Zafrul Aziz said last month that this year’s economic performance will be “closer to -5.5%” than the 4.5% contraction previously expected.

That was after taking into account renewed movement curbs, expected to cost the economy RM300 million a day, amid a fresh wave of Covid-19 infections that emerged in late September.

Even with the pandemic still raging, the government relaxed restrictions this month to give the economy some breathing room.

Daily virus cases hit a record-high of 2,234 on Dec 10, and several major glove makers – including Top Glove Corp, the world’s largest – halted production lines as infections spread among staff.

“There are speed bumps on the road to recovery,” Maybank analysts wrote in a mid-December research note.

The newest virus wave is more severe, and there may be a “scarring effect” on the economy that has been masked or delayed by relief measures that were extended into next year, they wrote. The bank expects Malaysia’s gross domestic product (GDP) to grow 5.1% in 2021.

Falling oil revenue

Aggravating the problem is the fact that Malaysia has few revenue sources to draw on. Since abolishing an unpopular goods and services tax (GST) in 2018, the country has depended on oil-and-gas revenue and dividends, largely from state energy company Petronas, to fill its coffers.

That backfired when crude prices plunged this year, contributing to a 14% decline in government revenue for 2020.

Given subdued oil prices, coupled with major economies’ gradual shift toward green energy, petroleum’s contribution to government revenue is set to decline, said economist Firdaos Rosli of Malaysia Rating Corp, a domestic credit-rating company.

“The government urgently needs to expand its revenue base, as expenditure is slated to rise to fund economic recovery efforts.

“The government would be at a loss to increase its coffers if it doesn’t capitalise on taxing consumption,” he said.

Malaysia is studying various consumption-tax models to gauge their effects on the economy and living costs, Tengku Zafrul said in a written reply to the Dewan Rakyat on Dec 15.

“The government won’t make any such decision during the pandemic, and will wait until the economy recovers,” he added.

Rating risks

The government’s budget plight is sounding alarm bells after Fitch Ratings downgraded the sovereign earlier this month.

Even with a stronger recovery in real GDP, any revenue growth next year is likely to be “moderate in nature,” said Andrew Wood, a Singapore-based analyst at S&P Global Ratings.

“A smaller revenue footprint relative to the size of the economy could put pressure on Malaysia’s fiscal settings, either limiting government expenditure or leading to a larger budget deficit,” he said.

S&P’s long-term rating on Malaysia carries a negative outlook, and could face “downward pressure” if the agency sees a weaker commitment to fiscal consolidation, Wood added.

Moody’s, in an outlook report published Dec 1, said the narrow revenue base limits the government’s flexibility to respond to shocks such as the pandemic, and leaves the country prone to volatile capital flows.

For now, investors are looking past the Fitch downgrade and rising Covid cases after lawmakers approved Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin’s annual spending plan, erasing some political risk.

The ringgit is trading near its strongest level in more than two years and the main stock index is up 4% for the year, after posting annual declines in 2018 and 2019.

“Over the medium term, the government probably realizes the importance of bringing even a politically tricky revenue stream such as GST back on board,” OCBC’s Wiranto said.

“Even if the plan might have to wait for a better economic and political environment to be adopted, it may be a matter of time before it’s reintroduced in some form.”

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