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PRESS RELEASE December 14, 2017

Malaysia’s Economic Growth Accelerates to 5.8 Percent in 2017

Domestic and external drivers propel economic growth

KUALA LUMPUR, December 14, 2017 – Growth in Malaysia accelerated through 2017 with year-on-year growth projected at 5.8 percent — the country’s highest annual growth rate since 2014 – and expected to remain strong, projected at 5.2 percent for 2018, reports the latest Malaysia Economic Monitor, launched today by the World Bank.

Accelerated growth has been fueled by strengthening domestic demand, improved labor market conditions, and wage growth, as well as improved external demand for Malaysia’s manufactured products and commodity exports. Capital expenditure has also increased due to higher private and public investment.

This edition of the Malaysia Economic Monitor includes a special focus on the Asian Financial Crisis, 20 years on, its impact, management, and lessons learned in Malaysia, the region, and globally. 

In 2017, Malaysia is significantly more resilient to external shocks and financial instability, having learned many lessons from the turmoil of 1997-98,” says Senator Datuk Seri S. K. Devamany, Deputy Minister of Prime Minister's Department.Malaysia learned from the experience of the Asian Financial Crisis, and in the years since, successive reforms have helped transform the economy and propel it closer to high-income country status."

Key policy responses to the crisis in Malaysia, while considered unorthodox at the time, many of the policies carried out by Malaysia, have since been incorporated into toolkits for policymakers in developing as well as developed countries. Such policies include flexible exchange rate regimes that lower the risk of currency crashes, large international reserves, selective and temporary capital controls to stabilize capital flows, and careful prudential regulation of the domestic financial sector. They have proven effective and today are widely considered good practice for countries around the world, even while recognizing the importance of customizing policies to a country’s own specific situation, resources, and institutional capacity.

“Malaysia’s progress over the last 20 years owes much to the sound policies being adopted during and since the Asian Financial Crisis," says Ulrich Zachau, World Bank Director for Malaysia, Thailand, and Regional Partnerships. “Continued sound macroeconomic management and further reforms to strengthen people’s skills, competitiveness, and equal opportunities will help secure gains from Malaysia’s robust economic growth for all its people, especially low-income and lower-income families, through access to more and better jobs.“

According to the report, These reforms include policies that enhance productivity and address constraints such as a lack of competition in key markets and critical skills deficits. Such policies will enable access to more remunerative employment and real income gains for lower-income families.

The Malaysia Economic Monitor series provides an analytical perspective on the policy challenges facing Malaysia as it grows into a high-income economy. The series also represents an effort to reach out to a broad audience, including policymakers, private sector leaders, civil society and academia.


Contacts

In Kuala Lumpur
Joshua Foong
+603-22634952
jfoong@worldbank.org
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