Malaysia: 'Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon'

John Taskinsoy
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引用次数: 14

Abstract

This paper metaphorically suggests that Malaysia could have been the 5th Asian Tiger if it were able to discover its special hidden talents as the idiom from the Chinese mythology “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon” infers. Malaysia’s astounding economic track record (1985-96) underpinned by tamed inflation and high future prospects fell short of expectations in the late 1990s. Malaysia’s autocratic leaders and their instability-inflicting policies augmented uncertainty and undermined any potential recovery efforts in the aftermath of the homegrown Asian crisis of 1997-98. As a result, Malaysia’s promising outlook had abruptly shifted from being a model for the future to Asian myth. Malaysia’s GDP contracted mindboggling -7.4% in 1998 after averaging 9.2% in the period of 1992-96. The unthinkable shrinkage in the steady state output amounted to a loss of about $30 billion, the country’s GDP declined from $101 billion in 1996 to $72.2 billion in 1998. Malaysian people become a lot poorer after the crisis; the per capita income was $4,797 in 1996 as opposed to $3,264 in 1998, a decline of $1,533 in per capita income. Malaysia managed to escape the severe impacts of the near global financial meltdown with a minor dent; unlike the contraction observed in 1998 (-7.4%), Malaysia’s GDP dropped from 6.3% to 4.83% (2007-08) before contracting -1.51% in 2009. Despite the transparent and open economy (ranked 16th place in 2008 GCI) plus fast rise in the Human Development Index ranking (61st out of 190 countries in 2018), Malaysia’s heavy reliance on exports and its elongated addiction to the U.S. dollar made it become more prone to financial, currency, trade, and economic crises. The propagation of contemporaneous crises since the late 1990s have distinctly proved that Malaysia is hardly immune to shocks resulting from the slower economic growth in China and monetary normalizations in Europe and the U.S. which are causing interest rates to rise and exchange rate pressures to increase. Although the remarkable transition of Malaysia into a middle-income country was rather easy fostered by unusually favorable macroeconomic environment, but it seems to have been stuck in the middle-income trap and the next major economic leap to achieve a high-income status will require so much more than cheap labor and “mobilization of resources” based on “perspiration rather than inspiration”. Malaysia is struggling to figure out how to develop comprehensive skills which are essential to support future economic growth. Another problem is that educational institutions in Malaysia are not well aligned with industries to meet their demands; furthermore, a seamless coordination as well as collaboration between them is missing. Accordingly, a decade after the 2008 global financial crisis, Malaysia ranks 44th in pillar 4 (Health and Primary Education) and 41st in pillar 5 (Higher Education and Training). Malaysia also ranks 43rd in pillar 9 (Technological Readiness) due to a lack of lifelong learning programs, weakness in Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET), and unready for disruptive technologies. Without significant improvements in these, Malaysia will remain in the middle-income trap.
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马来西亚:《卧虎藏龙》
本文以比喻的方式提出,如果马来西亚能够像中国神话“卧虎藏龙”中的成语那样,发现自己的特殊才能,那么它就可以成为亚洲第五虎。马来西亚令人震惊的经济记录(1985年至1996年)得到了温和通胀和美好未来前景的支撑,但在上世纪90年代末未能达到预期。马来西亚的独裁领导人及其造成不稳定的政策增加了不确定性,并破坏了1997-98年亚洲本土金融危机后任何潜在的复苏努力。结果,马来西亚原本充满希望的前景突然从未来的典范变成了亚洲神话。马来西亚的国内生产总值在1992-96年平均下降9.2%后,在1998年下降了7.4%,令人难以置信。稳定状态下产出的不可思议的缩水相当于损失了大约300亿美元,该国的GDP从1996年的1010亿美元下降到1998年的722亿美元。危机过后,马来西亚人变得更穷了;1996年人均收入为4 797美元,而1998年为3 264美元,人均收入减少了1 533美元。马来西亚成功地躲过了几近全球金融崩溃的严重影响,只受到轻微冲击;与1998年的收缩(-7.4%)不同,马来西亚的国内生产总值从6.3%下降到4.83%(2007-08),然后在2009年收缩-1.51%。尽管拥有透明开放的经济(2008年全球竞争力指数排名第16位),加上人类发展指数排名迅速上升(2018年在190个国家中排名第61位),马来西亚对出口的严重依赖和对美元的长期依赖使其更容易发生金融、货币、贸易和经济危机。自20世纪90年代末以来,同时期危机的蔓延清楚地证明,马来西亚很难不受中国经济增长放缓和欧洲和美国货币正常化所带来的冲击的影响,这些冲击导致利率上升和汇率压力增加。虽然在异常有利的宏观经济环境的推动下,马来西亚向中等收入国家的显著转型相当容易,但它似乎已经陷入了中等收入陷阱,而实现高收入地位的下一次重大经济飞跃将远远超出廉价劳动力和基于“汗水而不是灵感”的“调动资源”。马来西亚正在努力找出如何发展对支持未来经济增长至关重要的综合技能。另一个问题是,马来西亚的教育机构没有很好地与行业保持一致,以满足他们的需求;此外,他们之间缺乏无缝的协调和协作。因此,在2008年全球金融危机十年后,马来西亚在第四支柱(卫生和初等教育)中排名第44位,在第五支柱(高等教育和培训)中排名第41位。由于缺乏终身学习计划,技术和职业教育与培训(TVET)薄弱,以及没有为颠覆性技术做好准备,马来西亚在第9支柱(技术就绪度)中排名第43位。如果这些方面没有显著改善,马来西亚将继续陷入中等收入陷阱。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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