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Friday, November 19, 2021

Malaysia adopting disastrous Zimbabwe economic model!



Report: Malaysia adopting disastrous Zimbabwe economic model!



THE Malaysian Government’s move to force local forwarding companies to divest 51% of their equity to Bumiputera is the same idea that drove once prosperous Zimbabwe into economic ruins.

According to an article by Asia Sentinel, it said that expropriation moves would not work as they usually only enrich a class of opportunists.

“This will force productive people out of the country and least the rest with an impoverished economy.

“The Government needs to take a look at how closely Malaysia is following Zimbabwe, once one of the most prosperous countries in Africa, down the economic drain. Not for nothing did Bloomberg recently call Malaysia a failed economy,” the report stated.

In Sept, the Federation of Malaysian Freight Forwarders (FMFF) urged the Government to review its decision to force them to divest 51% of the businesses to Bumiputera, which simply meant that they were being told to sell their business to a Bumiputera or close down.

“If local logistics companies are compelled to sell a majority share to Bumiputera investors, it would mean that the Government is telling us to sell our business to a Bumiputera or close down.

“Bear in mind that by selling 51% of the business, it means the present owner can no longer control and run his business,” its president Alvin Chua was reported saying.

The Finance Ministry had since postponed the matter but made no mention of whether the policy has been rescinded for good.

With that, Kedah Parti Pribumi Bersatu Malaysia (Bersatu) information chief Khairul Anuar Ramli turned the matter into a racial issue by saying the DAP was opposed to the move as the latter was against Bumiputera from increasing their equity stake in the country.

Touching on the matter, the article warned that the prolonged measures under the New Economic Policy (NEP) was having adverse effects on the economy; with even local businesses leaving the country.

Citing an example, it noted that the business empire headed by “Sugar King” Tan Seri Robert Kuok has been slowly moving their business interests to outside Malaysia.

“Air Asia decentralised across the region due to high costs in Malaysia and better traffic opportunities elsewhere. Liberty Shipping has moved to Singapore.

“Genting Bhd moved its head office to Singapore. Hyundai closed its Asia Pacific headquarters in Malaysia and relocated to Indonesia, due to lack of a policy roadmap for the creation of an electric car industry.

“Tesco divested its assets in Malaysia. The IBM Global Delivery Center relocated its head office out of Malaysia. Malaysia-innovated ride-hailing service Grab set up its head office in Singapore rather than Malaysia.

“Other Malaysian high-tech companies that chose to start-up outside the country include Coin Gecko, a platform for multiple crypto-currency comparisons, and BigPay, a Malaysian banking app, also to Singapore,” it quipped.

As for multinational companies (MNC), the article said Malaysia missed a host of opportunities for innovative companies to start a venture in the country, which included Google, Amazon, Uber Technologies, Allianz, Vodafone Group and Akzo Nobel.

“Most moved to Singapore because of Malaysia’s relatively poor infrastructure, the poor level of human capital skills, and the poor regulatory framework. Zoom Video Communications has selected Singapore over Malaysia for their first R&D centre in the region,” it stressed.

On that note, it said that most of the policies under the NEP was misused by certain quarters to loot public treasury rent-seeking; with some being outright corruption.

“And the one-off super tax (Cukai Makmur) on companies with RM100 mil turnover or more from 24% to 33% for next year is a concerning precedent.

“Unfortunately, governments have poor credibility when they make promises about tax. This could potentially accelerate the exodus of large local companies exiting Malaysia and discourage foreign head offices to locate in Malaysia,” it remarked. – Nov 18, 2021.


5 comments:

  1. Everything is OK, as long as Kerajaan Allah is in charge, the majority will support.

    Just tax the Chinese corporations harder if Government revenue is insufficient to feed the Bumiputra Agenda.

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  2. Yes we missed a lot of opportunities with multinationals like Google, Amazon....because of cabotage policy...ha ha ha...

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  3. Jibby's Economic Model. I sagest instead of giving him 100 million house in KL we give him a condo in Forest City....ha ha ha...

    QUOTE
    Forest City enters list of world’s ‘most useless’ megaprojects
    17 Nov 2021
    Qistina Nadia Dzulqarnain

    KUALA LUMPUR – Malaysia’s controversial Forest City has been labelled as the second most useless megaproject in the world, behind the Yucca Mountain nuclear waste repository in Nevada, United States.

    The listing was featured in a YouTube video by Top Luxury, a channel established in March 2020 specialising in content on construction, megaprojects, and technology.

    The video in question has since garnered upwards of four million views at the time of writing.

    “Forest City was probably too ambitious to begin with, too futuristic to truly achieve, and is too politically challenged to succeed anytime soon.

    “It is safe to assume that despite the billions (of dollars) invested, Forest City is currently a useless megaproject,” the video said.

    It highlighted that the project near Johor Baru is being funded mainly by China, with wealthy Chinese investors unable to afford the soaring prices of apartments in their own country rushing to Forest City.

    “By 2019, 80% of the property owners (in Forest City) were Chinese. Even the street signs were in Mandarin and the few schools that opened in the area offered Mandarin courses,” the video’s narrator claimed.

    “This influx of Chinese investors caused a public outcry, with opponents of the project calling it a new form of colonialism.”

    It further alleged that Malaysians cannot afford to purchase properties in the smart city as the prices cater to the Chinese market.

    “By the start of 2020, less than 500 people were actually living in the residential developments, which is not a lot considering that Forest City is designed for 700,000 people,” it claimed.

    “The project has remained in flux ever since, with some salespeople claiming that fewer than 10 homes were sold in Forest City since the start of the pandemic.”

    The video also claimed that former prime minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad had banned foreigners from owning property in Forest City.

    During his second tenure as prime minister from May 2018 to February 2020, Dr Mahathir had indeed vowed to prevent foreigners from purchasing properties at the Forest City project, but he had reportedly failed to state if the ban on the sale of property to foreigners was already implemented.

    The video also referred to a South China Morning Post article in September this year that reported Country Garden Holdings, a direct stakeholder of Forest City, had laid off more than 1,000 of its Malaysian workers in a year.

    This, the video said, signalled the “epic downturn of the project’s fortunes”.

    The listing places Forest City in the same league as other controversial projects around the world cited in the video, including Ciudad Real Central Airport in Spain, Interstate H-3 in Hawaii, and Naypyidaw, the new capital of Myanmar.

    China has been Malaysia’s largest foreign direct investment contributor since 2016 and was involved in several of the country’s high-profile projects, such as the Malaysia-China Kuantan Industrial Park.

    Two other projects with heavy Chinese involvement – the East Coast Rail Link and Melaka Gateway – have since been cancelled during the Covid-19 pandemic.

    Forest City is widely known as a joint-venture between the Guangdong-based, Hong Kong-listed Country Garden Holdings and Johor’s state-owned Kumpulan Prasarana Rakyat Johor.

    Forest City had previously won the Global Model of Low-Carbon City Planning and Design Award for its low-carbon green development concept at the 2021 Sustainable Cities and Human Settlements Award event held online from October 27 to 29. – The Vibes, November 17, 2021
    UNQUOTE

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  4. if Force to Sign over the 51%....MAKE SURE YOUR LAWYER PUT IN FINE PRINT THAT YOU CAN INVOKE HUDAYBIYYAH KRAP AT YOUR CHOOSING....PROBLEM SOLVED AND SHARIAH WILL HAVE TO KOW TOW TO THE HUDAYBIYYAH SUPREMACIST RACIST STUPID RELIGION LIES!!...WITH THE SUPREMACIST RACE...ITS HUDAYBIYYAH EVERYDAY TILL YOU DIE!!....SO HUDAYBIYYAH BACK AT THE SUPREMACIST RACE!!

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  5. Soon Malaysia will have nothing

    ReplyDelete