Malaysia to Focus on Living Costs, Raising Wages as Growth Slows

Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim is exploring how to boost wages for Malaysian workers, as gloomy economic prospects pose headwinds to his fledgling administration.

(Bloomberg) — Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim is exploring how to boost wages for Malaysian workers, as gloomy economic prospects pose headwinds to his fledgling administration.

Malaysia plans to set a wage growth target for all workers and formulate policies to support this, Economy Minister Rafizi Ramli told a press conference Wednesday. The National Economic Action Council will meet in March to discuss this in a meeting chaired by the prime minister, he added.

“The inflation problem still needs to be managed properly, while the people’s wages still haven’t reached the right levels,” said Rafizi in the briefing in the administrative capital of Putrajaya. “It requires an integrated approach and we can no longer work in silos.”

How Malaysia handles an increasingly challenging economic outlook could be key for Anwar’s survival amid looming tests to his staying power. His three-month-old unity government is set to face six local elections later this year. While the polls have no direct bearing on the composition of parliament, they will be a gauge of his popularity among an electorate that’s seen four prime ministers in as many years.

The local elections are set to coincide with an expected slowdown in Malaysia’s growth. The government sees the pace of expansion moderating to between 4% to 5% in 2023, after growing at the quickest pace in more than two decades last year on pent-up demand. 

Meanwhile, prices continue to climb in the Southeast Asian nation, with the central bank expecting inflation to remain elevated in 2023. This even as the average salaries and wages in Malaysia are considered low, according to the Finance Ministry in its Economic Outlook 2023 report. Wages have grown at an average increment of about 140 ringgit ($31.9) a year between 2010 to 2019, the ministry said.

The public is assessing how well the government can address issues surrounding tepid economic growth and rising cost of living, pollster Merdeka Center said Friday. Anwar’s approval rating stood at 68%, just two months after the November’s general election resulted in a hung parliament, it said. That’s slightly lower than how his predecessors fared during their first few months in office.

“The Economy Ministry will balance between restructuring the economy and the needs of the people in relation to living costs and better wages,” said Rafizi on Wednesday.

Anwar, who doubles as finance minister, is set to table the revised 2023 budget to parliament on Feb. 24, and has been preaching fiscal prudence as the nation stares down still-elevated debt levels in the wake of a Covid-era spending drive.

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