Malaysia: From Crisis to Recovery

Malaysian government has implemented a number of medium- to long-term development plans, starting with the 20-year New Economic Policy and followed by the National Development Policy in the early 1990s.
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Volume/Issue: Volume 2001 Issue 005
Publication date: August 2001
ISBN: 9781589060470
$15.00
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Topics covered in this book

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Business and Economics , Banks and Banking , Exports and Imports , Finance , Public Finance , OP , crisis , inflation equation , export base , market confidence , implied output gap , reviews fiscal policy management , crisis economy , Nonperforming loans , Capital controls , Corporate sector , Corporate governance , Asia and Pacific , Global , Africa , East Asia

Summary

This paper discusses how Malaysia can better protect itself from future shocks and avoid another crisis while it seeks to regain its position as one of the fastest growing economies in the world. To these ends, its strategy should include continued structural reforms to achieve healthy balance sheets of the banking and corporate sectors; further deregulation to promote competition and efficiency; and consistent macroeconomic policies to maintain financial stability and sustainable fiscal and external positions. Malaysia's economic structure and performance were relatively strong prior to the crisis. Malaysia’s initial low level of short-term external debt enabled it to maintain foreign reserves at a reasonably high level, and this contributed to relatively robust external and domestic confidence early on in the crisis. As a consequence of financial vigilance exercised through prudential regulation of capital movements, the exposure of the financial and corporate systems was contained. Stock market capitalization in Malaysia grew to an extremely high level prior to the crisis, reflecting both the fast expansion of the capital market and liberal capital account regime.