
Greater powers under yesterday’s decree could help the government implement concrete solutions to the country’s health crisis and economic downturn, according to analysts at CGS-CIMB.
Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin said it would allow for ordinances to fight “economic sabotage, monopoly and excessive price hikes”.
The emergency, which could last until Aug 1, coincides with a two-week lockdown. Regions that have been placed under stay-at-home orders contribute to more than two-thirds of the country’s gross domestic product (GDP).
These measures come as record numbers of Covid-19 infections stretch the health system to the breaking point. While less severe than the two-month lockdown enacted last March, the restrictions will mean a loss of about RM3 billion per week in private consumption, according to an RHB Bank estimate.
“With its recovery momentum stymied, it will be even harder now for the economy to reach the 6.5-7.5% GDP growth target that the government has in mind,” Wellian Wiranto, an economist at Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp wrote in a research note.
The emergency decree does bring a measure of political stability to Malaysia for the first time since infighting early last year toppled the coalition and lifted Muhyiddin to power. With Parliament potentially suspended until August, the prime minister doesn’t have to worry about fresh elections anytime soon.
“The government may have a ‘no-holds-barred’ ” approach to the pandemic now, analysts at RHB Bank said. “This may include further support from the fiscal and monetary side, as well as a more unconventional approach, including a return of loan moratoriums and tax breaks on big-ticket items.”
The economy took the brunt of the Covid-19 blow in the second quarter of 2020, and began bouncing back in the latter half of the year. The government expected the economy to contract 4.5% for the full year.
Now, its ability to galvanise activity is constrained by limited fiscal space and a relatively high debt load, said Wiranto. “The government may remain reluctant to undertake a ‘bazooka’-type fiscal largesse, given the external constraints imposed by the market.”
Moreover, government intervention unchecked by Parliament could jeopardise market stability, said analysts at BIMB Securities Research. The move could send negative signals to investors, leading to the outflow or diversion of foreign investment from the country, they said.
That means monetary policy may have to do more of the heavy lifting. OCBC sees a “heightened chance” that Bank Negara Malaysia will cut its overnight policy rate by 25 basis points to a record-low 1.5% at its Jan 20 meeting.
Analysts at Hong Leong Investment Bank and Citibank were more conservative. While both believe the odds have risen for a rate cut this year, they don’t expect one next week.
The overnight rate “is likely to stay put until the extent and impact of the renewed lockdown is known with greater clarity”, Hong Leong analysts said.