Budget 2024 Implement Measure Disclose Innovate
I am sure that many of the details of Budget 2024 have been analysed thoroughly by analysts, tax experts, and policy professionals a week after it was tabled on Oct 13.
To ensure that Budget 2024 is a successful one, the Malaysian government, led by the Finance Ministry, needs to get to working hard and smart to properly implement, measure, disclose, and later on, innovate on the many policy measures which have already been announced.
There are many policy issues which require careful attention on the part of the finance minister and the ministry for proper and timely execution.
For example, the tax on luxury items was announced in February 2023 for the 2023 budget but could not be implemented in 2023.
The ministry was also not ready to implement the Global Minimum Tax (GMT) in 2024 which was announced in Budget 2023.
It is good that the ministry has more time to prepare for GMT in 2025 but if it is to be delayed for another year, the foreign investor community will start to have doubts about the ability of the government to stick to its publicly announced timelines.
Luxury brandsThere are also many policy issues where the power of implementation lies outside the direct control of the Finance Ministry.
The much-awaited revisions to the Malaysian My Second Home (MM2H) policy still have not been publicly announced in 2023.
A reversion to the previous, more open, and less onerous policy, with perhaps a tiered system for different categories of MM2H applicants would be welcomed by the stakeholders.
The government also must decide if the policy jurisdiction of the MM2H programme will revert back to the Tourism Ministry or if it will remain with the Home Ministry.
Similarly, the policy of allowing foreign students to work in Malaysia after they graduate from local institutions is a much-welcomed move but would require careful coordination between the Home, Higher Education, and Human Resources ministries.
Apart from policy implementation challenges, the Finance Ministry and the government should also pay attention to how to measure the effectiveness of the various budget initiatives announced.
Publicly disclose results
For example, there have been many digitalisation initiatives that have been undertaken by different ministries and agencies but there has been very little in the way of measuring whether these funds have been effectively deployed.
The SOPs of many of the government ministries give focus to the application process and the subsequent deployment of funds but are less focused on measuring the success (or lack thereof) after the deployment of these funds.
Without proper measurement mechanisms, it would be harder for individual ministries and the Finance Ministry to update and improve on these programmes and initiatives.
For example, I would have liked to see how effectively the Business Intervention (BI) matching grant under the Industry 4.0/Industry 4WRD programme was deployed from 2020 to 2023.
It is not sufficient to stop at implementation and measurement in some cases. Some of the results should also be publicly disclosed.
For example, it is good that Budget 2024 increased the allocation for the Ecological Fiscal Transfer (EFT) to the state governments from RM150 million in 2023 to RM200 million in 2024.
However, there should be transparency and disclosure on the part of the ministry on how these funds have been disbursed to the various states.
This kind of disclosure will also reveal the capacity of individual state governments to receive and properly manage these transfers for the purpose of preserving their own forests.
Where there are gaps, the federal and state governments must work together to close these gaps.
Room for policy innovation
Finally, there must also be room for policy innovation by the government. For example, the EFT covers forests and the ecology on land only.
Why not consider extending the EFT to cover marine ecology as well including seagrass, which is also an important source of photosynthesis?
I am encouraged by the announcement in Budget 2024 that the National Digital Identity (NDID) project will be expedited and that it will be undertaken by the new Govtech Nucleus Unit which is currently under the Finance Ministry.
The successful implementation of the NDID can lead to many other policy innovations in terms of the delivery of government services and can also spur innovation and delivery of services on the part of the private sector.
An NDID can significantly reduce electronic Know-Your-Customer (e-KYC) processing costs and time and will lead to more innovations in the fintech space in Malaysia.
We have seen this take place under the Govtech unit in Singapore which has rolled out SingPass, Singapore’s National Digital ID and also many other services that build on the SingPass electronic ecosystem.
I wish the Finance Ministry and government success in the proper implementation, measurement, disclosure, and innovations related to Budget 2024. - Mkini
ONG KIAN MING is a former deputy minister of international trade and industry.
The views expressed here are those of the author/contributor and do not necessarily represent the views of MMKtT.
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