The Need For Economic Literacy



On Budget Day last Friday, Member of Parliament for Bachok, Syahrir Sulaiman called the budget as limping or "tempang" in Malay. It can be misconstrued to also mean handicap, but its him expressing concern on the moderate growth that generate limited fiscal leeway for development. 
Yesterday, Opposition Leader, Hamzah Zainuddin created controversy with Perikatan Nasional counter offer for cash-aid of RM6,000 annually without restrictions and more free education programs. He raised other pertinent issues on the RM50.8 billion development expenditure by GLC and GLIC, lower Petronas dividend of RM20 billion, and somewhat in-sync with government concern on taxation, national revenue, etc. However, it is the cash-aid remark that attracted attention and suspected to be intended to viral. 
The math does not add up and criticised as populist rhetoric. Spending on STR and SARA for 2025 is RM15 billion and for 2026 budget is RM15 billion. Hamzah's plan means allocating  RM51.6 billion for the 8.6 million recipients!

Populist rhetoric
Naturally, it is not the job of the opposition to praise the Budget but highlight its weakness. The problem is his proposals is outwardly political rhetoric meant to displace substantive economic debate This sort of polity is not uniquely Malaysia and quite common malaise in developed democracies. 
If one has been following Trump and his economic argument for his tariff policies, one realise such populist promise, which lack substance, but fulfill voters' psychological appeal is happening in the biggest economy in the world and advance democrasy.    
It is obvious to spot the emotional appeal, easy to communicate and policy contrast for short-term voters approval. Despite structural fiscal deficit, one could hear such populist pledges in political campaigns in Indonesia and Philippines. 
Since GE12, with Anwar in top form as Opposition leader and remember the Buku Jingga, responsible pledges becoming increasingly uncommon at general elections. Same heard in US and UK of "cut taxes" and "make it free" slogans than serious and realistic fiscal trade-off more in-sync with economics of balancing scarcity. 
Economic literacy 
There is weak economic literacy among the public. When electorate lacks strong economic understanding, there’s little incentive for politicians to elevate the debate. Complex topics like fiscal sustainability, monetary-fiscal coordination, or subsidy rationalisation are hard to sell. 
For politicians, they can get away with illogical claims because voters can’t easily scrutinise them. Perhaps, due to their insufficient academic background or different professional exposure, the politicians themselves are not theoretically conversant.  
Malaysia’s case is symptomatic of this — few MPs, journalists, or voters discuss, for instance, what opportunity costs or long-term inflationary risks mean in budget promises.
Technocrats and economists used to play a more visible role in shaping policy debates. The influence of expert seemed to have declined. 
Over time, media logic noticeably favours conflict over analysis. The mainstream media peddles news as per the narrative by MOF to highlight "goodies for rakyat" than educating readers on the economics. Perhaps over analysis leads to some form of mental or attention paralysis. 
There will be MPs with some expertise expressing their views. One fine example was Shahar Abdullah, Government Back Bencher Chairman and former Deputy Minister of Finance. On Monday he raised the problem of only 54% Malaysian has life insurance and suggested the establishment of National Health and Social Insurance to provide complementary healthcare funds.
However, party whips tend to discourage independent expert MPs. Public debate becomes performative rather than deliberative.
Raising economic understanding 
Unlike knowledge of law or other public policy, economic policies has direct impact on the population's life and livelihood. Our politicians, policymakers, professionals, activists, and citizens need to be economically literate. 
There is a need to integrate economic reasoning and public policy education in secondary and tertiary curricula. The media should be encouraged to get into partnerships with economists and experts to explain fiscal issues to the public in plain language. 
At the same time, raise public familiarity with economic jargons. NGOs or think tanks could conduct public budget briefings to demystify policy rather than current forum format to make it simple but not raise public understanding of economics.  .
There must be political awareness to encourage more economists, public policy experts, or former civil servants to contest for MPs or at least involve to advise MPs to bridge the gap between political messaging and economic reality and promote meritocratic and technocratic representation .
Local media must evolve from practically verbatim "reporting what politicians said" to "interrogate what politicians claim." Media must make it their responsibility to automatically fact-checks or do budget claim verifications. Do data journalism segments during budget week.
There is little room for development expenditure with surplus of revenue over operating expenses is expected to be merely RM4.5 billion. With Petronas dividend down to only RM20 billion on the back of uncertain global economic condition, how will government allocate RM81 billion development expenditure without raising further the already RM1.4 trillion debt? 
Questions such as this should have been asked. The general public, not just professional and business people, need be made to aware why government cannot spend the way it used to and why the economy and present policies cannot duplicate the good old day of their political idols. 
Fiscal oversight  
For better fact checking, there need to be more collaborative with Bank Negara, DOSM, or universities for quick-response analysis.
In Malaysia, the fiscal oversight is left for politicians, government internal operation, media and independent observers. Its not good enough  and need to be institutionalised by an independent and credible body. 
Countries like the UK and Australia have independent budget offices that cost and evaluate political proposals.
Malaysia could strengthen its Parliamentary Budget Office to provide non-partisan fiscal analysis. Media could do comparative impact assessments of both government and opposition plans for public to debate. This curbs unrealistic claims such as RM6,000 cash aid by requiring transparency on costings.   
Malaysia’s problem is becoming more acute. The fiscal space is narrowing and the time for easy promises is over. The three years of fiscal caution need to be translated into a long term planning. More so with the expected turmoil from the shift from unipolar world order to multipolarity.  
Yet, political fragmentation creates incentives for populism. Without serious debate, the public is left uninformed but eagerly expecting something to happen. This will make fiscal reform politically harder and balancing act ever more delicate.
A mature democracy does not eliminate political rhetoric, but increased economic literacy  counterbalances it with strong institutions, informed voters, and credible media. Its not about silencing  politicians, but to make irresponsible economics electorally costly.
Have we not learned from GE13 an 14? 
Thick as a Brick


Artikel ini hanyalah simpanan cache dari url asal penulis yang berkebarangkalian sudah terlalu lama atau sudah dibuang :

http://anotherbrickinwall.blogspot.com/2025/10/the-need-for-economic-literacy.html

Kempen Promosi dan Iklan
Kami memerlukan jasa baik anda untuk menyokong kempen pengiklanan dalam website kami. Serba sedikit anda telah membantu kami untuk mengekalkan servis percuma aggregating ini kepada semua.

Anda juga boleh memberikan sumbangan anda kepada kami dengan menghubungi kami di sini
Easing Malaysia S Ncd Economic Burden The Case For Generics And Biosimilars

Easing Malaysia S Ncd Economic Burden The Case For Generics And Biosimilars

papar berkaitan - pada 11/10/2025 - jumlah : 264 hits
RECENTLY I read about how rising insurance premiums out of pocket expense and long waiting times are now pushing even middle and high income households in Malaysia to depend on the public healthcare system which only adds pressure to a sect...
Cattles In The Plantations A Struggle For Livelihood And Food Security

Cattles In The Plantations A Struggle For Livelihood And Food Security

papar berkaitan - pada 10/10/2025 - jumlah : 217 hits
FOR generations cattles have been reared in plantations by estate workers This practice began when plantation wages were critically low prompting the late prime minister Tun Abdul Razak to introduce the Buku Hijau initiative which encourage...
No Landmark Egypt Meet For Pmx After Missing The Point With His Conditional Support For Gaza Peace Plan

No Landmark Egypt Meet For Pmx After Missing The Point With His Conditional Support For Gaza Peace Plan

papar berkaitan - pada 15/10/2025 - jumlah : 195 hits
WHEN world leaders gathered in Egypt recently to witness the signing of the ceasefire deal to end the Gaza war one prominent leader was conspicuously absent the outspoken Malaysian Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim Anwar has always be...
Why The Work From Anywhere Revolution Is The Biggest Opportunity For You In 2025

Why The Work From Anywhere Revolution Is The Biggest Opportunity For You In 2025

papar berkaitan - pada 22/10/2025 - jumlah : 272 hits
In 2025 traditional office based careers are being challenged like never before More and more professionals are adopting the work from anywhere lifestyle not just remote work from home but full freedom to live travel and earn from anywhere ...
Retro Rubber The Best Modern Tires For Your Vintage Build

Retro Rubber The Best Modern Tires For Your Vintage Build

papar berkaitan - pada 22/10/2025 - jumlah : 262 hits
There are a few details that make or break a custom motorcycle build but none are as critical to the final stance as the choice of tires The right rubber provides the perfect profile and period correct aesthetic that ties an entire project ...
Penang Turf Club A Central Park For The People

Penang Turf Club A Central Park For The People

papar berkaitan - pada 22/10/2025 - jumlah : 339 hits
The state has a great opportunity to do something for the people But will it Or will it pander to developers interests Remember many moons ago the state granted this land for a pittance as it was originally zoned for recreational use for th...
Activists Support Social Media Age Limit Hike Call For Digital Literacy Efforts

Activists Support Social Media Age Limit Hike Call For Digital Literacy Efforts

papar berkaitan - pada 18/10/2025 - jumlah : 181 hits
Child rights activists say the proposed age limit of 16 for social media use must be accompanied by education to help children develop critical thinking skills the age limit for social media to 16 to curb online harms on children plus a pos...
Amerika Syarikat Penerima Terbesar Bantuan Antarabangsa

Nak Masuk Uss Guna Express Lane Ini Cara Mudah Dan Seronok Dapat Reward Nikmati Keistimewaan Macam Vip

Celebrate A Grand Festive Season At Grand Millennium Kuala Lumpur

Kedah Jumpa Pistol Belakang Pejabat Pemilik Kilang Ditahan

Key Benefits Of A Dedicated Ai Button On Your Phone

Resepi Roti Sardin Gulung Super Sedap Yang Orang Lain Tak Tahu

Janji Tere Liye

Sejarah Dan Warisan Iona Abbey Penubuhan Oleh St Columba Pada Tahun 563 Ad


echo '';
Info Dan Sinopsis Drama Berepisod Dendam Seorang Madu Slot Tiara Astro Prima

10 Fakta Biodata Amira Othman Yang Digosip Dengan Fattah Amin Penyanyi Lagu Bila Nak Kahwin

5 Tips Macam Mana Nak Ajak Orang Kita Suka Dating Dengan Kita

Info Dan Sinopsis Drama Berepisod Keluarga Itu Slot Lestary TV3

Bolehkah Manusia Transgender Mencapai Klimaks Selepas Bertukar


Maybank Tukar Kontrak Kad Kredit Dan Kesan Pada Pengguna

Panduan Asas Peralatan Menggali Emas Untuk Pemula Dari A Hingga Z

Profil Bahlil Lahadalia Dari Pengusaha Muda Ke Puncak Partai Golkar

Mum S Heritage House Largest Dessert Bakery Vendor In Perlis Kangar Jaya

Ritual Pagi Yang Bantu Pekerja Remote Lebih Fokus

Skinmade