Friday, November 14, 2008

How is the real economy faring?

Excerpts from the interview with Bank Negara governor Tan Sri Dr Zeti Akhtar Aziz on issues surrounding the domestic and international economy. Yap Leng Kuen, Jagdev Singh Sidhu and P. Gunasegaram interviewed her.
Bizweek: Do you expect the 3.5% growth next year to be achievable?
Yes.
What do you think will threaten the forecast?
An external environment that is beyond what we have already priced in, that is half the world in a recession.
If the recession becomes a depression, with high rates of unemployment and severe economic contraction, then of course, this will have repercussions even for Asia.
When do we see a recovery?

Warren Buffet got it right. It will take about 18 months. When we implemented the resolution to restructure our banking sector during the (1997) crisis, banks started lending again six months after the implementation of Pengurusan Danaharta Bhd, Danamodal Nasional Bhd and the Corporate Debt Restructuring Committee, together with other measures.
So the first indicator is when banks start lending again. The confidence has to return for the recovery to take place.
Crisis – past & present
If we were to compare the current economic condition to that of the previous crisis, how bad is it for Malaysia and globally?
We need to separate the two. We are not in a recession and we don’t expect to be in one.
Half the world will likely be in a recession. We are the other part that expects to still see growth because there are real economic activities happening.
You have to make a distinction between the stage of the crisis. In our case, we took action very early so there is the potential for containing the severity of the crisis.
In the case of the US, the action was taken too late and as a result, the crisis will have to run its full course.
What this means is the prices, mostly asset prices, will have to adjust before they reach their lows. The slower they adjust, the more prolonged it will be. It will likely take 18 months from the time they implement all their measures and that will take us into 2010.
Do you see unemployment in Malaysia rising?
It will rise but not significantly. The measures that are being put in place are promoting job creation and the education system to retrain and re-absorb.
The financial services sector is not contracting. In fact, it is expanding. There are job opportunities and there are still many vacancies in many organisations.
This is a time the workforce needs to be redeployed to the areas where there are opportunities. People may not get the jobs they want to have but during this kind of period, they have to take on jobs where there are vacancies.
Do you foresee the ringgit going back to the level of RM3.80/US dollar?
It would not reflect our underlying fundamentals. Currently, it reflects short-term flows. In the near term, we are going to see volatility but the medium-term underlying trend should be a gradual appreciation.
What is the comfortable level for the ringgit?
We don’t have a level that we are looking at. The International Monetary Fund continues to tell us that our ringgit is undervalued.
We said as a central bank, we never stood in the way of an underlying trend for the currency and in fact, it appreciated quite sharply to RM3.15. We didn’t stand in the way. Now, it has depreciated.
And we noticed when our currency appreciated, there was no representation to the central bank that this is too fast or putting us in difficulty.
Now, the currency has depreciated and importers will be affected. But again, there have been no remarks.
What is key to us is that the market remains orderly. The central bank will be there to ensure orderly conditions.
Over the long term, don’t you think the Asian currencies will have to strengthen as an overall adjustment?
I don’t think Asia determines the exchange rate of major currencies. The point that I want to emphasise is we don’t just look at one currency anymore. We should not just look at our link to the US dollar.
We should look at all the other currencies. Against the sterling, we have appreciated significantly. Against the euro, we have appreciated by a lesser amount and against the Aussie, quite a lot of people are quite happy.
Asia does not determine the currencies. (it is) the financial flows... that is why we have heightened our surveillance of the financial system. Asian countries have been responsible in the way they manage their reserves.
In the case of Malaysia, we had diversified our portfolio seven or eight years ago. This is important because of the high volatility of all the currencies.
People say interest rates should be reduced. Where do you see the interest rates heading?
We have said that we would take swift action to support the economy. If it is necessary, certainly, we have the flexibility to do so.
Do you think we need to bring the budget deficit under control?
In good times, every effort should be made to bring it under control. But under these challenging times, it is important to provide support to the economy to prevent a sharp economic downturn.
Yes, some of the issues need to be addressed like enhancing the revenue base. But this can be done during better times like having value-added tax.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Retail turnover data is the least worst measure we have when it comes to the rubber hitting the road of the real economy in terms of how money is flowing out of people’s wallets and into the nation’s cash registers.

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