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Will Umno buy Najib’s vision? PDF Print
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Friday, 03 July 2009 20:44

Najib disclosed that of the RM54 billion worth of shares sold to Malays from 1985 to 2004, only RM2 billion remain in Malay hands. The rest had been sold. So much for the original intent of building Malay equity.

Carolyn Hong, The Straits Times

Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak took office on April 3 saddled with the image of a tired Umno politician. But that look may well be changing.

On Tuesday, just days before his 100th day in office, he dropped a bombshell of an announcement on the Malaysian economic landscape. Given how politicised the economy is, it proved to be a major whammy on the political front as well.

A key part of the Malaysian psyche was shattered when Najib announced the removal of a decades-old quota on Malay ownership of public-listed companies.

Companies will no longer need to sell 30 per cent of their shares to Malays. Instead, they will reserve at least 25 per cent of shares for sale to the public, of which half must be sold to Malays. That works out to 12.5 per cent, and if there are not enough Malay takers, the requirement will be waived.

Close watchers of Malaysian politics will recognise that it is a seismic shift.

The pro-Malay economic policy was never meant to be that narrow but Malaysia's politicised economy meant that the 30 per cent quota had become a sacrosanct right a Malay leader ought never to question, much less quash.

In reality, it was a source of patronage and bred cronyism. Many politically connected businessmen became rich on the quota, evoking resentment among the Malay masses and minority races.

Najib disclosed that of the RM54 billion worth of shares sold to Malays from 1985 to 2004, only RM2 billion remain in Malay hands. The rest had been sold. So much for the original intent of building Malay equity.

The move breaks one major link of the patronage chain.

It comes on top of other measures like the scrapping of the Foreign Investment Committee which oversees Bumiputera participation in businesses. Earlier this year, he liberalised 27 sub-sectors of the services sector, and the financial sector.

Last week, he announced the creation of a merit-based National Scholarship.

What prompted these moves? Has Malaysia made a clean break from affirmative action?

Rita Sim of Insap, the think-tank of the MCA, says he was forced to act by circumstances.

“He has no choice. Malaysia needs to be more competitive and of course, he needs to win back support for the Barisan Nasional,” said the Insap deputy chairman.

The ruling BN was hit badly in last year's general election when voters deserted it in droves.

An aide to the Prime Minister said Najib was concerned over Malaysia's declining competitiveness.

“He's made it clear that he wants to tackle the structural problems. His overarching theme is 1 Malaysia, and this can be seen from the measures,” he said.

The aide acknowledged that there was a lot more to be done for the rural masses — who account for the bulk of Umno's support — but said Najib was starting with the big structural issues.

1 Malaysia is Najib's slogan of sorts. It appears to mean a policy that takes into account the interests of all races. Put another way, he is attempting to shift the balance towards injecting more meritocracy without completely abandoning pro-Malay policies.

Hence, along with the liberalisation, a RM500 million private equity fund was set up to develop Bumiputera businesses.

Even the scholarship scheme is merely a new category. There will still be a racial quota in some categories.

Critics like Universiti Malaya law professor Azmi Shahrom see such changes as merely papering over the cracks, rather than any serious dismantling of policy.

He pointed out that the system is still a lopsided one.

To him, Najib's aims are purely political — to weaken the opposition rather than to deliver real reforms.

“He needed to cut the legs off the opposition, and what better way than to hijack their platform,” he said.

But Najib supporters see it as keeping a delicate balance. There is already some dissatisfaction within Umno about these changes, though a fairly silent one so far as the government had taken pains to prepare the ground.

Over the last month, it met Malay editors and opinion-leaders to explain its policies, and the top Umno leadership was also briefed.

There is bound to be unhappiness. Years of prickly race relations have heightened sensitivities, and to some, the moves appear to be a capitulation to the minorities' persistent demands.

Umno Youth chief Khairy Jamaluddin admitted that there are rumblings on the ground.

Well-known blogger Zakhir Mohamad wrote that the new scholarship scheme challenges the notion that scholarships are part of the affirmative action policy.

Opposition PAS president Datuk Seri Hadi Awang has also raised objections.

“We want equality for all races but at the same time, the Bumiputeras must be given the strength,” he said.

Umno chieftains fear that Najib's new approach would be used in a fear-mongering campaign among the rural Malays, especially in a by-election in Kelantan in a PAS stronghold on July 14.

Umno has decided on its message: the Malay agenda is still there but new ways are being designed to uplift the community and distribute wealth to the masses.

Some Malays agree. A Malay political analyst, for instance, says Malay self-confidence can grow organically only through genuine competition in an arena like the National Scholarship.

But it is harder to convince the masses. While surveys by the independent Merdeka Centre do show a more nuanced Malay sentiment, the overall sense of insecurity remains.

“He'll find it very hard to keep a balance,” said Sim of Insap.

Najib, a strong party leader with widespread grassroots support, will thus have his work cut out for him to persuade his party to follow his new path.

Meanwhile, his critics remain sceptical about his ability to implement the changes.

All things considered, his image may be changing but the transformation is far from complete.

Comments (13)Add Comment
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written by krising1, July 03, 2009 20:54:14
Out of 54 biliion only 2 billion remains in the hands of the Malays! The rest were sold for quick profit. Those who made the quick profits are not the poor Malays. Only the UMNOputras! When the figures reveal that 40% of the civil servants are debt it tells a very depressing picture. After 40 years of affirmative action if only this much can be achieved, it is a very poor record. I can think the middle class have done better even after being marginalised. Something is wrong for such a dismal record!
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written by gycgocnt, July 03, 2009 21:08:00
The successful day of Najib vision is equal to the end of the UMNO's day.

UMNO members would refuse to co-operate with Najib on the back yard, but....If UMNO members table their unhappiness openly, Najib would probably be another Abdullah.

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written by InEffective, July 03, 2009 21:11:45

I wouldn't blindly believe the numbers (untrustworthy) spouted by this politician, and the conclusion or outcomes being reached from it.
(looking at shares does not paint the comprehensive picture of wealth distribution in the nation).

From filth and evil, no genuine effective wealth creation programs can ever arise - it will always be compromised. Just a fabrication for perception management.
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written by alpha100, July 03, 2009 21:38:43
What PM said is i believe true! So what are they going to do about it! How the hell going to achieve their target if they keep getting allocation but can't hold on to it! Its taxing on others and they always say "tak dapat! tak cukup!"
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written by Watchdog, July 03, 2009 21:43:52
For the right money, they will buy
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written by JaguhKampung, July 03, 2009 23:38:10
I for one will be skeptical of the implementation.

Expect hell from the UMNO warlords.This will be one of the best opportunity to move up the ranks by raising hell and shouting their rights is under severe threat. The louder they shout, the higher they go.
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written by JaguhKampung, July 03, 2009 23:40:29
Opposition PAS president Datuk Seri Hadi Awang has also raised objections.

“We want equality for all races but at the same time, the Bumiputeras must be given the strengthtongkat,” he said.
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written by chiongguo, July 04, 2009 11:16:07
Over the last month, it met Malay editors and opinion-leaders to explain its policies, and the top Umno leadership was also briefed.
........
Opposition PAS president Datuk Seri Hadi Awang has also raised objections.


And it seemed that hadi had a private briefing at parliament house. Someone saw him and posted it in another thread. If this is true doesn't hadi realised that such "khalwat" is haram precisely because of the suspicion that could be raised. It doesn't matter if there was anything inappropriate, the perception itself could "kill" most of all pas reputation.

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written by densemy, July 04, 2009 17:34:59
Look at these moves objectively. There is nothing new, nothing innovative, nothing exciting, nothing inspiring, nothing creative about these moves

He is simply undoing horrendously bad decisions from the distant past which should never have been allowed to survive this long

There is no leadership in that. And what Malaysia needs is leadership... inspiring, exciting, forward looking leadership
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written by Caesar, July 04, 2009 20:24:15
The cream of IPOs have already been creamed off by this extortionist policy...
Now, Malaysia has no choice because investors can go to the surrounding countries in this new world of mobile capital.Also, many IPOs of the past couple of years have not been able to fulfill this requirement.
Last but not least, is this a realisation by the authorities that there are few investment grade IPOs left for even the Bumi-institutions to get their hands on!(from the damage done to the country's economy & competitiveness after 40 years of NEP).
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written by alarcarte, July 04, 2009 22:19:49
Najib is no stupid fool, this will probably be his last "KOPEK", he needs to thread this UMNO mine field gingerly and if he lost his footing the UMNO mine will explode and render him CACAT!!

His move is nothing more than win back the Non Malays who vote against B.N.
In the past giving 30% of the IPO to the Malays are sure ways for the rich Malays to make more millions, because the share price is always up on the first day of listing and the Malays will sell of their 30% allocation during the first few days of IPO listing.

Now the scenario has changed, many IPO have suffered price decline in the first day of listing and the Malays are not interested in the 30% offered to them, who want to take up the shares knowing that the price will drop on the 1st day? This will be the main reason why he canceled the 30% IPO for Bumiputra requirement!!



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written by NSTPravda, July 05, 2009 10:16:01
Will Umno buy Najib’s vision?
Of course, absolutely!
At 200% discount....
Rasuah sayang eh!
smilies/smiley.gif smilies/cheesy.gif smilies/grin.gif smilies/tongue.gif smilies/cool.gif
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written by NSTPravda, July 05, 2009 10:19:48
Close watchers of Malaysian politics will recognise that it is a seismic shift.

This is absolutely untrue! There will be no "seismic shift" until big Ma Rosmah throws her weight around...

Rasuah sayang eh!
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