(Oct 21): Malaysia’s government is bracing for public backlash as it commits to rolling back petrol subsidies in mid-2025, a politically sensitive and long-delayed pledge that’s key to convincing investors it’s serious about fiscal reform.
The government is mulling a two-tier price system for the country’s most-widely used fuel, so that the wealthiest 15% pay the market rate for RON95 petrol while the rest enjoy the current subsidised price, Economy Minister Rafizi Ramli said on Saturday. That’s expected to save the government RM8 billion a year — though it could also trigger second-round price hikes and lead to a surge in inflation, he said.
“We are prepared for the choppy waters ahead,” Rafizi said in an interview on Bloomberg Television’s Insight with Haslinda Amin, to be broadcast at 11am Hong Kong time on Monday. While the government has spent time readying the masses and explaining their reasoning for the subsidy reforms, “it’s a once-in-a-generation decision that affects everyone’s lives”.
It’s a plan years in the making, and how Malaysia navigates it will be crucial for Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim as he looks to lift investor confidence while avoiding the fate of his three direct predecessors, each of whom lasted less than two years in office. Anwar needs to balance the interests of various political parties that make up his coalition government.
Rolling back diesel subsidies in June was followed by the ruling coalition’s loss in a by-election. While it rebounded in two subsequent polls, the stakes are higher with RON95 — Malaysians are so reliant on private transportation that vehicles outnumber the population.
“My hope, and our responsibility in the government, is to make sure that we manage this properly so that it is sustainable,” Rafizi said, a day after Anwar unveiled a record spending plan to boost the economy.
Inflation is the government’s biggest concern, according to Rafizi, even though only a fraction of the population will be subjected to higher RON95 prices.
“It is the nature of the Malaysian economy that, at any sign of a fuel price hike, you will start seeing everything else go up,” said the 47-year-old, who is a qualified chartered accountant. “Our simulation is that if there is a price hike, we have to go through at least a 12-month cycle before the inflation basically stabilizes again to around 2%.”
The government expects the inflation rate to average within the range of 2% to 3.5% next year, from 1.5% to 2.5% in 2024. The 3.5% estimate is a “worst case scenario” which Rafizi hopes can be avoided if the nation sticks to a two-tier pricing system for RON95.
Another option is to float RON95 prices like it did with diesel in June, and provide cash handouts to the needy to cushion the impact of higher costs, Rafizi said. But such aid may not reach everyone, given that just 60% of Malaysia’s workforce are in the formal sector, he added.
Regardless of the mechanism, Anwar can ill afford to delay such a move, which the government had initially planned to implement this year. Higher public wages and retirement charges led him to unveil Malaysia’s largest annual budget last Friday, and he’s counting on subsidy cuts as well as a wider tax base to further narrow the fiscal deficit to 3.8% of gross domestic product (GDP) next year, from 4.3% in 2024. The government has pledged to reduce the budget shortfall to 3% of GDP in the medium term.
Rebuilding fiscal health is key for Malaysia to retain emerging Southeast Asia’s highest credit score, and keep investors’ faith as Anwar looks to propel it into a global artificial intelligence hub.
A broad-based consumption levy could go a long way toward boosting Malaysia’s fiscal strength. Before the goods and services tax was scrapped in 2018, it made up about 20% of revenue, or 3.3% of GDP, according to Lavanya Venkateswaran, an economist at Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp (OCBC) in Singapore.
Rafizi said the government’s focus though will be on subsidy reforms and optimising spending before they can consider bringing back a consumption tax. Previous Malaysian administrations have struggled to boost tax collection rates, among the lowest in Southeast Asia.
After a revolving door of leaders since 2018, the current government has reason to be cautious.
“We don’t want to be a one-hit-wonder boy band,” Rafizi said.
Click here for all you need to know about Malaysia's Budget 2025.
Uploaded by Jason Ng