Competitiveness
Was reading this article on The Star website regarding our beloved Prime Minister giving a speech telling people not to compare Malaysia with Singapore.
18 February 2008
Pak Lah: Don’t compare Malaysia with Singapore
PENANG: Do not compare Singapore’s economy with that of Malaysia’s.
It is like comparing “first-class grapes (Singapore) with first-class apples (Malaysia),” Prime Minster Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi said when addressing the Chinese community at the Penang Chinese Town Hall (PCTH) dialogue session yesterday.
“We are a population of over 20 million and we rank eighth in the world in terms of our competitiveness.
“This is not the Government’s figure and I am not telling you lies. This statistic is from an international survey.
“If I quote statistics from our own surveys, you will not believe us. Everywhere I go, the business community tells me that Malaysia is doing very well. These people are smart. You cannot fool them because they are well-read,” he said, adding that the Government had no reason to lie.
“Please trust us – we are your government. If you look at the economy, we are doing well. That is a fact proven by figures. But people still claim otherwise because of increasing prices. This is a very simplistic way of analysing the economy.
“Nobody is happy to see prices rising but this is out of our control. The question is not how to bring down prices but how to help the rakyat cope.
“Every country in the world is faced with rising oil prices except maybe Brunei but you cannot compare. The RM40bil oil subsidy we give out can be used to build better schools, roads, hospitals and infrastructure but we don’t want to burden the people,” he said, adding that education and medical treatment was also heavily subsidised by the Government.
“We subsidise even water and electricity, yet people are angry when they hear the word ‘toll’. We try to subsidise as much as possible but we still need to impose toll charges because we need to build roads,” he said before thanking the Chinese community for contributing to the country’s economy.
“The private sector is dominated by the Chinese and I want to say a big ‘thank you’ to the community for creating so many job opportunities,” he said.
- If we don’t compare ourselves with someone better, how are we to improve ourselves?
- We rank 8th in competitiveness in the world as claimed but according to the World Economic Forum’s Global Competitiveness Report released last year, Malaysia ranks 21st in both Global and Business Competitiveness from 19th the previous year. (Where did he get this ambiguous and inaccurate information from? There’s no where else other than the World Economic Forum’s report to follow)
- Read on the report further and you’ll find out that the top 2 most problematic factors in Malaysia are inefficient government bureaucracy and corruption. Oh dear, oh dear!
- Yes, yes. You would argue that Malaysia is 21st out of 131 economics surveyed, that’s good. That isn’t my point, my point is where on Earth are we ranked 8th?
Hmmm. *ponders*
Probably I should go look at some anonymous global competitiveness ranking only approved by Malaysia and I might just find the answer there.




