Source : NST
KL now cheaper for expatriates
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Source : NST
KL now cheaper for expatriates
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Source : NST
Malaysia favourite among China luxury travellers
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Higher Education Minister Datuk Seri Idris Jusoh said UM, Universiti Putra Malaysia (UPM), Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia (UKM), Universiti Teknologi Malaysia (UTM) and Universiti Sains Malaysia (USM) generated more than RM6.18bil in research revenue between 2007 and 2016.
“This is a 55.3% return on research investment from the Government’s initial investment of RM3.98bil,” he said, adding that most of the varsities were also celebrating their 10th anniversary as a research university.
UM rose by 19 places to the 114th position in the QS World University Rankings 2018.
Idris said UM had consistently improved its rankings since 2013, and it could be in the top 100 universities worldwide in a year.
“In the span of four years, UPM has moved up 182 places to 229,” he said, adding that this was an average of 45 ranks every year.
UKM rose to 230, their highest jump, while UTM moved up to 253 and USM ranked 264, he added.
UKM’s jump, he said, showed the potential for the young university to “soar upwards”. Higher Education Ministry director-general Datin Paduka Dr Siti Hamisah Tapsir said the strength of these universities lay in their lecturers and researchers, who greatly improved their academic reputation through high-impact research, publications and citations.
UM deputy vice-chancellor (academic and international) Prof Dr Awang Bulgiba Awang Mahmud said their hard work had paid off.
However, he added, it would not be easy to enter the top 100 as competition would become stiffer the higher they rose in the international rankings.
UPM vice-chancellor Prof Datin Paduka Aini Ideris said they had achieved the highest score among local universities for the international student indicator besides improving in their academic reputation, employer reputation and faculty-to-students ratio.
She said the varsity planned to increase its international visibility in order to make it to the top 200 by 2020.
USM vice-chancellor Datuk Dr Asma Ismail said their success was due to “co-learning” and working together with the other research universities.
According to UKM vice-chancellor Prof Datuk Dr Noor Azlan Ghazali, their jump in the rankings would drive UKM to further improve its reputation.
Source : The Star
UM leads local varsities into top 1% worldwide
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Higher Education Minister Datuk Seri Idris Jusoh said Universiti Putra Malaysia (UPM) was the highest ranked institution at the 15th spot.
The 44-year-old varsity was at No. 17 last year.
Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia is in 16th place, Universiti Teknologi Malaysia at 21st and Universiti Sains Malaysia at 23rd.
“All our research universities are not only in the top 50 but in the top 23 under the QS World University Rankings Top 50 Under 50,” he told reporters after launching the Sports Leadership Transformation Programme at UPM yesterday.
The other universities to make the list – released on June 8 – are Universiti Teknologi Petronas (91100), Universiti Utara Malaysia (UUM) (101-150) and International Islamic University Malaysia (101150).
Except for Universiti Malaya, all the other universities in Malaysia are below the age of 50.
Idris congratulated UUM for debuting in the rankings this year.
“The 33-year-old university’s position in the 101-150 band shows that its focus to be a niche university, which focuses on management and social sciences, does not prevent it from competing and shining among other institutions,” he said.
He said UUM became an Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business International (AACSB) accredited institution last year, adding that this has contributed to its ranking position.
AACSB is the hallmark of excellence in business education, and has been earned by less than 5% of the world’s business programmes.
UUM vice-chancellor Prof Datuk Seri Dr Mohamed Mustafa Ishak thanked the UUM family “who is committed to the success of the university’s agenda”.
“This achievement shows that UUM’s strategic plan started in 2010 is bearing results,” he said.
He also hoped that staff and students would continue to carry out the university’s agenda so that it could compete with other renowned international universities.
UPM vice-chancellor Prof Datin Paduka Aini Ideris said the university had always focused on the fundamentals of teaching, research and services.
“We work hard to ensure quality education, quality research that benefits the community and produces all-rounder graduates with holistic and entrepreneurial skills,” she said.
Nanyang Technological University, Singapore tops the list this year followed by Hong Kong University of Science and Technology and Korea Advanced Institute of Science & Technology.
Source : The Star
Seven Malaysian varsities make it to QS world ranking
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Source : NST
Step up transformation efforts
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In congratulating the university, MCA deputy president Datuk Seri Dr Wee Ka Siong said UTAR was ranked in the 501-600 band on the list, above several Malaysian institutions.
“We hope this joyful achievement can be shared with more people.
“We cannot forget MCA’s support for the past 16 years,” said Dr Wee, who is also Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department, on his Facebook post.
UTAR president Prof Datuk Dr Chuah Hean Teik said the university – set up by MCA in 2002 – is humbled by the ranking.
“We will work even harder in teaching and research, as well as international and industrial collaboration, because we aim to provide quality higher education to as many youths as possible,” he said.
UTAR is one of eight Malaysian universities to make this year’s THE World University Rankings 2018 Top 1,000 list, which was released on Tuesday.
Universiti Malaya joins the Top 400 as a new entrant (351-400 band) on the list.
UTAR and Universiti Tenaga Nasional also join the table for the first time, in the 501-600 and 801-1000 bands, respectively.
Universiti Putra Malaysia, Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia, Universiti Sains Malaysia, Universiti Teknologi Malaysia and Universiti Teknologi Petronas are ranked in the 601st to 800th band.
Malaysia is one of the leading emerging university nations in Asia, said Times Higher Education Global Rankings editorial director Phil Baty.
“It has one of the world’s fastest growth rates in research paper outputs, PhD training capacity has increased, and it has the wealth needed to invest in the higher education sector,” he said.
THE’s World University Rankings are global performance tables that judge research-intensive universities across all their core missions: teaching, research, knowledge transfer and international outlook.
Source: The Star
Ranking will drive us to work harder, says UTAR
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Source: NST
Malaysia ranked 2nd in S-E Asia
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Source: NST
Malaysia takes 23rd spot in global report
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After suffering a steep fall in last year’s ranking, Malaysia moved up two spots to the 23rd place out of 137 countries in the World Economic Forum’s (WEF) 2017-2018 Global Competitiveness Report (GCR) released today.
The country was in the 18th place in 2015, but fell seven spots to 25th in 2016.
In a statement, International Trade and Industry Minister (Miti) Datuk Seri Mustapa Mohamed said the latest ranking affirms the strength of Malaysia’s macroeconomic fundamentals and that its economic policies are on the right track. “Our exports are doing well and we continue to receive healthy flows of foreign direct investments,” said Mustapa.
In the latest ranking, Miti said Malaysia overtook Ireland and Qatar and remained ahead of economies such as South Korea, China and Estonia.
“We also maintained our position as the most competitive among emerging economies in East Asia and the Pacific region, as well as among 20 economies in the transition stage from efficiency-driven to innovation-driven. It is important to note that all the countries ranked above Malaysia are developed and of high-income economies,” said Miti.
At the 23rd place, Malaysia was overtaken by Australia, Taiwan, Canada, New Zealand, Japan, Singapore and the US, among others, and obtained a performance score of 5.17 out of seven, up from 5.16 last year. Overall, the report ranked Switzerland as the most competitive economy in the world for the ninth consecutive year, ahead of the US and Singapore, followed by the Netherlands and Germany.
The GCR is an annual report published by the WEF based on the Global Competitiveness Index (GCI) that combines 114 indicators integrating both macroeconomic and microeconomic aspects of competitiveness. These indicators are grouped into 12 pillars, comprising institutions, infrastructure, macroeconomic environment, health and primary education, higher education and training, goods market efficiency, labour market efficiency, financial market development, technological readiness, market size, business sophistication and innovation.
Malaysia was among the top 50 countries in each of the 12 pillars, despite declining in six of them. It performed most strongly in the financial market development, where it was placed 16th, and improved the most in the health and primary education pillar, advancing 14 positions to 30th.
Mustapa said the country’s competitiveness can only be improved if there is coordinated actions among the government, private sector and civil society.
He said continuous efforts are being made by the Malaysia Productivity Corp and the Civil Service Delivery Unit, together with relevant parties, to ensure the country’s achievements are accurately reflected in both the soft and hard data compiled to measure competitiveness.
“Looking ahead, while the improvement should be welcomed, we must not get too overwhelmed and lose sight of future challenges. The landscape is rapidly changing and thus we must ramp-up our efforts in fostering greater public-private partnership collaborations and being in the forefront of future trends including Industry 4.0,” said Mustapa.
Source: The Edge Markets
Malaysia up 2 spots to 23rd in global competitiveness ranking
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Despite the slight decline, Malaysia actually recorded an improvement by 0.96 in terms of overall distance to frontier (DTF) score, from 77.47 in the previous year to 78.43 this year.
The DTF measure shows the distance of each economy to the frontier which represents the best performance observed on each of the indicators across all economies in the Doing Business sample since 2005.
World Bank’s country manager in Malaysia Faris Hadad-Zervos said Malaysia has retained its spot among the world’s top 25 economies on the Doing Business measures.
“As the government continues to strengthen the business regulatory framework, it is important to focus on the areas where small and medium firms face difficulties, such as starting a business,” he told a news conference in conjunction with the launch of the report today.
Source: The Edge Markets
Malaysia slips one notch to 24th in World Bank’s Doing Business Report
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Source: NST
Malaysia ranks 7th in number of family-owned firms
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Source: NST
Malaysia likely to climb in world talent ranking
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This year showed Malaysia falling one notch to 24th place out of 190 countries in the World Bank’s Doing Business Report 2018 released yesterday, compared with the 23rd placing last year, despite improvement in the domestic business climate.
Malaysia has been slipping down the global ease-of-doing-business rankings since 2013, when the country achieved its best-ever ranking of sixth globally out of 189 countries.
Commenting on the declining trend of Malaysia’s ease-of-doing-business rankings, economist Lee Heng Guie said: “This underscores a constant review and enhancement of regulatory and compliance hurdles to improve the ease of doing business. Policy clarity and certainty as well as a competitive tax structure are key to investors doing business.
“While the government has undertaken steps to improve the business regulatory environment, the fast-evolving technology changes demand for more streamlining of regulatory platforms for businesses via-government electronic systems for its speed, transparency and efficient delivery,” Lee, the executive director of the Socio Economic Research Centre, told StarBiz.
World Bank’s country manager for Malaysia, Faris Hadad-Zervos, said despite dropping one spot in the annual index this year, the business climate in Malaysia has actually improved.
He noted that the DB 2018 showed high ratings for Malaysia in terms of overall distance to frontier (DTF) score of 78.43, compared with 77.47 last year.
“That’s up by around 1% from last year. This is due to an improvement in Malaysia’s business climate having seen the enactment of three business reforms in the past year,” Hadad-Zervos told reporters during the launch of the World Bank Doing Business 2018: Reforming to Create Jobs report.
“Malaysia’s global ranking, however, went to the 24th spot due not to actions on its part, but the overall global rankings improvement and other depth and breadth and pace of reforms of other countries,” he explained.
The World Bank Doing Business 2018: Reforming to Create Jobs report, is the 15th in a series of annual reports measuring regulations affecting 11 areas of the life of a business.
These included starting a business, dealing with construction permits, getting electricity, registering property, getting credit, protecting minority investors, paying taxes, trading across borders, enforcing contracts and resolving insolvency, as well as labour market regulations.
The report covered data collection from
June 2, 2016 to June 1, 2017.
According to the DB 2018, the three notable reforms implemented by Malaysia during the past year were adopted in the areas of Getting Credit, Trading Across Borders and Protecting Minority Investors.
Commenting on Malaysia’s ranking in DB 2018, the International Trade and Industry Ministry (Miti) said in a statement: “The drop in the ranking was a result of reforms undertaken by the United Arab Emirates, translating to an increase in the DTF score of 1.87 and enabling it to leapfrog from 26th last year to a ranking of 21st this year.
“Out of the top 25 economies ranked, only Malaysia and 10 others recorded improvement in DTF scores,” Miti pointed out.
The DTF score measures the distance of each economy to the “frontier economy”, which refers to the best-performing country on each of the indicators across all countries involved since 2005. An economy’s distance is reflected on a scale of zero to 100.
“The 78.43 overall score recorded by Malaysia this year means our economy is 21.57 percentage points away from the frontier,” Miti said.
Overall, New Zealand maintained its position as the most business-friendly country in the world, ahead of Singapore and Denmark, which also maintained their respective positions in the top-three rankings this year.
South Korea moved up one notch to the fourth place this year, while Hong Kong fell one notch to fifth place.
Within Asean, Malaysia was ranked second after Singapore, ahead of Thailand (26th), Brunei (56th) and Indonesia (72nd) this year.
Malaysia ranked fourth in Asia, after Singapore, Hong Kong and Taiwan (15th).
In terms of overall DTF scores, the countries that saw the biggest year-on-year improvements in this year were Brunei (9%), India (8.2%), Thailand (7.9%), Vietnam (4.3%) and Indonesia (3.5%). This compared to the improvement of 1.2% by Malaysia.
The World Bank noted that over the past 15 years, Malaysia had implemented 23 reforms improving business regulations, much higher than the per country average of 15 reforms in the East Asia and Pacific region.
“As the government continues to strengthen the business regulatory framework, it is important to focus on the areas where small and medium firms face difficulties, such as starting a business,” Hadad-Zervos said.
According to the World Bank, Malaysia has an opportunity for further improvements in the area of Starting a Business, despite six reforms carried out in this area over the last 15 years. Paying Taxes is another area where there is room for improvement, it added.
Source: The Star
Others catch up as Malaysia slips
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Malaysia moved up two notches to 22nd place in the latest IMD World Competitiveness Rankings published by the Institute for Management Development (IMD) World Competitiveness Centre.
“Malaysia is the only economy (in South-east Asia) to register an improvement of two positions, driven by a strong rebound in economic performance, especially in international trade,” the Switzerland-based research group said in a statement today.
The top five most competitive economies in the world remain the same as in 2017, but their order changed.
The United States returned to the number one spot from fourth place in the preceding year, driven mainly by its strength in economic performance and infrastructure. It was followed by Hong Kong, Singapore, the Netherlands and Switzerland.
Singapore – which was unchanged at third place, globally, retained its lead among economies in South-east Asia, aided by its strong government efficiency.
However, the country “continues to be weakened by the high levels of private debt in the economy and the high price level, especially in real estate, which reduces quality of life and talent attraction,” IMD said.
Besides Malaysia, Japan (ranked 25th), South Korea (27th), and India (44th) saw slight improvements.
Asian countries that dropped a few rungs are Taiwan (17th), Thailand (30th) and Indonesia (43rd).
The Philippines experienced the most significant decline in the region, shifting nine places to 50th due to a decline in tourism and employment, the worsening of public finances and a surge in concerns over the education system, among others.
“Countries from the region that experience declines this year, with the exception of Taiwan, all show signs of a need to improve their tangible and scientific infrastructure,” said IMD.
The IMD World Competitiveness Center has been publishing the annual rankings since 1989.
This year, it benchmarked the performance of 63 economies based on more than 340 criteria measuring different facets of competitiveness.
Source: Bernama
Malaysia Up Two Spots On Competitiveness Rankings
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Source: NST
Malaysia 4th best country to invest in
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Thirteen Malaysian companies, led by Malayan Banking Bhd (Maybank), have made it into the Forbes 2018 Global 2000 list, which ranks the biggest, most powerful and most valuable companies in the world.
Criteria for the ranking include sales, profits, assets and market value.
The list of 2,000 companies, which was released today, include Maybank (394), Tenaga Nasional Bhd (503), CIMB Group Holdings Bhd (620), Public Bank Bhd (646), Petronas Chemicals Group Bhd (1,268), RHB Bank Bhd (1,448), Axiata Group Bhd (1,508), Sime Darby Bhd (1,535), Hong Leong Financial Group Bhd (1,568), Sime Darby Plantation Bhd (1,624), Maxis Bhd (1,779), Genting Bhd (1,811) and AMMB Holdings Bhd (1,911).
Forbes said Chinese companies extended their streak at the top of the Global 2000 list.
Industrial & Commercial Bank of China is ranked No. 1 for the sixth consecutive year. China Construction Bank remains in the No. 2 spot.
Source: The Edge Markets
13 Malaysian companies on Forbes 2018 Global 2000 list
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Source: NST
Malaysians ranked 7th in the world
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Source: NST
2 firms make it into Fab 50 list
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Malaysia has gone up in ranks in terms of its people’s life expentancy, standard of living and knowledge status, according to a United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) index.
Malaysia scored 0.802 in its Human Development Index (HDI) for 2017, which is considered as “very-high human development”, according to the 2018 statistical update of Human Development Indices and Indicators.
In 2016, the country’s score was 0.799.
Malaysia is ranked 57th out of 189 countries and territories, moving up one place.
Besides Malaysia, Singapore and Brunei are the only other South-East Asian countries considered to have “very-high human development” status.
Singapore has a score of 0.932 (9th ranking) while Brunei has a score of 0.852 (39th ranking).
Thailand is considered to have high human development status while all the other Asean countries are considered to have medium human development statuses.
The HDI, which was first introduced in 1990, is defined as a summary measure for assessing long-term progress in three basic dimensions of human development: a long and healthy life, access to knowledge and a decent standard of living.
According to the report, Malaysia’s HDI value increased from 0.643 in 1990 to 0.802 in 2017, an increase of 24.7%.
Between 1990 and 2017, Malaysia’s life expectancy at birth increased by 4.8 years, mean years of schooling increased by 3.7 years and expected years of schooling increased by 4.0 years.
Malaysia’s gross national income (GNI) per capita also increased by about 156.7% between 1990 and 2017, according to the report.
Norway, Switzerland, Australia, Ireland and Germany lead the HDI rankings, while Niger, the Central African Republic, South Sudan, Chad and Burundi have the lowest scores.
The HDI is based primarily on international data from the United Nations Population Division (the life expectancy data), the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization Institute for Statistics (the mean years of schooling and expected years of schooling data) and the World Bank (the GNI per capita data).
Source: The Star
Malaysia moves up Human Development Index
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Source: NST
Family owned firms excel
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UM improves ranking in world’s best varsities list
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Malaysia has been ranked 55th in the World Bank’s 2018 human capital index, lagging behind Singapore which topped the list.
Malaysia scored a total 0.62 versus Singapore’s 0.88.
Singapore came in first ahead of South Korea, Japan, Hong Kong and Finland.
Chad was at the bottom of the list with a score of 0.29.
The index is measured in terms of the productivity of the next generation of workers relative to the benchmark of complete education and full health.
An economy in which the average worker achieves both full health and full education potential will score a value of 1 on the index.
The World Bank in its World Development Report 2019: The Changing Nature of Work released last Friday said greater investments in people’s health and education are urgent in a rapidly evolving labor market increasingly shaped by technology.
World Bank group president Kim Jim Yong said the nature of work is not only changing, but changing rapidly.
“We don’t know what jobs children in primary school today will compete for, because many of those jobs don’t exist yet.
“The great challenge is to equip them with the skills they’ll need no matter what future jobs look like – skills such as problem-solving and critical thinking, as well as interpersonal skills like empathy and collaboration.
“By measuring countries according to how well they’re investing in their people, we hope to help governments take active steps to better prepare their people to compete in the economy of the future,” he said.
The report said the number of robots operating worldwide is rising rapidly, the report says, stoking fears of a jobs meltdown.
But it said technology is laying down a path to create jobs, increase productivity and deliver effective public services.
The World Bank said fears surrounding innovation, which has already transformed living standards, are unfounded.
The report said digital technology spurs rapid innovation and growth, disrupting old production patterns and blurring the boundaries of firms.
New business models, such as digital platforms, evolve at dizzying speed from local start-ups to global behemoths – often with few tangible assets or employees.
The report futher added that four out of five people in developing countries have never known what it means to live with social protection.
It said with two billion people working in the informal sector, unprotected by stable wage employment, social welfare, or the benefits of education – new working patterns are adding to a dilemma that predates the latest technological wave.
The report challenged governments to take better care of their citizens, calling for a universal guaranteed minimum level of social protection.
It said full social inclusion will be costly, but it can be achieved with reforms in labor market regulation in some countries and, globally, a long overdue overhaul of taxation policy.
Source: The Edge Markets
Malaysia ranked 55th in World Bank human capital index
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Malaysia rose one spot to the 25th place out of 140 countries with a score of 74.4 in the World Economic Forum’s (WEF) 2018 Global Competitiveness Report (GCR) insight report released last week.
Additionally, report published Oct 11 said the country was one of three non-high-income economies feature in the top 40: Malaysia (25th), China (28th), and Thailand (38th).
In terms of macro economic stability, Malaysia ranked first; 24th for institutions, 32nd each for infrastucture and ICT adoption; 15th for financial system and 19th for business dynamism.
The GCR said adaptability and agility of all stakeholders—individuals, governments and businesses—will be key features in successful economies, adding Malaysia ranked 9th among future-ready nations.
It said the relationship between future-preparedness and income level is positive but extremely loose, with Malaysia scoring significantly higher than Greece, Italy and Belgium.
The GCR pointed out although Malaysia and Belgium have a similar GCI score, Belgium’s median income is three times higher than Malaysia’s.
The report said Malaysia’s results suggest its competitiveness performance, if maintained, will promote higher and sustained levels of income in the future.
Meanwhile, Singapore ranked second (score of 83.5) on the overall rankings behind the United States, as a result of a very strong performance across the board. Singapore features in the top 10 of seven pillars and in the top 20 of a further four.
The GCR said openness is the defining feature of this global trading hub and one of the main drivers of its economic success. Singapore leads the Infrastructure pillar, with a near-perfect score of 95.7.
Source: The Edge Markets
Malaysia up 1 notch to 25th in WEF global competitiveness ranking
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The United States is the world’s most competitive economy, the Geneva-based World Economic Forum said on Wednesday, after revisions to its annual league table knocked Switzerland off the top spot for the first time in a decade.
Last year’s rankings, with a different methodology, placed the United States second.
Following is a table showing the top 30 countries, according to the World Economic Forum.
1 United States
2 Singapore
3 Germany
4 Switzerland
5 Japan
6 Netherlands
7 Hong Kong
8 United Kingdom
9 Sweden
10 Denmark
11 Finland
12 Canada
13 Taiwan
14 Australia
15 South Korea
16 Norway
17 France
18 New Zealand
19 Luxembourg
20 Israel
21 Belgium
22 Austria
23 Ireland
24 Iceland
25 Malaysia
26 Spain
27 United Arab Emirates
28 China
29 Czech Republic
30 Qatar
Source: Reuters
The world’s 30 most competitive economies — WEF
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Report: Country among top 20 ranked global economies
Malaysia moved up nine places to secure a global ranking of 15 in the World Bank’s business index after carrying out six business reforms in the past year.
The acceleration in reform helped the country regain a position among the top 20 ranked economies in the world, according to the World Bank Group’s doing business 2019: training for reform report.
The reforms carried out over the past year covered the areas of starting a business, dealing with construction permits, getting electricity, registering property, trading across borders and resolving insolvency.
In a statement, the group said Malaysia’s consistent efforts to adopt international regulatory best practices made the achievement possible.
“The World Bank congratulates Malaysia for making significant improvements in its business environment as captured by our Doing Business 2019 Report.
“We are committed to sustaining our support for this important reform agenda going forward with a focus on areas where entrepreneurs still experience difficulties,” World Bank Group country director for Malaysia Mara Warwick ( pic) said.
Among the reforms carried out was the introduction of an online registration system for the GST, reducing the time to register a new business from 23.5 days to 13.5 days.
The country also streamlined the process of obtaining a building permit, reducing the time needed to complete all required procedures to build a warehouse from 78 days to 54 days.
“Getting electricity was made easier by eliminating the site visit for new commercial electricity connections, reducing by seven days the time that it takes for a business to obtain a permanent electricity connection and supply,” the group said in the statement.
Malaysia is also among the world’s top five performers in several areas.
The country ranked second place after New Zealand in the area of protecting minority investors, while a reform to improve construction permitting advanced Malaysia to a global rank of three in the area of dealing with construction permits.
In the area of Getting Electricity, Malaysia now ranks fourth globally.
The cost for businesses to obtain a commercial electricity connection here is only 26% of income per capita, compared with an average of 625% in East Asia and Pacific.
However, the group noted that Malaysia continued to underperform in the area of starting a business, with a global ranking of 122.
Despite reform measures carried out over the years, it takes 9.5 procedures and 13.5 days to register a new business in Malaysia, compared with two procedures and 1.5 days in Singapore and 3.5 procedures and 5.5 days in Brunei.
In a statement, the International Trade and Industry Ministry said regulatory reforms and improvements within the doing business indicator areas in Malaysia were driven by Pemudah.
“Moving forward, the structure will be strengthened to better address issues at the policy and execution levels,” it said.
Source: The Star
Malaysia moves up World Bank business index
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