Thursday 28 Mar 2024
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This article first appeared in The Edge Financial Daily on May 16, 2019

KUALA LUMPUR: A Debt Management Office (DMO) has been set up to review and manage the government’s debt and liabilities, which will be chaired by Finance Minister Lim Guan Eng.

Apart from Guan Eng, the nine other members include Chief Secretary to the Government Datuk Seri Dr Ismail Bakar, Treasury secretary-general Datuk Ahmad Badri Mohd Zahir, Economic Affairs Ministry secretary-general Datuk Saiful Anuar Lebai Hussen, Bank Negara Malaysia governor Datuk Nor Shamsiah Mohd Yunus and Securities Commission Malaysia executive chairman Datuk Syed Zaid Albar.

The rest are Permodalan Nasional Bhd group chairman Tan Sri Dr Zeti Akhtar Aziz, Accountant-General of Malaysia Datuk Saat Esa, PricewaterhouseCoopers Malaysia executive chairman Datuk Mohammad Faiz Azmi and Economic Adviser to the Prime Minister Dr Muhammad Abdul Khalid.

“The DMO will come into effect immediately in order to craft the necessary strategies to reduce the country’s financial burden and put the plan into action. The formulated strategies and plans will be presented to the Fiscal Policy Committee chaired by the prime minister,” said Guan Eng in a statement yesterday.

He added that the establishment of the office has been agreed to by Prime Minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad.

The plan to set up the DMO was announced during the 2019 Budget speech in November last year.

The office is tasked to oversee the issuance and propose the structure of debt belonging to the federal government, all statutory bodies and the government’s special purpose vehicles in a holistic manner.

According to the ministry’s Fiscal Outlook and Federal Government Revenue Estimates 2019, the federal government’s overall debt and liabilities stood at RM1.07 trillion or 74.5% as a percentage of national gross domestic product (GDP) as at June 30, 2018 — slightly lower from RM1.09 trillion or 80.3% of GDP at Dec 31, 2017.

Of that, RM725.2 billion was the national debt (50.7% GDP), while RM184.9 billion come from other liabilities (12.9% GDP), RM117.5 billion from committed government guarantees (8.2% GDP), and RM38.3 billion was the net debt of 1Malaysia Development Bhd (2.7% GDP).

Guan Eng said the government intends to cut the incidence of having expensive and irresponsible debt servicing payments arising from weaknesses in debt issuance coordination.

“The establishment of the DMO is an effort by the administration to overcome and resolve the problem of hidden government debt and liabilities, which had grown in excess of RM1 trillion in 2017,” he said.

“The office is among the institutional reforms carried out to strengthen the government’s fiscal position that is closely monitored by international credit rating agencies.

“The DMO is designed to keep government debt and liabilities in check by preventing it from growing out of control, while ensuring that reckless borrowing made without valid reasons will no longer occur,” he added.

The office will perform the following duties:

•     Schedule bond issuance and overall borrowings by the government, statutory bodies and government-owned companies in an orderly fashion to attain the cheapest interest rates and coupon payments;

•     Restructure the relevant bonds and borrowings where possible to save finance costs by reducing debt repayments; and

•     Formulate strategies to reduce the government’s debt and liability burden.

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