IF Najib Razak and Barisan Nasional stayed in power for just one more term, Malaysia could have been saddled with up to RM3 trillion in debt, said Finance Minister Lim Guan Eng.
That amount would be impossible to repay, he said, thankful that Malaysians voted to bring about change in the 14the general election on May 9.
Lim based his projection on the cavalier manner of spending by the Najib government that resulted in the country carrying RM1 trillion in direct debts and borrowings by other entities guaranteed and paid by the government.
If given another term, BN’s profligate ways could have resulted in the debt ballooning to RM3 trillion and no one would have known about it, said Lim.
“Look at the way the money was spent? Look at the bags of cash, jewellery, super yachts,” Lim told The Malaysian Insight.
“If the debts had gone up to three trillion, there would be nothing we could do to save the country. We would be a basket case.
“Even though it is tough, we still have a good shot of solving it. If its three trillion, nothing you do will make a difference.”
Soon after taking over Putrajaya, the new Pakatan Harapan government announced that Malaysia’s actual debt bill was RM1.0873 trillion.
This was in marked contrast to the former BN administration’s claim of RM686.8 billion.
The new figure includes guarantees for entities unable to service their debts, amounting to RM199.1 billion.
These include Danainfra Nasional Bhd (RM42.2 billion), Govco Holdings Bhd (RM8.8 billion), Prasarana Malaysia Bhd (RM26.6 billion), Malaysia Rail Link Sdn Bhd (RM14.5 billion), as well as an estimated RM38 billion for 1Malaysia Development Bhd.
Putrajaya was also committed to leasing payments, including rental, maintenance, and other charges, for “a whole list of public-private partnership projects, such as the construction of schools, hostels, roads, police stations, hospitals, and so on”.
These lease commitments were designed specifically to circumvent the federal government guarantee and debt limits, and amounted to RM201.4 billion, Lim said.
“These government guarantees have turned into direct debts already. We have already started paying. These guarantees and lease commitments have already been converted into a form of direct debt,” Lim told The Malaysian Insight.
There were also several “mini-1MDBs” where the government is paying the debts of companies which it guaranteed, he said. These debts amount to between RM500 million and RM1 billion.
Lim added that Putrajaya is already forced to pay the expenses of public-private ventures which were originally the responsibility of the latter.
“Some of these companies had no financial resources any more, so all the expenses were taken over by the government or the government has to pay for loans that these companies took out.” – June 22, 2018.
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