THE Malays still need an affirmative-action policy to reduce income inequality, an academic told the Council of Eminent Persons today.
Universiti Malaya economist Kamal Mat Salih said the uneven income distribution was also a big factor why Pakatan Harapan did not receive the full support of the Malays.
“Race issues are not behind (us),” said the adjunct professor in the Department of Development Studies at the Faculty of Economics and Administration.
It is generally accepted that though PH promised to help the poor, Malays were suspicious that their rights will not be looked after by a PH government.
“Inequality between groups of income covers all people. In fact, over the last few years, inequality among the Chinese is worse than it was before,” Kamal told reporters at Ilham Tower today after briefing the council.
Kamal proposed a new Scandinavian-inspired economic model, which he called the Islamic economic model.
“It’s somewhere in between the capitalist market-based and market socialism. The Islamic economic system is universal.
“It’s a social solidarity economic model, based on the Norwegian social democratic system. Which means the state plays a very strong role in the allocation process of the economy.
“But the Scandinavian model is a high-tax regime, which we can’t afford. But (the) Islamic model has one solution. You can grow and accumulate wealth as much as you can but you must also share a part of that with the less fortunate. That is what I call the third factor,” he said.
He said the government’s focus should be on both growth and distribution, adding that the previous administration had failed to address them.
Kamal criticised the New Economic Model implemented by former prime minister Najib Razak in 2010, which originally sought to shift affirmative action from being ethnically based to needs-based to cater to a freer market.
“The current system is largely pro-business, largely capitalistic, based on profit-motive.
“The New Economic Model is based on market-based, more liberal approaches. It’s been shown that the market has failed to address the distribution issues.
“And so you have got to adjust your policy and continuously evaluate where you are at, in order to get growth. When the data is in your face, you still ignore it and you think that you are on the right track, when in fact you are on the wrong track, and you don’t realise you are on the wrong track,” he said.
The NEM sought to supplant the New Economic Policy, a Bumiputera affirmative programme implemented in 1971, following racial riots two years earlier.
The NEP was succeeded by the National Development Policy in 1991, which adopted much of the same policies. – July 5, 2018.
Comments
Posted 7 years ago by Peace Maker · Reply
Posted 7 years ago by Cheng long lu · Reply
Posted 7 years ago by Anak Kampung · Reply
Posted 7 years ago by Anak Kampung · Reply
Posted 7 years ago by Syahril Nizam · Reply
Posted 7 years ago by Anjing kawan Kucing Comel · Reply
Posted 7 years ago by Anak Kampung · Reply
Posted 7 years ago by MELVILLE JAYATHISSA · Reply
Posted 7 years ago by Chee chan · Reply
Posted 7 years ago by Richard Chapbell · Reply
Posted 7 years ago by David Lee · Reply