Malaysia's
economy grew 4.0 percent in the second quarter, its slowest pace in nearly two
years, on softening global export demand, the central bank said Wednesday.
The worsening outlook prompted Bank Negara governor Zeti
Akhtar Aziz to temper Malaysia's earlier official estimate for full-year growth
of between 5 and 6 percent, saying it would likely come in at the low end of
that range.
"The economic activity was affected by weaker external
conditions" and a moderation in public sector spending, the central bank
governor said, adding that domestic demand had helped prevent a further
deceleration.
The performance is down slightly from a 4.6 percent
first-quarter expansion but markedly lower than the 8.9 percent growth achieved
in the second quarter of last year.
Gross domestic product growth for the first half of this year
was 4.4 percent.
Malaysia's economy had rebounded strongly to log 7.2 percent
full-year growth in 2010 after suffering a 1.7 percent contraction in 2009 due
to the global slowdown.
But the world economy has again been unsettled by the March
earthquake and tsunami crisis in Japan, the ongoing Eurozone debt problem, and
the US credit crisis -- and Malaysia's export-dependent economy has felt the
impact of a resulting slowdown in global demand.
"Right now, based on our assessment we can achieve
growth of at least 5.0 percent," Zeti said, adding that the target could
slip further if the US or European economic woes deepen.
In March the government forecast 5-6 percent full-year
growth, spurred largely by domestic demand.
While the economy has slowed, inflation has not, averaging
3.3 percent in the first half of the year largely on increases in food prices,
according to central bank data.
July's 3.4 percent inflation was the highest since March
2009.
Zeti said she expects full-year inflation of 3.5 percent.
The central bank has raised interest rates four times since
March 2010 to contain inflation, which registered just 1.7 percent for all of
last year.
However, the second quarter performance was
"commendable" amid the global challenges, said Yeah Kim Leng, chief
economist with research firm RAM Holdings.
"More efforts will be needed to ensure continuous
consumer spending and investment by the public and private sectors in the
second half of 2011 in order to offset the weak demand from the US and
Europe," he added.
Prime Minister Najib Razak has unveiled a programme of major
infrastructure projects and financial market reforms aimed at jump-starting the
economy and attracting much-needed foreign investment, but critics say the
results have been limited.
Source : AFP
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