by Melissa Lee
Deputy Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin has warned Malaysia
will be bankrupt if the opposition wins the general election, but was
immediately shot down by Pakatan Rakyat leaders, who pointed the 2019
bankruptcy came from with his own boss's department.
"It is the silliest
accusation. The cat is chasing its own tail," PKR vice president Chua Jui
Meng told Malaysia Chronicle.
Indeed, it was in May 2010 that Minister in the Prime
Minister's Department Idris Jala first shocked the nation with a warning that
Malaysia may fold up if it fails to slash subsidies and reduce debt.
"We do not want to end up like Greece with a total debt
of EUR300 billion. Our deficit rose to record high of RM47 billion last year.
If the government continues at the rate of 12 per cent per annum, Malaysia
could go bankrupt in 2019 with total debts amounting to RM1,158 billion,"
Star reported Idris as saying on May 27 last year.
Flexible
memory bank?
But it looks like the 64-year-old DPM has a shorter
memory than most.
Muhyiddin said the
opposition was only good at making empty promises. He pointed out that when
Prime Minister Najib Razak tabled the 2012 Budget, he had promised to retain
the country's deficit at 4.7 per cent of Gross Domestic Product. Yet Pakatan
de-facto chief Anwar Ibrahim made a mockery of it.
"The shadow budget by the opposition shows its expenditure, purportedly for the people, but it does not take into account the deficit. If the deficit goes up to 10 per cent, it means the country is not managed well," Bernama reported Muhyiddin as saying a day ago.
"The shadow budget by the opposition shows its expenditure, purportedly for the people, but it does not take into account the deficit. If the deficit goes up to 10 per cent, it means the country is not managed well," Bernama reported Muhyiddin as saying a day ago.
Jui Meng rebuked Muhyiddin, accusing the Pagoh MP of talking
through his hat.
"It is very clearly
stated in the Pakatan's Prosperity for All shadow
budget that we do not want a deficit than of more than 4.4% of the country’s
Gross Domestic Product," said Jui Meng.
"But obviously, it must have missed Muhyiddin. Also,
Najib's Budget 2012 is already under heavy fire for overly high growth
projections with no real ideas or details of where the money will come from.
The only possibility is to introduce GST straight after GE-13. But before such
a drastic measure, why not trim the fat within BN itself first, starting with
Umno."
Trim
the fat
The Pakatan's shadow Budget was unveiled on Tuesday,
three days before Najib's grandiose and record-size RM232 billion spending plan
that was overly studded with "one-off" cash incentives.
The shadow Budget for 2012 is sized at RM220bil, and
plans to cut the expenditure of the Prime Minister’s Department by RM10bil and
re-distribute the allocation to the other ministries as part of its trimming
plan for the bureaucracy. Money would be spent on the people, with emphasis on
the needy groups, the Pakatan had promised.
This would include a RM1,000 bonus for senior citizens with
annual incomes of less than RM18,000 each as well as for qualified housewives.
Pakatan also proposed that the minimum wage be set at RM1,100, an annual
allowance of RM1,000 to be given to mothers to encourage them to enter the
workforce and re-imposing various taxes on luxury items like handbags and
branded clothes.
It also promised to give “top-up payment” to hardcore poor
households to ensure that their monthly income would reach RM550, increase
welfare aid from RM300 presently to RM550 and reduce the use of consultancy
services by the Government.
“We aim to reduce the deficit to a reasonable level so that
public services are not disrupted,” Anwar had told reporters after the Budget
launch on October 4.
Source : MC
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