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Racial divides threaten Malaysia
economy
Afp, Kuala Lumpur
Growing racial divides are undermining Malaysia and
the government must act or face severe social and
financial consequences, an anti-corruption watchdog
warned Monday.
Transparency International Malaysia president, Ramon
Navaratnam, said racial polarisation coupled with
weak institutions, rising corruption and poor
governance were deterring investors and weakening
competitiveness.
"We are beginning to see more and more signs of what
could be indications of a failing state," he said at
a conference on the 2007 outlook for Malaysia.
"If we don't address these issues now, it's like
gangrene. It gathers in strength and intensity and
causes major problems."
Navaratnam, an influential former senior treasury
official, said the country was going through a "bad
patch" with deteriorating race relations between its
majority ethnic Malays and minority Chinese and
Indians.
"This will affect confidence, this will affect
investment and affect growth and then, worse still,
affect our ability to distribute (wealth)," he told
reporters later.
"Migration is rising, people are leaving. I
understand the young people ... are reluctant to
come back."
Navaratnam said it was critical for the government
to review its economic policies, especially those
which favour the Muslim Malays, who lag economically
behind the Chinese. |