The Malaysian economy grew by 4.7% in the fourth quarter of 2018, the Bank Negara Malaysia announced in a statement.
The Malaysian economy grew by 4.7% in the fourth quarter of 2018, the Bank Negara Malaysia announced in a statement.
Private sector activity remained the main driver of growth, while a rebound in exports of goods and services contributed towards the positive growth of net exports.
On the supply side, the Central Bank notes that major sectors continued to expand. The services sector was supported by continued strength in consumer spending, particularly in the retail segment.
“Growth in the manufacturing sector remained driven by the electronics and electrical (E&E) and consumer-related clusters. Commodities-related sectors continued to recover from production disruptions experienced since the second quarter, with higher growth in the mining and agricultural sectors.”
Headline inflation declined to 0.3% (3Q 2018: 0.5%), mainly due to transport inflation turning negative. The combined outcome of the zerorisation of the Goods and Services Tax (GST) and the implementation of the Sales and Services Tax (SST) continued to exert an overall downward impact to headline inflation during the quarter.
The central bank is optimistic that going forward, the Malaysian economy is expected to remain on a steady growth path
Private sector demand is expected to remain the main driver of growth amid continuing fiscal rationalisation while the external sector is likely to soften with moderating global demand.
Going forward, headline inflation is expected to average moderately higher.
The impact of the consumption tax policy on headline inflation in 2019 will start to lapse towards the end of the year. Underlying inflation, which excludes the impact of the changes in consumption tax policy, is expected to be broadly stable in 2019 in the absence of strong demand pressure.