Malaysia Economic Outlook
GDP growth beat market expectations in Q1 but softened year on year from Q4. Private spending and investment grew at weaker rates, but moderating inflation, stable interest rates and a lower unemployment rate likely prevented larger downturns. Meanwhile, public consumption and exports declined, with the latter plagued by the global tech sector slump. In Q2, GDP growth is likely slowing further: The manufacturing sector weakened for the eighth consecutive month in April, with depressed demand weighing on output and new business. A surprise rate hike in May is likely further stifling domestic activity. Meanwhile, the country’s pensions system is reportedly facing a cash crunch after the withdrawal of about USD 33 billion for Covid-era government stimulus measures in 2020–2022. In May, Prime Minister Ibrahim blocked additional withdrawals, despite opposition calls to extend these measures.
Malaysia Inflation
Inflation eased to 3.4% in March (February: 3.7%), on softer transport and food price pressures. Price pressures should ebb further in 2023 on softer demand, state subsidies and tighter financing conditions, bringing inflation within the Central Bank’s 2.0–3.0% target range in Q2. Commodity market volatility and the potential removal of fuel subsidies pose upside risks.
This chart displays Economic Growth (GDP, annual variation in %) for Malaysia from 2013 to 2022.