To spur this growth, the Government has proposed various new and enhanced incentives designed to make Malaysia more attractive to foreign investors. On this, we saw a proposed extension of the Principal Hub incentive with relaxed conditions and the introduction of a new Global Trading Centre incentive. The PENJANA proposal of a preferential tax rate for selected manufacturers has also been extended to 2022 and the scope has been extended to cover selected services, particularly high technology, research and development and medical-related services. These proposals, combined with the proposed relaxation to the licensed manufacturing warehouse and free zone regimes, will certainly enhance Malaysia’s attractiveness, particularly as a supply chain hub.
The Government continues to take a strategic long-term view by providing the highest allocation of the Budget to the education sector for the third year in a row. The allocation for development expenditure is also encouraging, at more than 40% of public expenditure, the highest in 10 years. The development expenditure budget sees RM15b allocated for key infrastructure projects such as the Pan-Borneo highway, the Gemas-Johor Bharu double-tracking and electrification project, and Phase 1 of the Klang Valley Double Track project, to spur spending in the short term. The building of a strong infrastructure network, including an upgrade of broadband infrastructure, is also noteworthy.