Business

M’sian economy grows by 8.9% in Q2: BNM

Bank says growth reflective of normalising post-pandemic economic activity

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 12 Aug 2022 2:25PM

M’sian economy grows by 8.9% in Q2: BNM
In a statement today, Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) said the sterling growth of 8.9% in the second quarter of 2022 growth is reflective of normalising economic activity as the country moved towards endemicity and reopened international borders. – Pixabay pic, August 12, 2022

KUALA LUMPUR – Malaysia’s economy posted a sterling growth of 8.9% in the second quarter (Q2) of 2022 as domestic demand continued to strengthen, underpinned by the steady recovery in labour market conditions and ongoing policy support.

In a statement today, Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) said the higher growth was also reflective of normalising economic activity as the country moved towards endemicity and reopened international borders. 

“Exports remain supported by strong demand for electrical and electronics products. By sector, the services and manufacturing sectors continued to drive growth,” it said.

While the gross domestic product was lifted to some extent by the low base from the full movement control order (FMCO) in June 2021, the central bank said growth in April and May 2022 was particularly robust.

On a quarter-on-quarter seasonally-adjusted basis, it said the economy increased by 3.5% as compared to 3.8% in Q1 2022.

During the quarter, BNM said headline and core inflation increased to 2.8 and 2.5%, respectively, as compared to 2.2 and 1.7% recorded in the Q1, reflecting an improvement in demand conditions amid the high-cost environment, with price increases mainly driven by food away from home and other food items.

With the growth in the first half of 2022 at 6.9%, the central bank said the economy is projected to expand further for the remainder of the year. 

BNM Governor Tan Sri Nor Shamsiah Mohd Yunus said that while external demand could face headwinds from slower global growth, the Malaysian economy will continue to be supported by firm domestic demand moving forward. 

“Growth would also benefit from improving labour market conditions and higher tourist arrivals, as well as continued implementation of multi-year investment projects,” she said. 

However, BNM said Malaysia’s growth remains susceptible to weaker-than-expected global growth, further escalation of geopolitical conflicts and worsening supply chain disruptions.

“Headline inflation is projected to trend higher in some months during the remainder of the year, due partly to the base effect from the discount on electricity prices implemented in Q3 2021. Core inflation is expected to average higher in 2022, as demand continues to improve amid the high-cost environment. 

“The extent of upside pressures on inflation is expected to remain partly contained by the existing price control measures, fuel subsidies and the continued spare capacity in the economy,” it said. 

Nevertheless, BNM said the inflation outlook continues to be contingent on upside risks stemming from the strength of domestic demand, global price developments, and domestic policy measures.

Meanwhile, the ringgit depreciated by 4.6% against the US dollar in Q2 2022 and 6.3% year to date (YTD) until Aug 10, 2022, broadly in line with the movement of regional currencies (Q2 2022: -4.7%; YTD: -5.8%). 

According to the central bank, this largely reflected the continued strengthening of the US dollar following aggressive US monetary policy tightening, increased investors’ risk aversion due to the weaker global growth outlook and the military conflict in Ukraine. 

“Nonetheless, elevated commodity prices and Malaysia’s economic recovery helped to cushion the downward impact from the external developments on the ringgit during the quarter. 

“Going forward, while domestic financial markets will continue to be subjected to episodes of heightened volatility, spillovers to domestic financial intermediation are expected to remain broadly contained, supported by Malaysia’s healthy external position and strong banking system,” it said.

During the quarter, the central bank said net financing to the private sector grew by 4.9% as compared to 4.5% in the previous quarter amid higher growth in outstanding loans (5.4%; Q1 2022: 4.4%). 

“Outstanding corporate bond growth moderated (3.4%; Q1 2022: 4.6%) as growth in bond redemptions continued to outpace that of issuances. Outstanding business loans grew by 5.5% (Q1 2022: 4.3%), following strong expansion in loan disbursements for both working capital and investments. 

“For households, outstanding loan growth increased further (5.7%; Q1 2022: 4.8%), with higher growth recorded across all loan purposes. Loan disbursements remained robust amid strong loan demand, particularly for the purchase of cars and houses,” it said. 

Overall, BNM said loan repayments for both the business and household segments have been encouraging upon the lapse of repayment assistance programmes and the reopening of the economy. – Bernama, August 12, 2022

Related News

Film / 2d

Chinese short drama The Lady from the Northeast 2 strikes a chord with Malaysian viewers

Malaysia / 4d

Malaysia commits to strengthening educational ties with Palestine

Malaysia / 4d

Malaysian tourists spark backlash in China over alleged rude behaviour (video)

Malaysia / 6d

Prawn dispute a rising threat to Thai-Malaysia relations

Malaysia / 1w

Selangor still Malaysia’s top economic engine, DOSM data counters political claims

Malaysia / 2w

Southeast Asia’s booming scam industry eyes Malaysia

Spotlight

Malaysia

Video of individuals, believed to be Rohingyas, sleeping in MRT goes viral

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir

Malaysia

Woman claims RM4 million condo transferred without consent after investment scheme collapse

Malaysia

Outstanding judgment paid to Teresa Kok, auction of Jamal's property called off

Malaysia

PH defers Johor MB post decision as Loke prioritises election victory

Events

International media networks need to be strengthened to face global challenges

By Ian McIntyre

Malaysia

Over 250 homes damaged in Bercham storm (video)

Malaysia

Johor state election: DAP bets on Malay candidate in Ulu Tiram

Opinion

ASEAN’s renaissance: A new lease of life in the multipolar world

You may be interested

Business

Robo.ai in US$60 million deal to acquire QC Capital, accelerating global AI push

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir