launching of productivity report third quarter 2017 weekly... · 2017-12-05 · launching of...
TRANSCRIPT
1MITI Tower, No. 7, Jalan Sultan Haji Ahmad Shah, 50480 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Tel: +603 - 8000 8000 Fax: +603 - 6202 9446
Launching of Productivity Report Third Quarter 2017
Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak launched the Labour Productivity Report 3rd Quarter 2017. Malaysia labour productivity registered a 4.2 per cent growth in the third quarter of this year, higher than the average annual growth of 3.7 per cent set under the 11th Malaysia Plan.
Labour productivity was attributed to four major sectors, namely agriculture, registering an increase of 5.2 per cent; manufacturing (5.1 per cent); construction (4.8 per cent) and services (3.7 per cent). At the same event, six champions have been appointed for Productivity Nexus subsectors for Agro-food, Machinery and Equipment (M&E), Tourism, Private Healthcare, ICT Services and Professional Services.
The Productivity Nexus, which are centres of excellence for all things related to boosting productivity at sector and enterprise levels, are expected to drive the implementation of the productivity initiatives in close partnership with the Government.
Malaysia Productivity Blueprint (MPB), aimed to boost Malaysia’s economic growth targeting at 3.7% per annum and raise the prosperity of the rakyat. The blueprint will serve as a holistic measure to target initiatives to open up potential productivity at national, sectoral and industrial levels.
The productivity blueprint had outlined 5 strategic thrusts, 10 national initiatives and 43 sectoral initiatives and 16 key activities. The five strategic thrusts are: building workforce of the future, driving digitalization and innovation, making industry accountable for productivity, forging a robust strong ecosystem and securing a strong implementation mechanism.
Three productivity nexus which included retail and food and beverage, electric and electronic, and chemical products has been established to assists enterprises to boost productivity, increase innovation and capture growth opportunities.
For more information on MPB, kindly visit http://www.wayup.my
2MITI Tower, No. 7, Jalan Sultan Haji Ahmad Shah, 50480 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Tel: +603 - 8000 8000 Fax: +603 - 6202 9446
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Source: Department of Statistics, Malaysia
Labour Productivity, Third Quarter 2017Productivity by Sector
Highest Productivity Growth
Labour Productivity 2010 and 2016
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Labour Productivity 2010 - 2016
Productivity Performance, Third Quarter 2017Labour Productivity
Labour Productivity of Agriculture Sector Labour Productivity of Mining & Quarrying Sector
Labour Productivity of Manufacturing Sector Labour Productivity of Construction Sector
Labour Productivity of Services Sector
Source: Department of Statistics, Malaysia
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international reportWorld Map of Crude Oil Exports 2016
Note: World’s oil exporters ranked by revenue and global market share.Source: https://howmuch.net/articles/world-map-of-crude-oil-exports-2016
Saudi Arabia 20.1% Russia 10.9% Iraq 6.8% Canada 5.8%
UAE 5.7% Kuwait 4.5% Iran 4.3% Nigeria 4.0%
Angola 3.7% Norway 3.3%
Malaysia 0.8% Indonesia 0.8% Viet Nam 0.4% Brunei 0.3%Thailand 0.1% Philippines 0.03% Myanmar 0.01% Singapore
0.00002%
Top 10
ASEAN
5MITI Tower, No. 7, Jalan Sultan Haji Ahmad Shah, 50480 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Tel: +603 - 8000 8000 Fax: +603 - 6202 9446
MITI Weekly Bulletin | www.miti.gov.my
Note: *Provisional Data Source: Ministry of International Trade and Industry, Malaysia
Note: The preference giving countries under the GSP scheme are Cambodia, Japan, Kazakhstan, Norway, Russia, Switzerland, Belarus, Liechtenstein and Viet Nam
Number and Value of Preferential Certificates of Origin (PCOs)
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
0
50
100
150
200
250
10 S
ep
17 S
ep
24 S
ep
1 O
ct
8 O
ct
15 O
ct
22 O
ct
29 O
ct
5 N
ov
12 N
ov
19 N
ov
26 N
ov
No.
of C
ertif
icat
e of
Orig
in
RM m
il.
Generalised System of Preferences (GSP)
Total FOB (RM mil.) Total CO
0
1,000
2,000
3,000
4,000
5,000
6,000
0
500
1,000
1,500
2,000
2,500
3,000
3,500
4,000
4,500
5,00010
Sep
17 S
ep
24 S
ep
1 O
ct
8 O
ct
15 O
ct
22 O
ct
29 O
ct
5 N
ov
12 N
ov
19 N
ov
26 N
ov
No.
of C
ertif
icat
e of
Orig
in
RM m
il.
ASEAN Trade in Goods Agreement (ATIGA)
Total FOB (RM mil.) Total CO
0
500
1,000
1,500
2,000
2,500
0
200
400
600
800
1,000
1,200
1,400
1,600
1,800
10 S
ep
17 S
ep
24 S
ep
1 O
ct
8 O
ct
15 O
ct
22 O
ct
29 O
ct
5 N
ov
12 N
ov
19 N
ov
26 N
ov
No.
of C
ertif
icat
e of
Orig
in
RM m
il.
ASEAN-China Free Trade Agreement (ACFTA)
Total FOB (RM mil.) Total CO
0
200
400
600
800
1,000
1,200
0
200
400
600
800
1,000
1,200
1,400
1,600
1,800
2,000
10 S
ep
17 S
ep
24 S
ep
1 O
ct
8 O
ct
15 O
ct
22 O
ct
29 O
ct
5 N
ov
12 N
ov
19 N
ov
26 N
ov
No.
of C
ertif
icat
e of
Orig
in
RM m
il.
ASEAN-Korea Free Trade Agreement (AKFTA)
Total FOB (RM mil.) Total CO
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
160
10 S
ep
17 S
ep
24 S
ep
1 O
ct
8 O
ct
15 O
ct
22 O
ct
29 O
ct
5 N
ov
12 N
ov
19 N
ov
26 N
ov
No.
of C
ertif
icat
e of
Orig
in
RM m
il.
ASEAN-Japan Comprehensive Economic Partnership (AJCEP)
Total FOB (RM mil.) Total CO
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
900
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
900
1,000
10 S
ep
17 S
ep
24 S
ep
1 O
ct
8 O
ct
15 O
ct
22 O
ct
29 O
ct
5 N
ov
12 N
ov
19 N
ov
26 N
ov
No.
of C
ertif
icat
e of
Orig
in
RM m
il.
ASEAN-India Free Trade Agreement (AIFTA)
Total FOB (RM mil.) Total CO
0
200
400
600
800
1,000
1,200
1,400
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
160
10 S
ep
17 S
ep
24 S
ep
1 O
ct
8 O
ct
15 O
ct
22 O
ct
29 O
ct
5 N
ov
12 N
ov
19 N
ov
26 N
ov
No.
of C
ertif
icat
e of
Orig
in
RM m
il.
ASEAN-Australia-New Zealand Free Trade Agreement (AANZFTA)
Total FOB (RM mil.) Total CO
6MITI Tower, No. 7, Jalan Sultan Haji Ahmad Shah, 50480 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Tel: +603 - 8000 8000 Fax: +603 - 6202 9446
MITI Weekly Bulletin | www.miti.gov.my
Number and Value of Preferential Certificates of Origin (PCOs)
Note: *Provisional Data Source: Ministry of International Trade and Industry, Malaysia
0
200
400
600
800
1,000
1,200
0
50
100
150
200
25010
Sep
17 S
ep
24 S
ep
1 O
ct
8 O
ct
15 O
ct
22 O
ct
29 O
ct
5 N
ov
12 N
ov
19 N
ov
26 N
ov
No.
of C
ertif
icat
e of
Orig
in
RM m
il.
Malaysia-Japan Economic Partnership (MJEPA)
Total FOB (RM mil.) Total CO
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
400
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
160
180
200
10 S
ep
17 S
ep
24 S
ep
1 O
ct
8 O
ct
15 O
ct
22 O
ct
29 O
ct
5 N
ov
12 N
ov
19 N
ov
26 N
ov
No.
of C
ertif
icat
e of
Orig
in
RM m
il.
Malaysia-Pakistan Closer Economic Partnership (MPCEPA)
Total FOB (RM mil.) Total CO
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
0.0
0.1
0.1
0.2
0.2
0.3
0.3
0.4
0.4
0.5
0.5
10 S
ep
17 S
ep
24 S
ep
1 O
ct
8 O
ct
15 O
ct
22 O
ct
29 O
ct
5 N
ov
12 N
ov
19 N
ov
26 N
ov
No.
of C
ertif
icat
e of
Orig
in
RM m
il.
Malaysia-New Zealand Free Trade Agreement (MNZFTA)
Total FOB (RM mil.) Total CO
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
0
5
10
15
20
25
10 S
ep
17 S
ep
24 S
ep
1 O
ct
8 O
ct
15 O
ct
22 O
ct
29 O
ct
5 N
ov
12 N
ov
19 N
ov
26 N
ov
No.
of C
ertif
icat
e of
Orig
in
RM m
il.
Malaysia-Chile Free Trade Agreement (MCFTA)
Total FOB (RM mil.) Total CO
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
400
450
500
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
10 S
ep
17 S
ep
24 S
ep
1 O
ct
8 O
ct
15 O
ct
22 O
ct
29 O
ct
5 N
ov
12 N
ov
19 N
ov
26 N
ov
No.
of C
ertif
icat
e of
Orig
in
RM m
il.
Malaysia-India Comprehensive Economic Cooperation Agreement (MICECA)
Total FOB (RM mil.) Total CO
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
10 S
ep
17 S
ep
24 S
ep
1 O
ct
8 O
ct
15 O
ct
22 O
ct
29 O
ct
5 N
ov
12 N
ov
19 N
ov
26 N
ov
No.
of C
ertif
icat
e of
Orig
in
RM m
il.
Malaysia-Australia Free Trade Agreement (MAFTA)
Total FOB (RM mil.) Total CO
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
10 S
ep
17 S
ep
24 S
ep
1 O
ct
8 O
ct
15 O
ct
22 O
ct
29 O
ct
5 N
ov
12 N
ov
19 N
ov
26 N
ov
No.
of C
ertif
icat
e of
Orig
in
RM m
il.
Malaysia-Turkey Free Trade Agreement (MTFTA)
Total FOB (RM mil.) Total CO
7MITI Tower, No. 7, Jalan Sultan Haji Ahmad Shah, 50480 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Tel: +603 - 8000 8000 Fax: +603 - 6202 9446
MITI Weekly Bulletin | www.miti.gov.my
Source : Bank Negara Malaysia
Malaysian Ringgit Exchange Rate with Selected Countries,January 2016 - November 2017
US Dollar
Chinese Yuan
Thai Baht
Japanese Yen
Singapore Dollar
New Taiwan Dollar
4.3481
3.9045
4.4615
4.1725
3.60
3.70
3.80
3.90
4.00
4.10
4.20
4.30
4.40
4.50
4.60
Jan
Feb
Ma
rA
prM
ay
Jun Jul
Aug Se
pO
ctN
ovD
ec Jan
Feb
Ma
rA
prM
ay
Jun Jul
Aug Se
pO
ctN
ov
2016 2017
RM
USD 1 = RM
0.6615
0.6027 0.6019
0.6301
0.57
0.58
0.59
0.60
0.61
0.62
0.63
0.64
0.65
0.66
0.67
Jan
Feb
Ma
rA
prM
ay
Jun Jul
Aug Se
pO
ctN
ovD
ec Jan
Feb
Ma
rA
prM
ay
Jun Jul
Aug Se
pO
ctN
ov
2016 2017
RM
CNY 1 = RM
12.0200
11.1226
12.879012.6711
10.00
10.50
11.00
11.50
12.00
12.50
13.00
13.50
Jan
Feb
Ma
rA
prM
ay
Jun Jul
Aug Se
pO
ctN
ovD
ec Jan
Feb
Ma
rA
prM
ay
Jun Jul
Aug Se
pO
ctN
ov
2016 2017
RM
THB 100 = RM
3.6805
3.5620
4.0315
3.6972
3.30
3.40
3.50
3.60
3.70
3.80
3.90
4.00
4.10
Jan
Feb
Ma
rA
prM
ay
Jun Jul
Aug Se
pO
ctN
ovD
ec Jan
Feb
Ma
rA
prM
ay
Jun Jul
Aug Se
pO
ctN
ov
2016 2017RM
JPY 100 = RM
3.0323
2.8904
3.1583
3.0769
2.75
2.80
2.85
2.90
2.95
3.00
3.05
3.10
3.15
3.20
Jan
Feb
Ma
rA
prM
ay
Jun Jul
Aug Se
pO
ctN
ovD
ec Jan
Feb
Ma
rA
prM
ay
Jun Jul
Aug Se
pO
ctN
ov2016 2017
RM
SGD 1 = RM
12.9926
12.0705
14.5092
13.8665
10.00
10.50
11.00
11.50
12.00
12.50
13.00
13.50
14.00
14.50
15.00
Jan
Feb
Ma
rA
prM
ay
Jun Jul
Aug Se
pO
ctN
ovD
ec Jan
Feb
Ma
rA
prM
ay
Jun Jul
Aug Se
pO
ctN
ov
2016 2017
RM
TWD 100 = RM
8MITI Tower, No. 7, Jalan Sultan Haji Ahmad Shah, 50480 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Tel: +603 - 8000 8000 Fax: +603 - 6202 9446
MITI Weekly Bulletin | www.miti.gov.my
Sources: Ministry of International Trade and Industry Malaysia, Malaysian Palm Oil Board, Malaysian Rubber Board, Malaysian Cocoa Board, Malaysian Iron and Steel Industry Federation, and Bloomberg.
Commodity Prices
Notes: All figures have been rounded to the nearest decimal point * Refer to % change from the previous week’s price i Average price in the year except otherwise indicated
CRUDE PETROLEUM (BRENT)-per bbl-
1 Dec 2017 : US$63.7, 0.2%*Average Pricei : 2016: US$45.3 2015: US$53.6
CRUDE PALM OIL-per MT-
30 Nov 2017 : US$692.5, 3.0%*Average Pricei : 2016: US$702.2 2015: US$616.9
RUBBER SMR 20-per MT-
30 Nov 2017 : US$1,397.0, 2.2%*Average Pricei : 2016: US$1.394.5 2015: US$1.364.3
COAL -per MT-1 Dec 2017 : US$65.0, 3.8%*Average Pricei : 2016: US$45.6 2015: US$49.9
COCOA SMC 2-per MT-
30 Nov 2017 : US$1,443.6, 4.8%*Average Pricei : 2016: US$1,609.8 2015: US$2,077.0
SCRAP IRON HMS-per MT-
30 Nov 2017 : US$350.0 (high), 6.1%* US$340.0 (low), 9.7%*Average Pricei : 2016: US$243.2 2015: US$239.6
HIGHEST and LOWEST 2016/2017
Highest 24 Nov 2017 : US$63.9 30 Dec 2016 : US$56.8
Lowest
23 June 2017 : US$45.5
15 Jan 2016 : US$28.9
Crude Petroleum
(Brent)-per bbl-
Highest 20 Jan 2017 : US$843.0 30 Dec 2016 : US$797.5
Lowest
15 Jan 2016 : US$545.5 30 June 2017 : US$650.0
Crude Palm Oil -per MT-
Domestic Prices30 Nov 2017
Steel Bars(per MT)
RM2,400 – RM2,550
Billets(per MT)
RM2,200 – RM2,300
SUGAR -per lbs-30 Nov 2017 : US¢ 15.0, 3.0%*Average Pricei : 2016: US¢18.2 2015: US¢13.2
9MITI Tower, No. 7, Jalan Sultan Haji Ahmad Shah, 50480 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Tel: +603 - 8000 8000 Fax: +603 - 6202 9446
MITI Weekly Bulletin | www.miti.gov.my
Commodity Price Trends
Sources: Ministry of International Trade and Industry Malaysia, Malaysian Palm Oil Board, Malaysian Rubber Board, Malaysian Cocoa Board, Malaysian Pepper Board, Bloomberg and Czarnikow Group, World Bank, World Gold Council, The Wall Street Journal.
726.5
749.5
727.5
709.5
715.5
722.5
728.5733.0
731.0734.0
714.0
692.5
660
670
680
690
700
710
720
730
740
750
760
15 Sep 21 Sep 29 Sep 6 Oct 13 Oct 20 Oct 27 Oct 3 Nov 10 Nov 17 Nov 24 Nov 30 Nov
US$
/mt
Crude Palm Oil
1,371.7
1,428.21,442.9
1,616.9
1,481.71,503.3
1,615.0
1,488.5
1,561.9
1,501.71,517.2
1,443.6
1,200
1,250
1,300
1,350
1,400
1,450
1,500
1,550
1,600
1,650
15 Sep 21 Sep 29 Sep 6 Oct 13 Oct 20 Oct 27 Oct 3 Nov 10 Nov 17 Nov 24 Nov 30 Nov
US$
/mt
Cocoa
15.2
14.6
14.114.0
14.4
14.0
14.6
14.4
15.0
15.415.5
15.0
13.0
13.5
14.0
14.5
15.0
15.5
16.0
15 Sep 21 Sep 29 Sep 6 Oct 13 Oct 20 Oct 27 Oct 3 Nov 10 Nov 17 Nov 24 Nov 30 Nov
US¢
/lbs
Sugar
1,633.5
1,515.0
1,442.0
1,494.0
1,440.51,430.0
1,425.01,413.5 1,412.5
1,376.5
1,428.0
1,397.0
1,300
1,350
1,400
1,450
1,500
1,550
1,600
1,650
1,700
15 Sep 21 Sep 29 Sep 6 Oct 13 Oct 20 Oct 27 Oct 3 Nov 10 Nov 17 Nov 24 Nov 30 Nov
US$
/mt
Rubber SMR 20
6,900 7,088 7,113
7,281
6,917 6,851 6,730
6,337
6,085 5,965
4,516
3,984
4,366
4,605
4,188
4,571
3,000
3,500
4,000
4,500
5,000
5,500
6,000
6,500
7,000
7,500
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May
2016 2017
USD
/ to
nne
Black Pepper
* until 31 May 2017** data for April & June 2017 are not available
10MITI Tower, No. 7, Jalan Sultan Haji Ahmad Shah, 50480 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Tel: +603 - 8000 8000 Fax: +603 - 6202 9446
MITI Weekly Bulletin | www.miti.gov.myMITI Weekly Bulletin | www.miti.gov.my
Sources: Ministry of International Trade and Industry Malaysia, , Malaysian Iron and Steel Industry Federation, Bloomberg and Czarnikow Group, World Bank, World Gold Council, The Wall Street Journal.
60.1 60.1 60.259.9
60.4
61.3 61.4
64.4 64.564.2
62.6
65.0
57.0
58.0
59.0
60.0
61.0
62.0
63.0
64.0
65.0
66.0
15 Sep 22 Sep 29 Sep 6 Oct 13 Oct 20 Oct 27 Oct 3 Nov 10 Nov 17 Nov 24 Nov 1 Dec
US$
/t
Coal
1,481
1,531
1,531
1,571 1,551
1,594 1,629
1,639
1,592
1,666
1,737
1,728
1,791
1,861
1,901
1,921
1,913 1,885
1,903
2,030
2,096 2,131
1,400
1,500
1,600
1,700
1,800
1,900
2,000
2,100
2,200
Jan
Feb
Mar Apr
May Jun Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
Mar Apr
May Jun Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
2016 2017
US$
/ to
nne
Aluminium
4,472 4,599
4,954 4,873
4,695 4,642
4,865 4,752
4,722
4,731
5,451
5,660 5,755
5,941 5,825
5,684 5,600
5,720
5,985
6,486 6,577
6,808
4,000
4,500
5,000
5,500
6,000
6,500
7,000
Jan
Feb
Mar Apr
May Jun Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
Mar Apr
May Jun Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
2016 2017
US$
/ to
nne
Copper
8,507 8,299
8,717 8,879
8,660
8,928
10,263
10,336
10,192
10,260
11,129 10,972
9,971
10,643
10,205
9,609
9,155 8,932
9,491
10,890
11,216 11,336
7,000
7,500
8,000
8,500
9,000
9,500
10,000
10,500
11,000
11,500
12,000
Jan
Feb
Mar Apr
May Jun Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
Mar Apr
May Jun Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
2016 2017
US$
/ to
nne
Nickel
49.950.7
51.7
49.3
51.5 51.5
53.9
55.656.7 56.6
59.058.4
55.656.9
57.5
55.6
57.257.8
60.4
62.1
63.562.7
63.9 63.7
40
45
50
55
60
65
70
15 Sep 22 Sep 29 Sep 6 Oct 13 Oct 20 Oct 27 Oct 3 Nov 10 Nov 17 Nov 24 Nov 1 Dec
US$
/bbl
Crude Petroleum
Crude Petroleum (WTI)/bbl Crude Petroleum (Brent)/bbl
Commodity Price Trends
11MITI Tower, No. 7, Jalan Sultan Haji Ahmad Shah, 50480 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Tel: +603 - 8000 8000 Fax: +603 - 6202 9446
MITI Weekly Bulletin | www.miti.gov.myMITI Weekly Bulletin | www.miti.gov.my
Sources: Ministry of International Trade and Industry Malaysia, Malaysian Iron and Steel Industry Federation, Bloomberg and Czarnikow Group, World Bank.
979.0
938.0
923.0
914.0
943.0
922.0 920.0
930.0
941.0 940.0
933.0937.0
880.0
900.0
920.0
940.0
960.0
980.0
1,000.0
15 Sep 22 Sep 29 Sep 6 Oct 13 Oct 20 Oct 27 Oct 3 Nov 10 Nov 17 Nov 24 Nov 1 Dec
US$
/oz
Platinum
380.0
370.0
350.0 350.0 350.0 350.0
320.0
340.0
320.0 320.0
330.0
350.0370.0
360.0
330.0 330.0 330.0 330.0
300.0
320.0
300.0 300.0
310.0
340.0
200
220
240
260
280
300
320
340
360
380
400
15 Sep 21 Sep 29 Sep 6 Oct 13 Oct 20 Oct 27 Oct 3 Nov 10 Nov 17 Nov 24 Nov 30 Nov
US$
/mt
Scrap Iron
Scrap Iron/MT (High) Scrap Iron/MT(Low)
41.88
46.83
56.20
60.92
55.1351.98
57.26
60.8957.79
59.09
73.10
80.02
80.41
89.4487.65
70.22
62.43
57.48
67.74
76.07
71.53
61.66
30.0
40.0
50.0
60.0
70.0
80.0
90.0
100.0
Jan
Feb
Mar Apr
May Jun Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
Mar Apr
May Jun Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
2016 2017
US$
/dm
tu
Iron Ore
17.8
17.0
16.8
16.6
17.4
17.2
16.7
17.2
17.117.2
17.1
16.4
15.5
16.0
16.5
17.0
17.5
18.0
15 Sep 22 Sep 29 Sep 6 Oct 13 Oct 20 Oct 27 Oct 3 Nov 10 Nov 17 Nov 24 Nov 1 Dec
US$
/oz
Silver
42.5
41.6
41.3
40.6
41.8
41.2
40.7 40.7
41.3 41.3
41.5
41.0
39.5
40.0
40.5
41.0
41.5
42.0
42.5
43.0
14 Sep 21 Sep 28 Sep 5 Oct 12 Oct 19 Oct 26 Oct 3 Nov 10 Nov 17 Nov 24 Nov 1 Dec
US$
/oz
Gold
Commodity Price Trends
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MITI PROGRAMMEMITI PROGRAMME49th Federation on Malaysia Manufacturers Dinner, 27 November 2017
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MITI PROGRAMMEMITI PROGRAMMELaunching of Productivity Report 3rd Quarter 2017
at Malaysian Parliament Building, 27 November 2017
Asian Business Leaders Conclave, 30 November 2017
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of Technical Terms
Source: http://www.miti.gov.my/index.php/glossary
TransparencyTrade policies, laws and regulations are publicly available and predictable.
TRQTariff Rate Quota. Two-stage tariff: imports up to the quota level enter at a lower rate of duty; over-quota imports enter at a higher rate.
Twin Deficit HypothesisThe twin deposit hypothesis makes a connection between current account deficit and fiscal deficit. The theory suggests that tax cuts can increase fiscal deficit and results in increased consumption, which will lower the national savings rate. In turn, a nation has to borrow more money from other countries.
Unbound TariffTariff level of a product not notified to the WTO.
UnemployedRefers to both actively and inactively unemployed persons in the labour force. The actively unemployed include all persons who did not work during the reference week but were available for work and actively looking for work during the reference week. Inactively unemployed refers to persons who did not look for work because they believed no work was available or that they were not qualified, persons who would have looked for work if they had not been temporary ill or not had it not been for bad weather, persons who were waiting for answers to job applications and persons who had looked for work prior to the reference week.
Unemployment rate(Number of unemployed persons/ Number of persons in labour force) X 100
Unregulated sectorsThe working definition for unregulated services sector is services sectors that is not regulated by any act, regulations, government guidelines, government licensing requirement and are not supervised by any government agencies.
Value ChainThe process or activities by which a company adds value to an article, including production, marketing, and the provision of after-sales service.
Vertical ApproachApproach to address NTBs based on specific sectors. For example harmonization of standard in lighter.
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EXPONEGARAKU 2017@ Dataran Merdeka
#EXPONEGARAKU15-15 | 10-10 NOV DIS PAGI MLM
1 TUAH DIKONGSI
BERSAMA
Pengembaraan anda bermula di Kubah 1 dengan tayangan video yang menyelami kehidupan rakyat Malaysia yang dilimpahi tuah hasil daripada kemajuan infrastruktur negara.
Paparan visual 360 darjah di Kubah 5 pasti akan menakjubkan anda ! Masa depan Malaysia di depan mata menerusi pembangunan Bandar Malaysia, Malaysia Vision Valley dan MyHSR. Segalanya untuk kita dan generasi seterusnya.
5 MASA DEPAN
GEMILANG
Saksikan sendiri panorama Kuala Lumpur dari Menara PNB118, lanskap Pulau Langkawi yang menakjubkan dari puncak kereta kabel, serta infrastruktur moden sepanjang Lebuhraya Utara-Selatan. Semuanya secara interaktif di Kubah 4 yang membawa anda mengembara sepanjang infrastruktur pelancongan dan kebudayaan di Malaysia.
4 GAYA HIDUP
MALAYSIA
Apa kata rakyat Malaysia tentang segala kemudahan ini? Kubah 3 mengupas testimoni benefisiari-benefisiari pelbagai program dan inisiatif yang menjana pertumbuhan ekonomi dan menambahbaik tahap kehidupan dan kesejahteraan rakyat.
3KEHIDUPAN &
KESEJAHTERAAN
Membawa anda melihat sendiri segala kemudahan infrastruktur yang membawa transformasi kepada kehidupan rakyat Malaysia. Dari jalan raya, lapangan terbang, sistem transit aliran massa hinggalah ke penjanaan kuasa. Rasailah sendiri kemudahan-kemudahan ini dengan cara yang berbeza.
2KEMUDAHAN
INFRASTRUKTUR
ACARA-ACARA SAMPINGAN
MINGGU 1Kesihatan & Kesejahteraan• Upacara Pembukaan• Zumbanation• Kejohanan Futsal Expo Negaraku
MINGGU 3Kebudayaan & Pelancongan• Kenali Budaya Negeri-Negeri di Malaysia• Malam Bersama Pelawak Terkemuka• Penghargaan Tokoh-tokoh Malaysia
MINGGU 2• Citarasa Kita• Pesta Fiesta 2017• Pesta Buah-buahan
MINGGU 4• Aktiviti & Permainan• Permainan Rakyat• Go-Kart• Majlis Penutup
EXPO NEGARAKU 2017 diilhamkan oleh YAB Perdana Menteri, Dato’ Sri Najib Tun Razak bagi mempamerkan projek-projek infrastruktur semasa dan masa hadapan yang dirancang dan dilaksanakan oleh Kerajaan Malaysia demi menyediakan kehidupan yang lebih bermakna buat seluruh rakyat Malaysia.
Ekspo ini menawarkan satu pengalaman baharu buat para pengunjung untuk merasai sendiri denyut nadi pembangunan negara secara lebih dekat, sambil mengecapi satu pengalaman yang menyeronokkan.
Inilah peluang untuk anda dan keluarga atau rakan taulan untuk bersama-sama menyaksikan sendiri jaringan pembangunan yang telah dirancang selama ini, demi Negaraku Malaysia. Expo Negaraku berlangsung selama sebulan di Dataran Merdeka, Kuala Lumpur yang sarat dengan sejarah.
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Objective
Help SMEs to export their products
globally with ease
Nurture an ecosystem to drive innovation in e-commerce and internet economy
Make Malaysia the regional fulfillment
hub for global brands to reach ASEAN
buyers
Enable global market places to source from Malaysian
manufacturers and sellers
The three components
eServices Platform E-Fulfillment Hub Satellite Services Hub
Industry No. of CompaniesFood & Beverage 385Beauty & Personal care 196Furniture 116Health & Medical 84Packaging & Printing 76Apparel 63Agriculture 61Rubber & Plastics 59Automobiles & Motorcycles 58Others 225
Top 10 product categories preffered by Malaysian SMEs on Alibaba:
SMEs breakdown according to states:
Source: mydftz.com and www.klia.com.my/document/subsidiares/pdf_aeropolis-master-plan_337427522.pdfKindly visit https://mydftz.com/dftz-goes-live/ to get more information on DFTZ.
DFTZ
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Quick Introduction to the Comprehensive andProgressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP)
What is the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPPA)?• The Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement
(TPPA) is a comprehensive and high standard trade agreement between 12 Pacific Rim nations: Australia, Brunei Darussalam, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore,the United States and Vietnam.
• The TPPA was concluded on 5 October 2017 in Atlanta and signed by twelve parties on 4 February 2016 in Auckland, New Zealand.
• Following the withdrawal of the US on 23 January 2017, the TPPA cannot be implemented.
1Why the TPPA cannot be implemented?• Article 30.5 of the TPPA requires ratification of at
least 6 countries, accounting for 85% of the total GDP of the 12 countries, to bring it into force. The US’ GDP constitutes about 60% of the combined GDP of the 12 TPP members.
2
What is the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP)?• It is an agreement negotiated by the TPP11 as a
way forward to implement the TPPA.• After the US withdrawal, the TPP Ministers from
the remaining 11 member countries met on 21 May 2017 in Hanoi, Vietnam and affirmed the economic and strategic importance of the TPP, particularly as a vehicle for regional economic integration. The Ministers agreed to task the Senior Officials to explore possible ways to implement the TPPA without US participation.
• In order to facilitate the Senior Officials’ discussion, the TPP Ministers set the following guiding principles:
- maintain momentum and act decisively in a timely manner;- maintain the high standards and balance of the TPPA and prevent unraveling of the Agreement;- maintain the commercial and strategic interests of all participants; and- facilitate the implementation of the agreement by all original signatories
• On 9-10 November 2017 in Da Nang, Viet Nam, Ministers of the 11 TPP countries reached an agreement on the core elements and way forward to implement the TPPA. The 11 members agreed on the text of the Agreement and renamed it as the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP).
• The CPTPP incorporates the provisions of the TPPA text with a limited number of provisions suspended. The CPTPP maintains the high standard and comprehensive nature of the TPPA. The new agreement needs to be signed and ratified by the 11 TPP countries.
• To date, there are a total of 20 suspended provisions agreed by all parties. Further work is ongoing before the Agreement is finalized for signature.
3
How did Parties decide on the provisions to be suspended?• Items in the suspension list were agreed by
consensus. The proposals made by Parties were based on the guiding principles agreed by all Parties. The proposed suspensions must be:
- rules-related, limited in number and will maintain the high standards and balance among signatories;- necessary to facilitate the implementation of the agreement by all signatories; and- applicable to all.
4
Did Malaysia propose any suspension?• The suspension of a limited number of provisions
provides a strong and clear indication that all 11 countries would want to maintain the high standard and comprehensive nature of the Agreement. This agreement could be the benchmark and reference for future FTAs.
• As Malaysia’s areas of concern have been addressed, there is no reason for Malaysia to withdraw its participation from the CPTPP. In fact, Malaysia will reap benefits as one of the first movers in this agreement.
• In the CPTPP, Malaysia will have three new FTA partners, namely Canada, Mexico and Peru. Staying out of the CPTPP means Malaysia would have to undertake lengthy and difficult negotiations to conclude bilateral FTAs with these countries.
• In addition, there are other parties in the Asia Pacific region which have openly registered their interest to join the TPP/CPTPP, including some ASEAN countries.
5
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Quick Introduction to the Comprehensive andProgressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP)
When can we expect the CPTPP to be signed? What is the way forward?• In Da Nang, the CPTPP parties have agreed on the core elements of this agreement but need to
continue finalising remaining issues and complete technical work.• Upon completion of all outstanding work including legal scrubbing and translation from English
to Spanish and French,the date of signing will be decided by consensus. It is expected that the work programme would start in early 2018.
7
CHAPTER PROVISION IMPLICATION
Chapter 9: Investment
Article 9.19.1: Submission of Claim to Arbitration - a(i) B and C; (b)(i) B and C
Malaysia neither can be challenged nor take other TPP countries to task for any breaches arising from investment agreement.
Chapter 11: Financial Services
Article 11.2: Minimum Standard of Treatment
The suspension will reduce the risk of Government being liable for breach of MST obligations and subjected to the ISDS arrangement.
Chapter 15: Government Procurement
Article 15.24.2: Further Negotiations
Parties agree that the commencement of negotiations to include sub-central procurement should start after the fifth year instead of no later than three years
Chapter 17: State-Owned Enterprises and Designated Monopolies
Transition period for upstream preferential procurement to commence from the entry into force of the new agreement
Enable Petronas to exercise its flexibility for a longer duration and thus will facilitate in achieving our objective of building local capability in the oil and gas sector.
Chapter 18: Intellectual Property
Article 18.46: Patent Term Adjustment for Unreasonable Granting Authority Delays Article 18.48: Patent Term Adjustment for Unreasonable Curtailment Article 18.50: Protection of Undisclosed Test or Other Data Article 18.51: Biologics Article 18.63: Term of Protection for Copyright and Related Rights
Enable Malaysia to continue its current policy and regulations on IPR issues and give more time to us in making domestic adjustment.
Chapter 26: Transparency and Anti-Corruption
Article 3: Procedural Fairness (Annex 26 A – Transparency and Procedural Fairness for Pharmaceutical Products and Medical Devices)
This annex may restrict the ability of government to use reimbursement of price control system to reduce healthcare cost.
ANNEX I : LIST OF SELECTED SUSPENDED PROVISIONS
For more information on CPTPP, kindly access MITI website or click http://fta.miti.gov.my/index.php/pages/view/71?mid=40
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Withholding TaxWithholding tax is an amount withheld by the party making payment (payer) on income earned by a non-resident (payee) and paid to the Inland Revenue Board of Malaysia.
'Payer' refers to an individual/body other than individual carrying on a business in Malaysia. He is required to withhold tax on payments for services rendered/technical advice/rental or other payments made under any agreement for the use of any moveable property and paid to a -resident payee.
'Payee' refers to a non-resident individual/body other than individual in Malaysia who receives the above payments.
For more information on Withholding Tax, please visit LHDN’s website via this link: http://www.hasil.gov.my/bt_goindex.php?bt_kump=2&bt_skum=6&bt_posi=1&bt_unit=5&bt_sequ=1&bt_lgv=2
“The best executive is the one who has sense enough to pick good men to do what he wants done, and self-restraint enough
to keep from meddling with them while they do it”
Thedore Roosevelt (US President, 1858-1919)
Quote of the day...