Malaysia will never repeg ringgit to US dollar: Najib

24 Jan 2018 / 00:00 H.

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia will never repeg the ringgit to the US dollar, according to Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Abdul Razak.
"We've made it very clear that we would never repeat that measure, trusting that while there may be short-term fluctuations, in the longer term the level of the ringgit would reflect the strength of the Malaysian economy," he said during his keynote address at the "Invest Malaysia 2018" event. 
Najib recalled that investors and global markets had lost confidence in Malaysia following the ringgit's peg to the US dollar in September 1998 during the Asian financial crisis. It was only abandoned in July 2005.
"It took a long time to win that back. That was a very heavy costs to the country."
He also noted that it is not an easy and helpful move to repeg the ringgit.
"There are some leading the opposition whom I'm afraid really don't understand economics. The reality is that this (currency repeg) would be an unmitigated disaster for our economy and therefore for the prosperity of our people." 
Meanwhile, he acknowledged failings at 1Malaysia Development Bhd in his speech, stating that there was valid cause for concern.

"Within Malaysia, there was a concentrated campaign to sabotage our economy for political gain. Challenges at certain state-owned institutions, and you will all know I'm referring to 1MDB, were amplified and used as a tool to suggest our economy was collapsing. Now I am not going to brush over the issue. There were indeed failings at the company, there were lapses of governance. There was valid cause of concern," Najib said.
This, he said, had led him to order one of the most comprehensive and detailed investigations in Malaysia's corporate history, one that involved multiple lawful authorities, including a bipartisan parliamentary body.
Najib further explained that their findings were taken on board – and the company's board was dissolved, its management team changed, and its operations reviewed.
"1MDB rationalised its assets, and with the proceeds, took an aggressive approach in reducing the debts to its lowest possible levels, and the company concentrated their efforts on ensuring its two most valuable assets, Bandar Malaysia and Tun Razak Exchange, remain as attractive investment propositions to both its shareholders and its investors," he said.

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