Tan Sri Dr Zeti Akhtar Aziz |
Tan Sri Dr Zeti Akhtar Aziz
-Who's thought women will be good with money? Tan Sri Dr Zeti Akhtar Aziz is the governor of Malaysian Central Bank and the longest serving governer of Bank Negara Malaysia. top10malaysia.com
-She the 1st woman appointed as central bank governor in Malaysia and Asia, and also the 1st woman within the top 10 rankings for central bank governors of the world. op10malaysia.com
-She was part of the team that “bet against the IMF and won” in the aftermath of the 1998 Asian Financial Crisis when Malaysia declined aid from the IMF. themalaysianinsider.com
-Zeti is one of the most internationally respected central bankers and played a key role in turning KL into a global hub of the RM3 trillion Islamic finance industry. themalaysianinsider.com
-In 2011, Bloomberg columnist William Pesek picked her as one of his four nominees to head the prestigious International Monetary Fund (IMF) following the resignation of Dominic Strauss Khan. themalaysianinsider.com
-She put Malaysia at the forefront of the Islamic money market, and with carefully planned policies executed, Malaysia now has a substantial number of Islamic investors, both domestic and foreign. top10malaysia.com
Governor gives her
frank opinions on the central bank, her successor and the challenges the
country faces
ByJAGDEV SINGH SIDHU and GURMEET KAUR
Saturday / 26 March 2016 / StarBizWeek / Cover
feature
AS one of her last acts as governor of
Bank Negara, Tan Sri Dr Zeti Akhtar Aziz will be asked to write something to be
placed into a time capsule at Bank Negara’s new automated cash centre. That
capsule will be opened during the 100th anniversary of the central bank in the
year 2059.
She has not decided what will be penned on
that special sheet of paper that will be given to her, but the symbolic aspect
of that gesture goes some ways in explaining the respect her colleagues have
for the retiring governor.
Her reputation was forged over a period of
16 years where she served as the head of Bank Negara, with many of those years
fire-fighting crisis after crisis, big and small. Her career spanned 35 years
at the central bank and Zeti was the head of economics at Bank Negara during
the Asian financial crisis. After being appointed as its governor, she had to
steer the economy through other rough waters, most notably, the global
financial crisis.
Apart from navigating the economy and the
banking system through rough patches, Zeti also oversaw the transformation of
the banking system. During the past 16 years, Malaysia’s banking system has
grown from banks that were predominantly
domestic-focused to a few that have sprawling regional footprints. It was during
her tenure that two financial sector master- plans were drawn up and executed,
resulting in improved efficiency, delivery channels and structural processes by the banks.
Apart from the reach and services of
banks, domestic financial institutions have emerged stronger from a period of
consolidation and capitalisation that by the central bank’s own assessment, is
now able to withstand just about any imaginable crises.
The regularly conducted stress tests it
conducts attest to the strength of the banking system. Those tests also help
the central bank check the pulse of the banking sector to ensure there is no
undue build-up of risks that could derail or puncture the financial system. The
process of approving financial products in Malaysia has also kept banking
relatively simple and steady.
But it has not always been a trouble-free
career as governor. Zeti has had her detractors, which she does acknowledge.
The latest has been the way Bank Negara has handled the issues regarding
IMalaysia Development Bhd (1MDB), which she now appears to be atoning for past
oversights.
But her record, regardless of the hiccups,
is one where there have been more accolades than criticism. In her final
briefing of the media ahead of the release of Bank Negara’s 2015 annual report,
she spoke candidly on a number of subjects, about her career and the state of
the economy. Below is a ques- tion-and-answer session she had with the media.
In terms of the development of the
financial sector, what are you most proud of in terms of the challenges faced
and what are your disappointments during your tenure?
The achievements of the central bank have
been backed by a very solid team (sitting beside and behind me).
We drove the achievements and many of that
were highly challenging. When I complete my term, I give the assurance that
this institution is still very solid and resilient, and therefore, has every
potential to continue doing the very good job it has been doing and delivering
to the people of this country.
Of course, managing a challenging
environment, including crises, was one of the accomplishments of this bank.
That was very, very difficult.
The other relates to areas involving
other countries where we need to build the consensus for the greater good of
the region. This was very challenging, as some of these took years and some of
it set us so back that we went back to the position where we started. We were
sort of worse off and that was very stressful. Our challenges were in the area
of financial integration, Islamic finance, in the area to get recognition by
the international community on certain issues that we thought were important
for the emerging world and the region.
It’s rewarding to see it through during a
person’s career lifetime. But it’s the team that did it and it’s a privilege to
be leading the team.
I won’t say there
were disappointments, but I wish we would have moved a litde bit faster on the
migration to electronic payments. There were other things that were more
important at that time. Now we are placing higher priority on this because the benefit of it would be so
immense.
Integration is an
ongoing thing... we are not
there by any means, but at least we have a platform from which we can leap
forward.
In terms of the domestic economy and
financial markets, they continue to function very well.
Tan Sri, you had talked earlier that you
don’t want the position of governor to be politicised. You talked about the
virtues and strength of Bank Negara as an institution. How important is it that
a governor is a person that will be well-liked by the markets and will continue
the work the central bank has done under your leadership?
I have to say that I wasn’t always
well-liked. There were times that some of our policies were attacked quite
viciously. But we undertook those policies because we had the conviction that
they were the right policies to do. It’s not about being well-liked... it’s
about people having the confidence that you are going to do the right thing and
having the capability also to do it. So, there are a lot of demands on the
governor. First of all, having the capability to do it and having the
confidence of the people that you are going to do the right thing.
Will the wrong candidate set the central
bank back in terms of development that has taken place under your tenure?
The person has to be ready and able and
for the team to be here and intact because it is not about one individual.
While leadership is important, equally important is for the team to stay
together. And the team here is of a very high quality ... we spend a lot of
time investing in people. We have one of the best talent collectively in all
the areas from reserve management to supervision, regulation and economic
analysis of international affairs.
Like in any organisation, the CEO has to
command the respect and confidence of the team. Without that, the central bank
will be set back.
Is it a concern that the independence of
the bank may be compromised if someone from the outside comes in as governor?
Everyone who works in the central bank
knows that independence is the most precious thing that we want to safeguard.
This culture of independence was already there before my time; the culture that
we don’t want to be drawn into politics. In the 60s and 70s, we did not have
the kind of political pressure as we had during the Asian financial crisis.
There is a corporate culture which everyone takes great pride in the feeling
that our actions are not drawn into politics and driven by any political
agenda.
The political agenda changes all the time
and if we are drawn into such matters, the central bank will lose credibility
and respect.
The central bank gets its powers from the respect and
confidence the people have in us. This is where the power of the central bank
is derived from. It’s the same as all other central banks.
How would you
describe the changes and transformation the Malaysian economy has undergone in
the past 16 years?
The Malaysian economy has been able to
withstand a lot of shocks like the energy and commodity shocks, the volatile
and disruptive financial markets, the surges of inflows and outflows.
Are we satisfied? I would say no because
in our assessment, we could be so much better in terms of being on a higher
phase of growth. Because we are ambitious, at least I am ambitious in anything
that we do, if we compare ourselves with some of our peers, we are doing quite
well. But if we compare ourselves with, say, South Korea, the country was
poorer than us before but it is now a developed country. So, we ask ourselves
why aren’t we there too?
So, how can we make ourselves better?
Several years ago in 2009, we made a
presentation to the Cabinet. We were discussing among ourselves the three most
urgent things that needed to be addressed. When we presented it to the Cabinet,
we asked to pick one and after I reflected for a while, the answer was education.
From the entry point to the CEO level, we
have one of the best education programmes. We spend so much effort on this but
we wish it’s across the board.
The other two were price distortions and
having the broadband infrastructure that is important to advance the economy.
You can have the other two but without education, you still cannot move
forward.
In the short to medium term, what is the
risk to the economy?
Is the 1MDB issue still a certain risk?
The current risk volatility in the
financial markets. If our level of indebtedness goes higher (at the current
level it is just manageable), that means that as we go forward and take on more
and more debt, it will become like what Europe is facing. That is even if you
get higher income or better growth, you will have to repay your debt. So, you
are consuming now based on your future income, which means we are getting our
future generation of grandchildren and great grandchildren to repay for our
excessive expenditure.
In the current environment, if we don’t
rein in our borrowings, not only household or corporate but the public sector
also, it poses a future risk. Right now, everything is about a manageable
level. It’s not alarming or a great concern now, but beyond that is a future
risk.
Then, there are other issues like an
ageing society. Fourteen years from now in 2030,15% of our population will be
ageing, which means we would need to have facilities to support them. And we
have to start preparing for it now. We can deal with the current challenges
because we had prepared for it 10 years ago.
How do we define the independence of the
central bank?
There should be no external influence on
the decision-making process of the central bank in regards to our mandate.
A few days ago, at one panel discussion meeting where
the audience was made up of central bank governors and their delegations, a question was posed on how the governors dealt with
interference. That’s a question all governors share with each other. The governor
of the Reserve Bank of South Africa’s response was: you have to stand your
ground, which means do what is in the best interest of the country. When it
came to my turn to give a response, I said, “of course the central bank has to
stand its ground, but better be sure you are standing on solid ground”. It drew
laughter from the floor. Because if you want to be able to stand your ground
and be able to deliver for the people of this country, you have to stand on
solid ground. We worked with the Government to do all this.
How have you been dealing with politicians
in this country? Has it been difficult over the years?
We have a professional relationship. We
don’t get to know them well. That is how it is and that is how I guide.
You can’t be their friend, but that does
not mean we are not going to work with them. We have no problems working with
so many agencies. Take small and medium enterprises (SMEs) for instance. We
have to work with many agencies. It all started with why banks were not lending
to SMEs and when we asked the banks, they said it was because the SMEs were at
a low level of development because their contribution to the economy was less
than 7% then. So, we recommended a few things like setting up a National
Council, which the Government did during Tun Dr Mahathir’s time.
Then, we wanted to set up an agency - SME
Corp - to be independent in reporting to the board. Just about every ministry
attacked us for that and said that it would erode their powers. We went on with
this and demonstrated that their powers were not eroded. As a result of the
formation of the SME Council and SME Corp, now the contribution of SMEs to
growth is more than 30%.
Tan Sri, earlier on you had talked about
building future resilience and being focused on some key
challenges like productivity and
technology. The brain drain seems to be at a critical stage as highlighted by
some reports. How does this affect the building of future resilience?
I think every effort is being done to
address the brain drain. We need the talent to remain and we need to build the
existing talent. And most of all, we need strong institutions as well. We need
many things to realise that.
This also relates to moving up the value
chain and if the job opportunity is not there to keep the talent,
then the talent will move elsewhere. It’s
all part of a circle. If you have an economy that is moving up the value chain,
there would be job opportunities for the talent and they will stay.
Are we moving up the value chain at the
required pace?
If we compare ourselves against South
Korea, we could have been much higher up the value chain.
One of the things that is holding us back
is the over-dependence on low-cost labour. While our economy cannot completely
not need low-cost labour, the question is one of over-dependence, which is
shuttling us to a particular state of economic activity and preventing us from
progressing further.
We can’t be competing on cost, we have to
compete on quality and that will allow us to move up the value chain. The
number of patents by our residents is one of the lowest. These are some of the
structural things that we must address.
How do we regain the loss of investor
confidence?
The point I want to emphasise is that
Malaysia is in a position to manage the current environment and is still
growing in 2015 despite the collapse in commodity prices. Of course, there is
some loss of investment activity in the economy because of confidence issues
and waiting on the sidelines for some certainty about where the ringgit is
headed. We got the International Trade and Industry Ministry working very hard
to attract investments. Malaysia is still attracting investments into the
country, as we have a low cost of doing business, but we need to have the
talent so that we get the right type of investments.
Tan Sri, of the few economic crises under
you tenure, which was the most challenging?
It was the 1997/1998 Asian economic
crisis because it involved the whole region and it was made worse on how it was
managed in some of the other countries with no end in sight. In 1997, Malaysia
still had 7% growth. Then in 1998, for the first time in our history, we had
minus 7%. We never had that kind of economic contraction.
The good thing at that time was that the
developed world was growing well. We managed to stabilise the domestic economy
and picked up based on the demand from the global economy.
The issue we are facing now under the
current circumstances is that our domestic fundamentals are relatively sound
but the world environment is not as good.
In the annual report, household debt is at
89.1% and does not seem to be going down.
Of course, as debt is growing faster than
income, but assets are more than two times liability.
In terms of quality of debt, the
non-performing loan ratio is at 1.5%, meaning that there are not many loans
that are turning bad and the people who borrowed can afford to borrow. We look
at a wide range of indicators, but if this trend continues, then it will become
a concern.
From an economic perspective, if you have
credit-driven growth, it is not a sustainable economy. As a policymaker, we
also have to be cautious from the perspective of how fast we want that to
grow. Addressing the issue on that level, given the demographics of our society,
it is going to continue to grow. But we need to look at who is this debt with;
is it with people who can service the debt or those who are financially
stretched?
Are you going to write your memoir?
I will do some writing, some serious
writing on subject matters like integration or central banking.
Are you going to play a more active role
in society?
I have not had time to think about that,
but I know I am going to do some writing and spend some time with my family.
The bank has not been too kind to me in allowing any free time. The past 12
months have been back-to-back in terms of functions. My life has been very full
this past year but I enjoyed it.
When you took over, did you expect to last
16 years?
I didn’t, and people ask me why I am not
staying on to match Tun Ismail Mohd Ah’s record of 18 years.
That is not the objective. The thing that
is important is what you do while in office.
The succession
By FINTAN NG / fintan@thestar.com.my
Saturday / 26 March 2016 / StarWeek /
THEBE is always speculation in banking and
financial circles over who will eventually become the next central bank chief.
So it is in Malaysia, where, as governor Tan Sri Dr Zeti Akhtar Aziz’s tenure
comes to an end, there has been a lot of interest over who will succeed her.
This time around, interest is not just
confined to bankers as the wider public would also like to know who will
eventually helm Bank Negara.
Four names have emerged as possible
candidates, with the central bank’s most senior deputy governor, Datuk
Muhammad Ibrahim, a career central banker, said to be the internal candidate of
choice.
Besides him, the names of three others
have been speculated as possible successors - the Minister- in-charge of
economic planning in the Prime Minister’s Department Datuk Seri Abdul Wahid
Omar, Malaysian ambassador to the United States Datuk Awang Adek Hussin, and
the secretary-general of the Treasury at the Finance Ministry Tan Sri Mohd
Irwan Serigar Abdullah.
The erosion of trust in public
institutions stemming from issues related to 1Malaysia Development Bhd (1MDB)
has made the matter of her successor more urgent since part of Bank Negara's responsibility is to safeguard financial stability as clearly stated in part six, chapter one of the Central Bank of Malaysia Act 2009.
It has come to the point where Zeti has
had to deny that there was any political interference in her decision not to
pursue another five-year term as governor, which, if the King gave his consent,
would have made her the longest serving governor, surpassing Tun Ismail
Mohamed Ah’s 18-year tenure.
Zeti has also said that the governor’s
position should not be politicised. She made that clear in a Wednesday media
briefing on the annual as well as financial and payment systems reports that
the central bank’s independence should be safeguarded in order that it can
fulfill its duties and responsibilities.
Bank Negara is seen by the public as about
the only institution that has stood its ground on 1MDB and this was
underscored by Zeti’s comments in last Wednesday’s media briefing that she
would like to resolve the 1MDB issue before she leaves office.
But there is little chance that she can
resolve the issue in the weeks remaining to her as governor. It is very likely
that her successor will have to deal with the issue relating to lMDB’s failure
to submit documentary evidence pertaining to its inability to repatriate the
US$1.83bil (RM7.16bil) that was used abroad.
Whoever succeeds Zeti will also have to
manage monetary and financial stability at a volatile time for the global
economy.Useful links
Malaysia: a less hawkish hold
Najib: Malaysia's born-again liberal
International Women Day 10 Most Memorable Achievements by Malaysian Women
Another Brick In The Wall
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