Malaysia’s Experience with the Small and Medium Sized Enterprises Masterplan

Productivity-enhancing measures play a pivotal role in Malaysia’s aspirations of becoming a high-income economy. Malaysia has enjoyed an impressive growth performance over the past few decades, with growth rates of at least 7 percent per year for more than 25 consecutive years. However, with the rise of other emerging economies, notably China and India, Malaysia has faced challenges in pivoting away from a ‘low-cost, high-volume’ strategy towards a ‘high-value’ one. Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) are a crucial component of Malaysia’s strategy to become a high-income nation. As SMEs account for all but 1.5 percent of firms and the bulk of production and employment, they are central to Malaysia’s objective of becoming a high-income economy. SMEs form the bedrock of the private sector and innovation and can contribute to growth by supplying multinationals or accessing international markets directly. Despite their critical importance, the share of Malaysian SMEs in GDP (32 percent) and total exports (16 percent) was far lower than competitors in 2010. At the time of preparation of the Masterplan, the export share was more than 20 percent lower than that in countries such as the Philippines, Hong Kong, Taiwan and even the US, and there was also scope for greater sectoral and geographical diversification. It was recognized that specific policies to enable favorable conditions for SMEs to flourish were needed so that they can easily expand into fast-growing markets and increase the production of knowledge- and innovation-based products and services.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank Group
Format: Report biblioteca
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Malaysia 2020-02
Subjects:SMALL AND MEDIUM SIZE ENTERPRISE, GOVERNMENT SUPPORT, INVESTMENT CLIMATE, BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT, SME FINANCE, MASTER PLAN, COMPETITION POLICY, BUDGET PROCESS, FINANCE, COMPETITIVENESS AND INNOVATION,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/504361583989615623/Malaysia-s-Experience-with-the-Small-and-Medium-Sized-Enterprises-Masterplan-Lessons-Learned
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/33437
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-okr-1098633437
record_format koha
spelling dig-okr-10986334372024-08-07T18:56:38Z Malaysia’s Experience with the Small and Medium Sized Enterprises Masterplan Lessons Learned World Bank Group SMALL AND MEDIUM SIZE ENTERPRISE GOVERNMENT SUPPORT INVESTMENT CLIMATE BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT SME FINANCE MASTER PLAN COMPETITION POLICY BUDGET PROCESS FINANCE, COMPETITIVENESS AND INNOVATION Productivity-enhancing measures play a pivotal role in Malaysia’s aspirations of becoming a high-income economy. Malaysia has enjoyed an impressive growth performance over the past few decades, with growth rates of at least 7 percent per year for more than 25 consecutive years. However, with the rise of other emerging economies, notably China and India, Malaysia has faced challenges in pivoting away from a ‘low-cost, high-volume’ strategy towards a ‘high-value’ one. Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) are a crucial component of Malaysia’s strategy to become a high-income nation. As SMEs account for all but 1.5 percent of firms and the bulk of production and employment, they are central to Malaysia’s objective of becoming a high-income economy. SMEs form the bedrock of the private sector and innovation and can contribute to growth by supplying multinationals or accessing international markets directly. Despite their critical importance, the share of Malaysian SMEs in GDP (32 percent) and total exports (16 percent) was far lower than competitors in 2010. At the time of preparation of the Masterplan, the export share was more than 20 percent lower than that in countries such as the Philippines, Hong Kong, Taiwan and even the US, and there was also scope for greater sectoral and geographical diversification. It was recognized that specific policies to enable favorable conditions for SMEs to flourish were needed so that they can easily expand into fast-growing markets and increase the production of knowledge- and innovation-based products and services. 2020-03-16T18:53:01Z 2020-03-16T18:53:01Z 2020-02 Report Rapport Informe http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/504361583989615623/Malaysia-s-Experience-with-the-Small-and-Medium-Sized-Enterprises-Masterplan-Lessons-Learned https://hdl.handle.net/10986/33437 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank application/pdf text/plain World Bank, Malaysia
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
topic SMALL AND MEDIUM SIZE ENTERPRISE
GOVERNMENT SUPPORT
INVESTMENT CLIMATE
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
SME FINANCE
MASTER PLAN
COMPETITION POLICY
BUDGET PROCESS
FINANCE, COMPETITIVENESS AND INNOVATION
SMALL AND MEDIUM SIZE ENTERPRISE
GOVERNMENT SUPPORT
INVESTMENT CLIMATE
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
SME FINANCE
MASTER PLAN
COMPETITION POLICY
BUDGET PROCESS
FINANCE, COMPETITIVENESS AND INNOVATION
spellingShingle SMALL AND MEDIUM SIZE ENTERPRISE
GOVERNMENT SUPPORT
INVESTMENT CLIMATE
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
SME FINANCE
MASTER PLAN
COMPETITION POLICY
BUDGET PROCESS
FINANCE, COMPETITIVENESS AND INNOVATION
SMALL AND MEDIUM SIZE ENTERPRISE
GOVERNMENT SUPPORT
INVESTMENT CLIMATE
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
SME FINANCE
MASTER PLAN
COMPETITION POLICY
BUDGET PROCESS
FINANCE, COMPETITIVENESS AND INNOVATION
World Bank Group
Malaysia’s Experience with the Small and Medium Sized Enterprises Masterplan
description Productivity-enhancing measures play a pivotal role in Malaysia’s aspirations of becoming a high-income economy. Malaysia has enjoyed an impressive growth performance over the past few decades, with growth rates of at least 7 percent per year for more than 25 consecutive years. However, with the rise of other emerging economies, notably China and India, Malaysia has faced challenges in pivoting away from a ‘low-cost, high-volume’ strategy towards a ‘high-value’ one. Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) are a crucial component of Malaysia’s strategy to become a high-income nation. As SMEs account for all but 1.5 percent of firms and the bulk of production and employment, they are central to Malaysia’s objective of becoming a high-income economy. SMEs form the bedrock of the private sector and innovation and can contribute to growth by supplying multinationals or accessing international markets directly. Despite their critical importance, the share of Malaysian SMEs in GDP (32 percent) and total exports (16 percent) was far lower than competitors in 2010. At the time of preparation of the Masterplan, the export share was more than 20 percent lower than that in countries such as the Philippines, Hong Kong, Taiwan and even the US, and there was also scope for greater sectoral and geographical diversification. It was recognized that specific policies to enable favorable conditions for SMEs to flourish were needed so that they can easily expand into fast-growing markets and increase the production of knowledge- and innovation-based products and services.
format Report
topic_facet SMALL AND MEDIUM SIZE ENTERPRISE
GOVERNMENT SUPPORT
INVESTMENT CLIMATE
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
SME FINANCE
MASTER PLAN
COMPETITION POLICY
BUDGET PROCESS
FINANCE, COMPETITIVENESS AND INNOVATION
author World Bank Group
author_facet World Bank Group
author_sort World Bank Group
title Malaysia’s Experience with the Small and Medium Sized Enterprises Masterplan
title_short Malaysia’s Experience with the Small and Medium Sized Enterprises Masterplan
title_full Malaysia’s Experience with the Small and Medium Sized Enterprises Masterplan
title_fullStr Malaysia’s Experience with the Small and Medium Sized Enterprises Masterplan
title_full_unstemmed Malaysia’s Experience with the Small and Medium Sized Enterprises Masterplan
title_sort malaysia’s experience with the small and medium sized enterprises masterplan
publisher World Bank, Malaysia
publishDate 2020-02
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/504361583989615623/Malaysia-s-Experience-with-the-Small-and-Medium-Sized-Enterprises-Masterplan-Lessons-Learned
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/33437
work_keys_str_mv AT worldbankgroup malaysiasexperiencewiththesmallandmediumsizedenterprisesmasterplan
AT worldbankgroup lessonslearned
_version_ 1807159874189000704