Asian Angle | How Malaysia’s PAS made a ‘brilliant move’ to consolidate political power
SG4 aims to pool resources from Kedah, Kelantan, Perlis and Terengganu to attract investment – though feasibility issues remain
In early September, it was reported that the four state governments ruled by the federal opposition coalition Perikatan Nasional (PN) had banded together to set up a company called SG4 Group Sdn Bhd. The objective of this company is to pool the resources of the four relatively rural states to share wealth equitably, with each state holding a 25 per cent stake in the company.
The idea of clustering states together is not new. When Pakatan Harapan – then Rakyat – governed the states of Penang, Perak and Selangor following the 2008 general election, there were attempts at common policy platforms. However, the most that was achieved in that first Pakatan term was hosting chief minister summits, bringing together the three – and then later only two, when Perak switched hands to Barisan Nasional (BN) – states alongside their aides and civil servants to discuss administrative matters such as water and land policy.
The SG4 Group’s innovation, based on the idea of pooling resources and sharing wealth, is therefore the first of its kind.
State governments, constrained by an overly centralised federal structure in which states have relatively few responsibilities and receive minimal revenues, have continually expanded initiatives to take control of their assets through state economic development corporations or state-level government-linked companies. Successful examples include Johor Corporation and Menteri Besar Selangor Incorporated. While setting up a multi-state company is unusual, whether it will achieve its chief purpose of attracting investment remains to be seen.