By Professor Dato Dr Ahmad Ibrahim
RMK13 may prove to be Malaysia’s lucky break from the middle income trap. As Parliament dissects this five-year roadmap towards a “sustained high-income prosperous nation,” questions arise: How does it differ from RMK12? What lessons have we learned? And does it possess the clarity, focus, and execution muscle needed to convert ambitious vision into transformative reality?
The RMK12 (2021-2025), launched amidst pandemic upheaval, was undeniably ambitious. Its journey offers stark lessons for RMK13: RMK12 suffered from a persistent gap between elegant strategy and gritty execution. Silos between ministries, bureaucratic inertia, and a lack of clear, accountable ownership for specific outcomes hampered progress. Grand targets often remained just that – targets. While outputs were tracked, measuring genuine outcomes and impact remained challenging. Did initiatives truly enhance productivity, create quality jobs, or reduce inequality in tangible ways? The data often lacked granularity and timeliness for effective mid-course correction.
Despite the long-term vision of high-income status, the five-year RMK cycle can sometimes lead to a “reset” mentality with each new plan, disrupting momentum on complex, long-gestation projects like R&D. Shifting priorities across plans can waste sunk costs and demoralise implementers. Ambitions frequently outstripped the clarity and stability of funding mechanisms, especially for cross-cutting initiatives requiring coordinated budget allocations across multiple agencies.
Public investment efficiency remains a concern. While RMK12 emphasised public-private partnerships, translating this into genuinely catalytic collaborations, especially in areas like technology adoption and innovation, often fell short. The “how” remained elusive.
RMK13 (2026-2030) understandably builds on the foundational goals of its predecessor – driving growth, enhancing inclusivity, ensuring sustainability. This continuity is necessary; nations aren’t rebuilt from scratch every five years. Key thematic pillars persist. However, RMK13 does signal shifts in emphasis and strategy, attempting to address past weaknesses: Moving beyond just digital access, RMK13 places greater weight on becoming a tech producer and leveraging AI, energy transition tech, and space tech. This aligns directly with the urgent need to reform R&D culture – innovation must drive productivity.
“Bridging the Disparity Divide” is a dedicated thrust. Targeted strategies for B40, vulnerable groups, and rural-urban/regional divides are more pronounced. Green growth isn’t just an environmental add-on; it’s positioned as a core economic driver, responding to global pressures and opportunities. Recognising past implementation failures, RMK13 explicitly includes “Strengthening Governance and Institutional Reform” as a thrust, aiming for more effective delivery. While the broad thrusts are evident, RMK13’s ultimate potency hinges on translating these aspirations into crystal-clear, measurable, and accountable strategies. Concerns remain: High-level goals need unambiguous roadmaps. Exactly how will productivity be doubled? Which specific regulatory reforms will unlock private investment in key sectors? Who is unambiguously responsible and accountable for delivering each major outcome? How will their performance be measured and consequences applied? RMK13 needs real-time tracking dashboards visible to the public.
Ambitions in tech, sustainability, and social safety nets require massive, sustainably sourced funding. RMK13 must detail innovative financing mechanisms and demonstrate fiscal discipline to ensure efficient use. RMK13 needs powerful, cross-ministerial implementation units with real authority and mandates to cut through red tape and enforce coordination.
Moving beyond rhetoric requires creating genuinely attractive, de-risked opportunities for private capital in strategic sectors. This means tackling regulatory hurdles, improving contract enforcement, and offering smart incentives. To maximise RMK13’s impact, we must launch a mandatory, publicly accessible online dashboard tracking key RMK13 KPIs in real-time. Regular parliamentary progress reviews should be instituted.
Rigorously link budget allocations to achieving specific, measurable outcomes outlined in RMK13, not just activities. Establish a small, high-powered, Prime Minister’s Department-based RMK13 Delivery Unit. Staffed with top talent from public and private sectors, it should have the mandate to monitor progress, identify bottlenecks, intervene across ministries, and report directly to Parliament.
Create formal mechanisms for citizens, civil society, and businesses to report on implementation gaps and localised impacts, feeding directly into corrective actions. Foster a Parliamentary Select Committee specifically for RMK13 oversight, ensuring continuity and accountability beyond electoral cycles.
RMK13 presents a refreshed vision, acknowledging past stumbles and attempting to steer towards a more innovative, equitable, and sustainable future. The continuity in the ultimate goal is necessary; the shifts in emphasis are welcome. However, the plan’s success will be determined not by the elegance of its prose, but by the ruthlessness of its execution.
Malaysia cannot afford another cycle of lofty ambitions undermined by implementation lethargy, fuzzy accountability, and bureaucratic inertia. RMK13 must become a binding contract for national progress, marked by unprecedented transparency, rigorous outcome tracking, empowered delivery mechanisms, and a genuine whole-of-nation effort.
The blueprint is drafted. Now, we must build – with precision, accountability, and unwavering focus on the tangible results that will finally propel Malaysians towards that sustained, shared prosperity.
The author is affiliated with the Tan Sri Omar Centre for STI Policy Studies at UCSI University and is an associate fellow at the Ungku Aziz Centre for Development Studies, Universiti Malaya. He can be reached at ahmadibrahim@ucsiuniversity.edu.my.