KUALA LUMPUR, July 19 — Recent natural disasters in Malaysia’s
regional neighbours have perpetuated an industrial boom in Penang as
global manufacturers flee to the Pearl of the Orient to park their
businesses in a bid to spread risk, the
Asian Wall Street Journal (WSJ) reported today.
The international paper wrote that global tech firms, eyeing Penang
not only for its strong logistics infrastructure but also its geographic
location outside the the “Pacific Ring of Fire”, now find the island an
attractive alternative investment destination.
File
photo of the Komtar Tower, a Penang landmark, is seen in the background
as ferries park at a jetty in Penang. Multinational firms are now
looking to invest more in Penang. — Reuters pic
This
investment climb, it said, has helped Penang rediscover its industrial
dynamism from the 1970s and placed the Pakatan Rakyat-ruled (PR) state
onto the global investment map.
“Longer term, many multinational companies are preparing better for
natural disasters and supply-chain disruptions, and they now see Penang
and Malaysia as an attractive location,” the paper quoted Globetronics
Technology Bhd managing director Heng Huck Lee as saying.
The article noted that the only possible risk to investing in Penang
was the prospect of political turbulence as the ruling Barisan Nasional
(BN) is facing stiffer competition from PR in the coming polls.
This, it added, ultimately meant that PR-ruled states like Penang could face policy conflicts with the federal capital.
“But those tensions are relatively minor compared with those of some of Malaysia’s neighbours,” WSJ wrote, pointing to Malaysia’s geographic location.
“The country sits safely away from the so-called Pacific Ring of
Fire, mostly unaffected by the earthquakes and volcanoes that can
afflict countries such as Japan and Indonesia.
“Malaysia also is less likely to fall victim to the kind of flooding that left Thailand’s economy flailing last year,” it said.
WSJ reported that the earthquake in Japan and floods in Thailand last year had left companies in both nations flailing.
The hardware industry was hit especially hard from Thailand’s
flooding, it said, even forcing renowned electronics firms like
disk-drive maker Western Digital and electronics companies Sony Corp,
SNE and Toshiba Corp to temporary shut down their plants.
At one point, global prices for disk drives even doubled, WSJ
reported, before Western Digital and other manufacturers began bumping
up their productions in Malaysia.
“Now the California company is expanding across Malaysia in a
five-year, US$1.2 billion (RM3.8 billion) effort to whittle down its
dependence on Thailand.
“A new Malaysian plant is expected to open this year,” the paper wrote.
Others, including chip-maker Intel Corp, audio firm Bose Corp and
electronics-equipment makers National Instruments Corp and Agilent
Technologies, have also begun expanding their operations here.
With investments pouring in, Penang Chief Minister Lim Guan Eng is
banking on another “bumper year” in 2012 after having pushed for the
construction of more industrial parks to accommodate the investment
boost.
“We had fallen off the radar screen, so we went back to the drawing
board. It just takes a little time to shake off the rust,” Lim was
quoted as saying.
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