“DRIVING Transformation, POWERING Growth” MITI in the News Malaysia’s Total Trade Grew 4.6 Per Cent in July Malaysia's total trade in July 2015 grew by 4.6 per cent to RM124.08 billion yearon-year, said the Ministry of International Trade and Industry (MITI) on 4 September 2015. It said export for the month expanded by 3.5 per cent or RM2.12 billion to RM63.23 billion compared with July 2014 while imports increased by 5.9 per cent to RM60.85 billion. The expansion in exports to China, the United States, Vietnam, Indonesia, Thailand, Japan and the European Union supported the higher growth in the month reviewed, it added. In July 2015, total trade with free trade agreement (FTA) partners was RM77.57 billion, up by 4.6 per cent with exports totalling RM40.03 billion and imports amounting to RM37.54 billion. Malaysia continued to register a trade surplus valued at RM2.38 billion in July 2015, making it the 213th consecutive month of trade surplus since November 1997. "The moderation in trade surplus reflected mainly the higher imports required for production and investment purposes which will contribute towards exports going forward," said MITI in its Malaysia External Trade Statistics report. Total trade for the first seven months of 2015 moderated to RM819.06 billion. Exports during the period contracted by 2.2 per cent to RM231.57 billion while imports declined by 1.4 per cent to RM387.49 billion to the corresponding period in 2014. Meanwhile, trade surplus remained sizeable at RM44.07 billion. "Similar moderation in trade performance was also registered by other countries in Asia," said MITI. Total trade with FTA partners was valued at RM515.13 billion, accounting for 62.9 per cent of Malaysia's trade during the first seven months of 2015. Overall, MITI said major manufacturing subsectors experienced positive growth on a year-on-year basis. Mining and major commodity subsectors had reduced exports due to significantly lower prices relative to last year. Major exports in July 2015 were electric and electrical products worth RM23.1 billion constituting 36.5 per cent of total exports, chemicals and chemical products (RM4.35 billion), palm oil (RM4.06 billion) and liquefied natural gas (RM3.09 billion). On a year-on-year basis, Malaysia's total trade with ASEAN remained firm at RM32.86 billion with higher imports from ASEAN of 2.6 per cent to RM15.51 billion. Exports to ASEAN amounted to RM17.35 billion, accounting for 27.4 per cent of Malaysia's total exports. Bernama, 4 September 2015 “DRIVING Transformation, POWERING Growth” MALAYSIA Trade Performance, January - July 2015 Total Trade -1.8%* RM819.1b Jan-Jul 2015 RM834.1b Jan-Jul 2014 Exports -2.2%* RM431.6b Jan-Jul 2015 Imports -1.4%* RM441.3b Jan-Jul 2014 RM392.8b Jan-Jul RM387.5b 2014 Jan-Jul 2015 Note : * y-o-y growth Trade Performance, January - July 2015 RM billion 63.6 Jan Growth y-o-y (%) -0.6 54.6 -5.2 53.2 48.6 Feb Mar -9.7 58.6 Apr May 66.5 2.3 5.8 60.4 53.5 -8.8 60.5 -6.7 -6.9 -7.2 54.9 64.3 Jun 5.0 -1.5 56.3 63.2 Jul 60.9 Exports Source : Department of Statistics, Malaysia 0.3 3.5 5.9 Imports MITI Weekly Bulletin / www.miti.gov.my “DRIVING Transformation, POWERING Growth” Top 10 Export Products, January - July 2015 Total Exports RM431.6b Rubber Products 64.1% Optical & Scientific Equipment 35.4% 2.6% of top 10 products are 3.3% manufactured products worth 3.5% RM276.6b 4.0% Crude Petroleum 4.6% 5.7% Manufactures of Metal Machinery, Appliances & Parts E&E 7.2% 6.6% 7.0% Chemicals & Chemical Palm Oil Petroleum Products LNG Manufacturing: RM343.6b Mining:RM48.0b Agriculture: RM37.3b Others: RM2.7b Top 10 Export Destinations, January - July 2015 RM billion Singapore 59.7 (-4.8%) 55.7 (+6.0%) PRC Japan 42.4 USA 40.0 Thailand Hong Kong (-11.9%) (+10.7%) 24.7 (+7.2%) 21.3 (-1.6%) India 18.0 (+3.5%) Indonesia16.5 (-11.4%) Australia 15.8 (-19.0%) ROK 14.0 (-9.9%) Source : Department of Statistics, Malaysia MITI Weekly Bulletin / www.miti.gov.my “DRIVING Transformation, POWERING Growth” Productivity Level Labour Productivity (USD) 1980 (USD 41,360) 2000 (USD 58,463) 2015 Malaysia Source : Total Economy Database, The Conference Board Note : Labor productivity per person employed in 1990 US$ (converted at Geary Khamis PPPs) MITI Weekly Bulletin / www.miti.gov.my “DRIVING Transformation, POWERING Growth” ‘ and You’ Intra-ASEAN Trade, 2014 Lao PDR Exports US$1.5b Imports US$2.0b Myanmar Exports US$4.4b Imports US$7.1b Thailand Exports US$59.4b Imports US$43.3b Philippines Exports US$9.2b Imports US$16.2b Cambodia Exports US$2.0b Imports US$5.6b Malaysia Exports US$65.3b Imports US$53.8b Viet Nam Exports US$39.8b Imports US$50.9b Brunei Exports US$18.3b Imports US$22.5b Indonesia Exports US$2.1b Imports US$1.8b Singapore Exports US$127.7b Imports US$75.5b ASEAN 24.1% India 2.7% Australia 2.8% Hong Kong 3.9% Taiwan 4.3% Total Trade US$2.5 tril. China 14.5% ROK 5.2% USA 8.4% Japan 9.1% Top 10 ASEAN Trading Partners EU-28 9.8% Source : www.asean.org MITI’s ASEAN Portal can be accessed via http://aec2015.miti.gov.my/ MITI Weekly Bulletin / www.miti.gov.my International Report “DRIVING Transformation, POWERING Growth” US Trade Performance, July 2015 Export of Goods: US$128.2b ( 0.5%) m-o-m growth Import of Goods: US$189.6b ( 1.5%) m-o-m growth Export of Services: US$60.3b ( 0.3%) m-o-m growth Import of Services: US$40.8b ( 0.7%) m-o-m growth Trade Surplus Trading Partners in Goods, July 2015 South & Central America OPEC UK Hong Kong Singapore US$ billion 2.0 0.2 0.1 2.0 0.5 Trade Deficit US$ billion EU Germany Japan Mexico 15.2 6.6 5.7 3.4 China 31.6 Source : US Dapartment of Commerce India’s Economic Performance Q1 (April -June) of Fiscal 2015/2016 Economy Grew 7.0%*, (US$427.2b) l I n d u s t r i ao n Producti 3 .2 % * Mining 0 .7 % * Foreign Trade Total Trade: US$165.6 bil., 14.3% Exports: US$66.7bil., 16.8% Imports: US$98.9 bil., 12.6% Electricit 2 .3 % * uring M a n u f a c%t * 3 .6 y Inflation Rate (Wholesale) -2.4%* Inflation Rate (Retail) 5.1%* Foreign Direct Investment US$9.5 bil. Increased 31.4% (y-o-y) Malaysia is the 23rd largest investor (US$744.1 mil.) Note: * y-o-y growth Source: MITI New Delhi MITI Weekly Bulletin / www.miti.gov.my “DRIVING Transformation, POWERING Growth” Visit full website at https://esd.imi.gov.my/portal/ MITI Weekly Bulletin / www.miti.gov.my “DRIVING Transformation, POWERING Growth” Information for Mid-Tier Companies Development Programme - Part 1 Mid-Tier Companies (MTCs) are an integral part of the Malaysia Economy The Mid-Tier CompaniesDevelopment Programme (MTCDP) aim to help MTCs accelerate Export Growth Source : Malaysia Petroleum Resources Corporation MITI Weekly Bulletin / www.miti.gov.my “DRIVING Transformation, POWERING Growth” Number and Value of Preferential Certificates of Origin (PCOs) Number of Certificates (Provisional data) 12 Jul 2015 19 Jul 2015 26 Jul 2015 2 Aug 2015 9 Aug 2015 16 Aug 2015 23 Aug 2015 30 Aug 2015 AANZFTA 841 582 601 978 689 942 1,040 916 AIFTA 618 413 624 765 573 742 724 780 AJCEP 157 148 221 153 267 112 211 210 ATIGA 3,633 3,066 3,212 4,152 4,374 4,399 4,422 4,358 ACFTA 1,177 1,076 1,022 1,646 1,267 1,300 1,505 1,461 AKFTA 672 677 740 649 692 739 912 744 MICECA 381 190 336 308 312 289 336 305 MNZFTA 7 2 4 9 12 15 3 3 MCFTA 56 35 64 56 74 53 110 71 MAFTA 432 288 371 351 429 396 449 436 MJEPA 938 637 763 672 759 764 815 966 MPCEPA 95 110 130 143 143 184 186 170 GSP 154 93 76 155 94 117 160 129 - - - 0 0 93 239 283 MTFTA Notes: The preference giving countries under the GSP scheme are Cambodia, the Russian Federation, Japan, Switzerland and Norway. MPCEPA: Malaysia-Pakistan Closer Economic Partnership Agreement (Implemented since 1 January 2008) MJEPA: Malaysia-Japan Economic Partnership Agreement (Implemented since 13 July 2006) MICECA: Malaysia-India Comprehensive Economic Cooperation Agreement (Implemented since 1 July 2011) MNZFTA: Malaysia-New Zealand Free Trade Agreement (Implemented since 1 August 2010) MCFTA: Malaysia-Chile Free Trade Agreement (Implemented since 25 February 2012) MAFTA: Malaysia-Australia Free Trade Agreement (Implemented since 1 January 2013) MTFTA: Malaysia-Turkey Free Trade Agreement (Implemented since 1 August 2015) AANZFTA: ASEAN-Australia-New Zealand Free Trade Agreement (Implemented since 1 January 2010) ATIGA: ASEAN Trade in Goods Agreement (Implemented since 1 May 2010) AJCEP: ASEAN-Japan Comprehensive Economic Partnership (Implemented since 1 February 2009) ACFTA: ASEAN-China Free Trade Agreement (Implemented since 1 July 2003) AKFTA: ASEAN-Korea Free Trade Agreement (Implemented since 1 July 2006) AIFTA: ASEAN-India Free Trade Agreement (Implemented since 1 January 2010) Value of Preferential Certificates of Origin 5,000 250 4,500 4,000 200 RM million RM million 3,500 150 100 3,000 2,500 2,000 1,500 1,000 50 500 0 0 12 Jul 19 Jul 26 Jul 2 Aug 9 Aug 16 Aug 23 Aug 30 Aug AANZFTA 78 126 80 182 69 85 99 85 AIFTA 116 113 222 221 165 153 153 209 AJCEP 51 50 95 57 102 47 71 58 12 Jul 19 Jul 26 Jul 2 Aug 9 Aug 16 Aug 23 Aug 30 Aug ATIGA 829 525 719 1,352 843 997 783 1,272 ACFTA 613 410 547 830 850 4,575 982 557 AKFTA 375 126 261 413 235 133 137 160 180 200 160 140 150 RM million RM million 120 100 50 100 80 60 40 0 20 0 -50 12 Jul 19 Jul 26 Jul 2 Aug 9 Aug 16 Aug 23 Aug 30 Aug MICECA 56.68 22.77 50.64 34.72 46.07 48.23 56.30 47.98 MNZFTA 0.16 0.03 0.03 0.47 0.43 0.42 0.08 0.10 MCFTA 8.36 9.20 22.57 27.61 9.65 6.82 12.65 24.53 MAFTA 42.86 25.91 37.01 29.09 37.00 185.99 41.61 35.63 Source: Ministry of International Trade and Industry, Malaysia 20 12 Jul 19 Jul 26 Jul 2 Aug 9 Aug 16 Aug 23 Aug 30 Aug MJEPA 136 111 123 97 109 147 162 162 MPCEPA 38 12 20 46 40 63 69 41 GSP 27 13 18 27 18 20 27 21 0 0 35 68 89 MTFTA MITI Weekly Bulletin / www.miti.gov.my “DRIVING Transformation, POWERING Growth” Malaysian Ringgit Exchange Rate with US Dollar and Pound Sterling USD = RM GBP = RM 4.20 6.60 1 USD = RM 4.06 6.40 4.00 6.20 3.80 6.00 3.60 5.80 5.60 3.40 5.40 1 GBP = RM 6.34 3.20 3.00 5.20 Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug 2014 5.00 2015 Source : Bank Negara, Malaysia Gold Prices, 29 April - 4 September 2015 Gold US$/Gram 40.0 38.9 39.0 38.0 37.0 36.0 36.0 4 Sep 28 Aug 21 Aug 14 Aug 7 Aug 31 Jul 24 Jul 16 Jul 10 Jul 3 Jul 26 Jun 19 Jun 12 Jun 5 Jun 29 May 22 May 15 May 29 Apr 34.0 8 May 35.0 Source : http://www.gold.org/investments/statistics/gold_price_chart/ Silver and Platinum Prices, 29 April - 4 September 2015 US$/Oz Silver 18.0 1,200.0 17.5 1,150.0 17.0 16.0 1,100.0 16.6 15.5 1,050.0 15.0 14.5 14.0 1,000.0 14.6 950.0 29 Apr 8 May 15 May 22 May 29 May 5 Jun 12 Jun 19 Jun 26 Jun 3 Jul 10 Jul 16 Jul 24 Jul 31 Jul 7 Aug 14 Aug 21 Aug 28 Aug 4 Sep 13.5 13.0 1,154.5 Source : http://www.hardassetsalliance.com/charts/silver-price/usd/oz 900.0 990.0 29 Apr 8 May 15 May 22 May 29 May 5 Jun 12 Jun 19 Jun 26 Jun 3 Jul 10 Jul 16 Jul 24 Jul 31 Jul 7 Aug 14 Aug 21 Aug 28 Aug 4 Sep 16.5 Platinum US$/Oz Source : http://www.hardassetsalliance.com/charts/platinum-price/usd/oz MITI Weekly Bulletin / www.miti.gov.my “DRIVING Transformation, POWERING Growth” Commodity Prices Crude Petroleum (per bbl) Crude Palm Oil (per MT) Raw Sugar (per MT) Rubber SMR 20 (per MT) Cocoa SMC 2 (per MT) Coal (per MT) Scrap Iron HMS (per MT) 4 Sep 2015 (US$) 46.1 500.5 245.3 1,216.5 2,033.5 47.3 250 (high) 230 (low) % change* 1.8 2.3 2.2 5.3 0.7 0.4 unchanged unchanged 2014i 54.6 - 107.6 823.3 352.3 1,718.3 2,615.8 59.8 370.0 2013i 88.1 - 108.6 805.5 361.6 2,390.8 1,933.1 .. 485.6 Commodity Notes: All figures have been rounded to the nearest decimal point * Refer to % change from the previous week’s price i Average price in the year except otherwise indicated n.a Not availble Highest and Lowest Prices, 2014/2015 Crude Petroleum (4 Sep 2015) US$46.1 per bbl Highest (US$ per bbl) Lowest (US$ per bbl) 2015 29 May 2015: 60.3 2015 21 Aug 2015: 40.5 2014 13 June 2014: 107.6 2014 26 Dec 2014: 54.6 Average Domestic Prices, 28 Aug 2015 Billets (per MT) RM1,300 - RM1,350 Crude Palm Oil (4 Sep 2015) US$500.5 per MT Highest (US$ per MT) Lowest (US$ per MT) 2015 16 Jan 2015: 701.0 2015 4 Sep 2015: 500.5 2014 14 Mar 2014: 982.5 2014 26 Dec 2014: 664.0 Steel Bars (per MT) RM1,600 - RM1,700 Sources: Ministry of International Trade and Industry Malaysia, Malaysian Palm Oil Board, Malaysian Rubber Board, Malaysian Cocoa Board, Malaysian Iron and Steel Industry Federation, Bloomberg and Czarnikow Group. MITI Weekly Bulletin / www.miti.gov.my “DRIVING Transformation, POWERING Growth” Commodity Price Trends Crude Palm Oil 1,600 680 1,550 663.5 648.5 640 1,570.5 1,550.0 1,499.0 1,500 661.5 658.5 630.5 620 1,451.0 1,446.5 1,450 639.5 1,407.5 622.5 600 1,400 US$/mt 660 US$/mt Rubber SMR 20 700 599.5 580 577.5 560 1,343.5 1,341.5 1,350 1,302.5 1,300 1,200 520 512.5 500 1,216.5 1,150 500.5 480 1,100 19 Jun 26 Jun 3 Jul 10 Jul 16 Jul 24 Jul 31 Jul 7 Aug 14 Aug 21 Aug 28 Aug 4 Sep 19 Jun 26 Jun 3 Jul 10 Jul 16 Jul 24 Jul 31 Jul 7 Aug 14 Aug 21 Aug 28 Aug 4 Sep Cocoa Black Pepper 2,300 8,500 7,967 8,000 2,250.9 2,250 7,822 2,231.5 2,195.2 2,173.6 2,183.8 2,150 7,2867,267 7,000 6,864 6,000 2,094.5 7,148 7,063 7,027 6,742 6,469 6,500 6,515 2,115.5 2,100 7,296 7,507 2,197.7 2,188.9 USD/ tonne 2,200 7,853 7,806 7,894 7,707 7,500 2,207.6 US$/mt 1,285.0 1,250 551.0 540 1,396.0 6,245 5,740 5,779 5,843 5,500 2,058.0 2,050 2,047.3 2,033.5 5,000 Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep 2014 2,000 12 Jun 19 Jun 26 Jun 3 Jul 10 Jul 16 Jul 24 Jul 31 Jul 7 Aug 14 Aug 21 Aug 28 Aug 4 Sep Raw Sugar Crude Petroleum 70 280 270 65 263.3 260 265.8 266.8 63.9 60 254.8 249.8 55 248.3 240 245.3 242.0 240.0 US$/bbl US$/mt 250 2015 * until 4 September 2015 60.0 63.0 63.3 59.6 59.7 60.3 58.7 56.9 54.6 52.7 50 228.5 228.0 220 52.2 50.9 234.0 230 57.5 48.1 45 48.6 50.1 49.0 45.5 43.9 46.1 45.2 42.5 40 210 49.6 47.1 40.5 Crude Petroleum (WTI)/bbl 19 Jun 26 Jun 3 Jul 10 Jul 16 Jul 24 Jul 31 Jul 7 Aug 14 Aug 21 Aug 28 Aug 4 Sep Crude Petroleum (Brent)/bbl 12 Jun 19 Jun 26 Jun 3 Jul 10 Jul 16 Jul 24 Jul 31 Jul 7 Aug 14 Aug 21 Aug 28 Aug 4 Sep Sources: Ministry of International Trade and Industry Malaysia, Malaysian Palm Oil Board, Malaysian Rubber Board, Malaysian Cocoa Board, Malaysian Pepper Board, Malaysian Iron and Steel Industry Federation, Bloomberg and Czarnikow Group, World Bank. 35 200 MITI Weekly Bulletin / www.miti.gov.my “DRIVING Transformation, POWERING Growth” Commodity Price Trends Copper Aluminium 2,100 2,056 2,030 7,400 7,291 7,200 2,000 1,990 1,946 US$/ tonne 1,900 1,909 1,800 1,819 1,815 1,727 1,804 1,774 1,751 1,700 1,705 1,695 6,446 6,295 6,200 6,042 5,940 6,000 5,831 5,833 5,729 5,457 5,400 5,127 5,200 1,548 5,000 Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug 2014 6,650 6,400 5,600 1,640 1,500 6,713 6,737 6,674 5,800 1,688 1,600 6,872 6,821 6,600 1,818 1,839 1,811 6,891 6,800 US$/ tonne 1,948 7,113 7,002 7,149 7,000 Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug 2015 2014 2015 Coal Nickel 50.0 19,401 19,118 19,000 49.0 18,629 17,000 18,600 48.8 18,035 48.0 17,374 15,678 15,000 47.5 47.0 14,574 US$/mt US$/ tonne 15,962 15,812 15,807 14,849 14,101 14,204 13,756 13,000 13,511 12,831 11,000 46.0 47.3 47.3 47.3 47.2 46.2 45.3 45.0 12,825 47.5 45.3 44.9 45.0 3 Jul 10 Jul 16 Jul 24 Jul 31 Jul 7 Aug 14 Aug 21 Aug 28 Aug 44.0 11,413 10,386 43.0 9,000 Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug 2014 42.0 2015 12 Jun 19 Jun 26 Jun Iron Ore Scrap Iron 140.0 300 130.0 128.1 290 121.4 280.0 280 270.0 270.0 270.0 270.0 110.0 114.6 111.8 100.6 100.0 260.0 250.0 250.0 250.0 260.0 260.0 250.0 250.0 250.0 250.0 240.0 240 90.0 96.1 92.6 92.7 81.0 80.0 82.4 74.0 68.0 70.0 230 230.0 220 230.0 68.0 230.0 60.0 220.0 210 50.0 63.0 60.0 58.0 63.0 56.0 52.0 52.0 Scrap Iron/MT (High) 40.0 Scrap Iron/MT(Low) Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug 200 17 Apr 24 Apr 8 May 15 May 29 May 5 Jun 19 Jun 3 Jul 24 Jul 7 Aug 14 Aug 28 Aug 2014 2015 Sources: Ministry of International Trade and Industry Malaysia, Malaysian Palm Oil Board, Malaysian Rubber Board, Malaysian Cocoa Board, Malaysian Pepper Board, Malaysian Iron and Steel Industry Federation, Bloomberg and Czarnikow Group, World Bank. US$/mt 120.0 260.0 260 250 280.0 US$/dmtu 270 270.0 280.0 MITI Weekly Bulletin / www.miti.gov.my “DRIVING Transformation, POWERING Growth” “The Housewife who became a CEO” TAJ Vision Sdn Bhd TAJ International College first started out in 1996 as TAJ College, a small college in small town Ipoh. Founded by a respected local leader who chose education to uplift the local population, the path of fate made a turn in 2005 and the daughter was given a chance to shine. Tina bt Tajuddin was a young housewife when her big challenge came. She was actually nursing a four months old baby when her destiny called. There was also the small matter of location, she was happily married and living in Kuala Lumpur while the college was back in her hometown of Ipoh which was a few hundred kilometres away. To make it even more difficult, her young family’s modest economic situation at the time meant that she could not even afford to own a motor vehicle. In order to make it work, she would have to get on a long distance bus at 4am every morning to get to work on time, only to return back to her already asleep children late at night. In true entrepreneurial fashion Tina surmounted her difficulties and emerged as a model SME Bank success story. Her intelligence, determination and business acumen transformed the modest college. She moved the college from a shoplot setting to a perfect location which allowed her to easily grow and add to the facilities of the college. From the college’s early days of conducting scaffolding pre-university programmes, various educational qualifications were added such as certificates, diplomas, degrees and Masters degrees. level in partnership with leading universities such as UNITAR. Its latest foray is into healthcare education in collaboration with Cyberjaya University College of Medical Sciences (CUCMS). SME Bank’s facilities to assist new entrepreneurs made great sense to Tina. With no commercial bank interested to even listen, it was SME Bank that assisted Tina to elevate her operations. In 2009 she received funding of RM4 million to upgrade her college building and facilities. In 2012 Tina obtained a series of funding totalling over RM4 million to meet her expansion plans. Tina’s next goal is for her college to achieve the status of ‘University College’ by 2016. With her dynamism, ambition and quick thinking, we are sure she will be able to achieve this and more! See more at: http://www.yoursuccessourstory.com/story03.html#page=page-1 Apart from home-grown programmes at the certificate and diploma levels specialising in automotive engineering, beauty management, early childhood education, and various business, management and entrepreneurship programmes, the college further extended its sphere into entrepreneurial university programmes at the degree and Masters MAIN CAMPUS (IPOH) TAJ International College 100-102 Jalan Tun Abdul Razak 30100 Ipoh, Perak Darul Ridzuan Tel : +6-05-528 6666 / 527 7092 Email : enquiry@taj.edu.my Website: www.tic.edu.my MITI Weekly Bulletin / www.miti.gov.my “DRIVING Transformation, POWERING Growth” MITI Programme Perhimpunan Bulanan MITI & Agensi, 4 September 2015 Comments & Suggestions Dear Readers, Kindly click the link below for any comments in this issue. MWB reserves the right to edit and to republish letters as reprints. http://www.miti.gov.my/index.php/forms/form/13 MITI Weekly Bulletin / www.miti.gov.my “DRIVING Transformation, POWERING Growth” TPP Briefing at Star Media Group Berhad, 3 September 2015 MITI Weekly Bulletin / www.miti.gov.my “DRIVING Transformation, POWERING Growth” Outcome-based Budgeting Refresher Workshop, 3 - 5 September 2015, Melaka MITI Weekly Bulletin / www.miti.gov.my “DRIVING Transformation, POWERING Growth” @ YOUR SERVICE Name Designation Job Description Division Contact No Email Name Designation Job Description Division Contact No Email : Dg. Shalbia Abdul Ghani : Director : Coordinate and monitor the formulation of policies, strategies and programmes related to trade facilitation and e-commerce : Investment Policy and Trade Facilitation : 603-6200 0150 : shalbia@miti.gov.my : Muhammad Ariq Tan Abdullah : Assistant Accountant : Managing payment process : Account : 603-6200 0102 : ariq@miti.gov.my Comments & Suggestions Dear Readers, Kindly click the link below for any comments in this issue. MWB reserves the right to edit and to republish letters as reprints. http://www.miti.gov.my/cms_matrix/form.jsp?formId=c1148fbf-c0a81573-3a2f3a2f-1380042c MITI Weekly Bulletin / www.miti.gov.my