September-October , 2020 | @ green
innovation
29
Rakyat first
Malaysia 5.0 – putting the rakyat at the heart of the Digital Economy Masterplan
By Ameen Kamal
A
core policy framework where the rakyat is put first must be at the heart of any national economic masterplan .
This is to ensure that the trajectory of Malaysia ’ advancement ( in all aspects ) is towards the creation of a society where , ultimately , society ’ s problems and issues are addressed .
After all , what good is a ‘ high-income ’ technologically advanced nation , if issues affecting the people such as inequality and job losses continue to persist , if not worsen ?
“ Malaysia 5.0 ” is a policy framework that can be integrated at the core of the Digital Economy Masterplan , which is a foreseeable overarching national-level initiative to expand digital transformation to all sectors .
Inspired by Japan ’ s Society 5.0 , it provides a core principle of a problem-solving approach to society ’ s challenges and problems by putting the rakyat at the centre of the technological revolution , altering the ecosystem of digitalisation from technology-driven to society-driven .
The Digital Economy Masterplan is targeted to be launched in October and would mostly involve the Malaysia Digital Economy Corporation ( MDec ) and the Ministry of Communications and Multimedia .
The unveiling of the masterplan by the Minister in the Prime Minister ’ s Department ( Economy ) Datuk Seri Mustapa Mohamed on Aug 13 coincides nicely with the Malaysia 5.0 concept that has been coined and championed by MDec Chairman Datuk Wira Dr . Rais Hussin since May this year .
According to Datuk Seri Mustapa , a study on the Fourth Industrial Revolution ( 4IR ) will be finalised and merged with the digital economy .
This indicates the masterplan would integrate and align other related national initiatives such as the National Policy on Industry 4.0 ( Industry4WRD ) which was introduced by the Ministry of International Trade and Industry ( MITI ) last year , and the National Technology and Innovation Sandbox ( NTIS ) spearheaded by the Ministry of Science , Technology and Innovation ( MOSTI ) and recently launched on Aug19 .
The envisioned inter-ministerial collaboration and the resulting effort in coordinating the many agencies involved in the promotion of the growth of the digital sector is also entirely in sync with the “ Unity Alliance ” concept under Malaysia 5.0 .
This concept envisions a unified coalition of not only government stakeholders but also industry players working together to build a supportive ecosystem through the development of infrastructure , talents , technologies and policies .
This concerted effort is necessary to ensure successful digital transformation nationwide . However , ensuring that the people become the ultimate beneficiary of the technological revolution requires a rakyat-centric principle to be at the core of the digital economy .
With Malaysia 5.0 serving as the glue that binds the “ Unity Alliance ”, the techno-economic coalition under the Digital Economy Masterplan would be guided to serve society in its migration into the digital age ultimately .
It is worth recognising that Malaysia needs to establish itself in the desirable elements of “ Society 4.0 ” first before pursuing “ Malaysia 5.0 ”.
However , key pillars of Society 4.0 need to be rooted in Malaysia 5.0 principles now to allow a course-correction on its trajectory of becoming the highly touted ‘ high income ’, ‘ high tech ’ nation with the theme of digital inclusion , digital equity and technology reciprocity with the rakyat at the centre .
According to an article by the Chairman of Keidanren ( Japan Business Federation ) Hiroaki Nakanishi which was published in the World Economic Forum ( WEF ), the common themes of Society 4.0 include :
• Efficiencies / economies of scale ;
This concept envisions a unified coalition of not only government stakeholders but also industry players working together to build a supportive ecosystem through the development of infrastructure , talents , technologies and policies .”
Shopping on smart phone with scanning facial recognition .
• Mass standardisations / uniformity of things and society leading to suppression of individuality ;
• concentration of knowledge , information , resources , and power , causing disparity in opportunities ;
• Vulnerability due to personal and public security ; and
• Mass consumption of resources with large environmental impacts . In contrast , he summarises that Society 5.0 is the society in which “ anyone can create value anytime , anywhere , with security and in harmony with nature ”. This is the people-centric model that Malaysia 5.0 intends to emulate , and integrate into current initiatives and policies to ensure Malaysia ’ s path of technological and economic development doesn ’ t fall into the various limitations of Society 4.0 .
Lockdowns and movement restrictions due to the Covid- 19 pandemic have accelerated the migration of society from the physical world into the digital space .
Malaysia ’ s ensuing recovery from the socio-economic impact of the pandemic – which has thus far plunged Malaysia ’ s GDP to contract 17.1 per cent in the second half of 2020 – is significantly dependent on the proper use and acceleration of IR4.0 technology adoption , integration , and development .
Digital Transformation , which is the key enabler of the Digital Economy , is an inevitable phenomenon as the world shifts into the 4IR and migrates to the digital era .
However , without a people-centric framework such as Malaysia 5.0 , the 4IR can be ( at its worst ) the final iteration of uninhibited and unregulated capitalism .
At the corporate level , transformations solely led by scientific and technological innovations in digitisation , automation , high-tech surveillance and artificial-intelligence hold the promise to be highly efficient at improving profits .
However , in the absence of a policy that puts the wellbeing of the people first , such a system would do little to improve the lives of the vast majority of the public .
Rather than improving prosperity for all , the technologyenabled corporate-centric bottom line-driven revolution can lead to even more inequality and job displacements .
At the government level for example , the use of high-tech surveillance ( through various technologies such as cuttingedge video analytics ) can assist in improving security . Still , without proper guidance , it can be misused to mine for people ’ s data for the wrong reasons .
In this scenario , the integration of personal information ’ big data ’ with AI can be wrongfully exploited by the government to increase control and by corporations for their benefits .
In these examples , without a people-centric governing philosophy and framework such as Malaysia 5.0 , technology serves to exploit the people , instead of helping them .
As warned by Shoshana Zuboff , professor emerita at Harvard Business School in the book “ The Age of Surveillance Capitalism ”, surveillance capitalism undermines autonomy and democracy .
History indicates that severe inequality ( at whichever stage of the industrial revolution ), loss of privacy , undermined freedom , and the sense of limited free-will can lead to civil unrest and ultimately , system implosion .
Instead of exploiting the people through the use of advance technology , Malaysia 5.0 puts the Rakyat at the centre of the technological revolution . The well-being of the masses is the objective , instead of the groups being exploited for the benefit of the few . — @ green
Ameen Kamal is the Head of Science & Technology at EMIR Research , an independent think tank focused on strategic policy recommendations based on rigorous research .