
IN a world increasingly shaped by uncertainty, Malaysia’s new Madani Budget 2026 stands out not because it is perfect, but because it dares to choose direction over distraction.
Where many governments are trapped in survival mode — reacting to inflation, conflict, and economic shocks — ours has chosen to think forward. That in itself is an act of courage.
Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim’s latest budget is not merely an accounting exercise. It is an articulation of intent: to build a nation that can grow with integrity, compete with compassion, and prosper without leaving the weakest behind.
And that — in the noise of global instability — is no small thing.

The Right Direction
What strikes me most is that this government has finally moved beyond slogans and subsidies. It addresses the fundamentals: reforming how we spend, not just how much we spend.
By targeting subsidies rather than handing out blanket aid, we are beginning to heal a long-standing economic wound — a system that too often rewarded inefficiency instead of need.
And the decision to hold the line on fiscal discipline while still protecting the rakyat shows a rare kind of political maturity. Most leaders choose the easy road of populism. This Prime Minister has chosen responsibility.
Yet, honesty compels us to say this too: a good budget is only as good as the people who deliver it.
The Prime Minister may chart the course, but the ship will not move without capable hands-on deck. Ministers, technocrats, civil servants, and even the private sector — we all share in this responsibility of execution.
If we fail in that, then no budget, no policy, no reform will ever reach the people.
The People Around Him
Anwar Ibrahim is a reformist, but reformists are only as effective as those they empower.
He has shown restraint and moral clarity — qualities Malaysia desperately needed. But now, his ministers and his aides must match that courage with competence.
Integrity is not performance; it is a daily practice. We cannot have a Prime Minister fighting for clean governance while others are content with mediocrity or old habits.
The Madani Budget 2026 gives us the framework; the real test begins now, in the ministries, in the agencies, and in every tender and allocation.
If even one leak in that system remains unplugged, it weakens the whole vessel. The people’s patience for waste and hypocrisy has run dry. Unfortunately political, religious and racial hypocrisy is a virus that keeps evolving and needs to be wiped out.

Malaysia’s Moment Amid a Fractured World
Look around the world: Major economies are stumbling under the weight of political division. Wars in Europe and the Middle East threaten global supply chains. Inflation remains stubborn. Climate disasters are rewriting economic geography.
And yet — in this global chaos — Malaysia stands relatively steady.
Our diversity is still our strength. Our debt, while real, is manageable. Our leadership, finally, has vision. And our people — resilient, pragmatic, creative — are ready to seize opportunities if we give them a fair chance.
We are not perfect. But for the first time in many years, we are not lost.
This is not blind optimism; it is a recognition of reality.
When the world is fracturing, the nations that survive will be those that can adapt, collaborate, and hold on to a moral compass. Malaysia still has all those tools — if we use them wisely.
Social Capitalism and Shared Prosperity
I have always believed that wealth, like knowledge, must circulate to create value. That is the essence of social capitalism — the idea that enterprise and empathy must coexist. A strong private sector is not the enemy of the rakyat; it is the engine that lifts them. But the engine needs good fuel — clear policies, less bureaucracy, and leadership that believes in partnership, not patronage.
The Madani framework gestures in that direction. What we need now is follow-through: new and fair incentives that reward innovation, support small and medium sized businesses, and turn Malaysia into the green, digital, and inclusive economy we claim to want.
If this budget becomes the start of such a transformation, then history will look back at it not as a list of numbers, but as the beginning of finally fulfilling the Malaysian promise.
A Final Word
Budgets come and go. What endures is the trust that citizens place in those who lead them.
Today, Malaysia is more stable, more hopeful, and more respected than at any time in the last two decades. But that hope must be honoured.
Anwar has done his part by showing courage and integrity. The rest of us — in business, government, and civil society — must now match his intent with action.
Because nations are not saved by one man’s sincerity and hope; they are built by the collective discipline of an entire people.
Malaysia stands at a rare intersection of stability and opportunity.
Let us not waste it — for if we get this right, the world’s chaos may well become Malaysia’s opportunity. – October 11, 2025
Datuk Dr Vinod Sekhar is the publisher of the Vibes and Chairman of the Petra Group
.png)

