Tuesday 25 December 2012

Intro of PEMUDAH Malaysia

The idea for a high-powered task force to address bureaucracy in business-government dealings was first introduced in the Prime Minister’s annual speech to the Civil Service on 11th January 2007. It was recognised that a concerted cross-ministerial initiative was needed to effect greater improvement in the way government regulates businesses. To be truly relevant, it was also essential to have active participation by the private sector.



On 7th February 2007, the Special Task Force to Facilitate Business or PEMUDAH (taken from the task force’s Malay name ‘Pasukan Petugas Khas Pemudahcara Perniagaan’) was established. Reporting directly to the Prime Minister, the team comprises 23 highly respected individuals from both the private and public sectors. It is co-chaired by Y.Bhg. Tan Sri Mohd Sidek Hassan, the Chief Secretary to the Government of Malaysia and Y.Bhg. Tan Sri Datuk Yong Poh Kon, President of the Federation of Malaysian Manufacturers.

Terms of Reference:
To review the status of the public services delivery system in terms of processes, procedures, legislation and human resource and to propose new policies for improvements;
To benchmark best practices to improve the ease of doing business;
To enhance collaboration among public and private sector agencies to improve Malaysia’s competitiveness;
To monitor the implementation of policies, strategies and procedure that would improve the efficiency and effectiveness of the public and private sector delivery system; and
To take appropriate action to address issues in line with the National philosophy of 1Malaysia, People First, Performance Now. Vision and Values



To achieve a globally benchmarked, customer-centric, innovative, entrepreneurial and proactive public and private sector delivery service in support of a vibrant, resilient and competitive economy and society, driven by the following:
A sense of urgency
Proactive public-private sector collaboration
Facilitation, not hampering
No more regulation than necessary
Zero tolerance for corruption

No comments:

Post a Comment