At 80, His Majesty delivered more than a message of celebration. He reminded Brunei that national strength rests not on wealth alone, but on unity, integrity and shared responsibility. As the economy changes and new challenges emerge, the titah asks every institution and citizen to rise together—so that stability is preserved, progress is sustained, and no one is left behind.
By Malai Hassan Othman
His Majesty Sultan Haji Hassanal Bolkiah Mu’izzaddin Waddaulah, the Sultan and Yang Di-Pertuan of Negara Brunei Darussalam, marked his 80th birthday with an unusually direct warning: Brunei’s strength will not be measured by the wealth it enjoys, but by whether its people remain sincerely united when the country is tested.
In a titah delivered on the royal milestone, His Majesty said he would not compromise with any party seeking to divide the people. He added that corruption and dishonesty had no place in Brunei when they threatened national welfare and progress.
The language was restrained, but the message was not. Nearly six decades on the throne, His Majesty identified trust, loyalty and unity — rather than prosperity itself — as the constants that had carried Brunei from basic development into the modern age.
That distinction matters. In a country where oil and gas wealth has long softened economic shocks, the titah placed moral cohesion and institutional integrity above material comfort. It was less a celebration of what Brunei possesses than a reminder of what it could lose.
His Majesty also turned pointedly to the younger generation, saying they should no longer remain spectators of change or merely users of technology created by others. They must rise as creators, thinkers and visionary leaders.
The call came against an economy that is growing, but only narrowly. Official figures show real gross domestic product expanding by 0.3 per cent year-on-year in the first quarter of 2026, largely because oil and gas activity rose by 4.1 per cent.
The non-oil and gas sector still accounted for 54.9 per cent of gross value added, confirming that diversification has changed the shape of the economy. Yet it contracted by 3.0 per cent during the quarter. Services fell by 3.1 per cent, construction by 8.0 per cent and business services by 7.8 per cent.
The figures expose the harder truth beneath the encouraging headline. Brunei’s economy is becoming more diversified in composition, but its immediate growth remains heavily dependent on hydrocarbons.
That gives greater weight to His Majesty’s pledge that the Government will continue supporting young people who wish to enter and expand in business across all sectors. He highlighted microfinancing available through Bank Islam Brunei Darussalam, Perbadanan TAIB and Bank Usahawan.
But access to finance is only one part of the equation. Young entrepreneurs are being asked to take risks in an economy where finance contracted by 6.6 per cent, construction by 8.0 per cent and several service industries recorded declines. The challenge is no longer simply to produce more entrepreneurs, but to build an environment in which viable firms can survive.
His Majesty reaffirmed his commitment to lead Brunei towards Wawasan Brunei 2035 — a developed, sustainable and resilient nation supported by the combined efforts of all sectors.
On social development, he highlighted Projek Teduh, under which the Government and BIBD have used the bank’s business zakat fund to build homes for vulnerable groups. His Majesty encouraged more public-private partnerships of this kind to raise the living standards of those in need.
The initiative places Islamic social finance alongside public efforts to address housing vulnerability. It is modest in scale, but significant in principle: social protection need not be left to the state alone when institutions with resources can be brought into the national effort.
Energy security also featured prominently. His Majesty said Brunei remained in a comparatively sound position despite global uncertainty, with the Government prioritising strategic reserves of petroleum fuel and LPG cylinders to meet daily needs.
He also placed responsibility beyond government, urging all parties to use energy resources prudently. It was a quiet but important shift in emphasis: national resilience depends not only on what the state stores, but on how society consumes.
His Majesty announced approval of the Disaster Management Strategic Policy Framework, intended to strengthen risk management and coordinated action among agencies during emergencies.
The titah then moved to the issue that may prove most consequential: the country’s fiscal position. His Majesty acknowledged that fiscal challenges still require sustained attention and said the Government would widen non-oil and gas revenue, manage public expenditure prudently, strengthen business facilitation and ensure government processes are investor-friendly.
The pressure is already visible in the latest national accounts. Government final consumption fell by 12.2 per cent in real terms in the first quarter, while household consumption rose by 9.1 per cent and gross capital formation increased by 6.3 per cent.
Those figures do not by themselves prove austerity. But they underline why the call for fiscal responsibility was more than ceremonial language. Brunei is attempting to restrain public demand while expecting households, investors and private enterprise to carry more of the economy’s forward momentum.
His Majesty expressed confidence in each Menteri Penyelaras, or Coordinating Minister, to ensure that gaps and obstacles are addressed effectively. With weakness extending across finance, business services, construction, transport and public administration, that reference carried an unmistakable message about delivery.
Policies may be announced at the centre, but implementation often succeeds or stalls in the spaces between ministries, regulators and agencies. The titah appeared to put those gaps on notice — diplomatically, but firmly.
The year 2027 will bring two major national occasions: the Diamond Jubilee of His Majesty’s reign and Visit Brunei Year. The ceremonies will be substantial. The more enduring test will be whether the commitments outlined now — on youth enterprise, vulnerable households, economic diversification and government delivery — are felt beyond the official programme.
His Majesty closed by thanking the people, the Civil Service, the security forces, the private sector and the national and district celebration committees.
Yet the central message had already been delivered. At 80, after nearly six decades of rule, His Majesty was not asking Brunei merely to celebrate continuity. He was asking whether the unity, integrity and institutional discipline that built the country remain strong enough to carry it through the next test.
Sources: Full text of His Majesty’s 80th birthday titah; Department of Economic Planning and Statistics, Gross Domestic Product, First Quarter 2026.





