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Malaysia

Updated: October 9, 2016 Source: The World Bank
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Note: This column mainly includes countries along the Belt and Road and countries that have signed cooperation agreements with China on Belt and Road Initiative.

Population 30.33 million 2015
GDP $296.2 billion 2015
GDP growth 5.0% 2015
Inflation 2.1% 2015

Malaysia is a highly open, upper-middle income economy.Malaysia was one of 13 countries identified by the Commission on Growth and Development in its 2008 Growth Report to have recorded average growth of more than 7 percent per year for 25 years or more. Economic growth was inclusive, as Malaysia also succeeded in nearly eradicating poverty.

Though extreme poverty is less than 1 percent, pockets of poverty remain and income inequality remains high relative to other developed countries: Malaysia’s gini coefficient of income inequality stood at 0.41 in 2014, compared with 0.31 and 0.33 in the Republic of Korea and Japan (both as of 2010), for example. Real income of the bottom 40 percent of households increased by an average 6.3 percent per year between 2009 and 2012, compared to 5.2 percent for the average household, suggesting the benefits from growth were being shared.

Malaysia’s near-term economic outlook remains broadly favorable, reflecting a well-diversified economy, despite some risks. The Government has taken steps to broaden the revenue base, in particular by introducing a Goods and Services Tax in 2015 and by removing fuel subsidies in 2014. Recent increases in the minimum wage and public sector salaries to support households’ income may prove challenging to sustain as fiscal consolidation continues, which raises the importance of boosting labor productivity and increasing the efficiency of the social protection. Introducing unemployment benefits may also help to improve matching in the labor market and provide support as the labor market softens. Other risks are related to the volatility in capital flows from the normalization of US monetary policy. The long-term sustainability of this favorable outlook hinges on structural reforms to strengthen medium-term fiscal planning, and to boost capabilities and competition within the economy.

Accelerated implementation of productivity-enhancing reforms to increase the quality of human capital and create more competition in the economy will be key for Malaysia to secure a lasting place among the ranks of high-income economies. Malaysia has been working to address these challenges. In 2010, Malaysia launched the New Economic Model (NEM), which aims for the country to reach high income status by 2020 while ensuring that growth is also sustainable and inclusive. The NEM includes a number of reforms to achieve economic growth that is primarily driven by the private sector and moves the Malaysian economy into higher value-added activities in both industry and services.

Last updated: September 2016

Editor: Li Jing