Key Findings
Malaysia is projected to grow more slowly in 2015.
- Growth projections: 5.7% in 2014; 4.7% in 2015.
- Slowdown in China and uneven global recovery will dampen export growth.
- Fiscal consolidation is on track and current account to stay in surplus, but risks to both if oil prices fall further.
Malaysia has reduced poverty and vulnerability; inequality is still a challenge.
- Absolute poverty has nearly been eradicated.
- Vulnerability is limited and declining.
- However, inequality is still high compared to OECD countries (Gini = 0.42 in 2014).
- Some gaps between ethnic groups remain, but inequality within groups explains most (96 percent) of overall income inequality.
Growing the middle class will promote shared prosperity in Malaysia.
- The challenge is for Malaysia to transition from a middle-income nation to a middle-class society.
- The middle class is an engine of economic growth and promotes social cohesion.
The ¡®aspirational group¡¯ that¡¯s neither poor or vulnerable, but has yet to join the middle class now makes up the majority (51%) of Malaysian society.
- It is largely urban and is comprised of smaller families.
- Their material asset ownership is similar to that of the middle-class.
- They lack post-secondary education: only 16%, compared to 55% of the middle/upper-class.
- Raising the aspirational group to the middle class will require helping them get jobs that earn ¡°middle-class wages¡± and build up savings.
Post-secondary education is the pathway for the aspirational class to join the middle class:
- Closing the existing large gaps in educational achievement at the post-secondary level will improve opportunities for higher-paying jobs.
- Education subsidies are not enough.
- Long-term factors, such as parents¡¯ education level, account for most of educational achievement gaps.
- The government can further increase the pre-primary enrolment rate and raise the quality of the lowest performing schools.
- For those who are already in the work force, making skills development programs more demand-led by employers will help with the skills mismatch.
Equity could be further enhanced by modernizing Government transfers, financed by more progressive taxes:
- Government programs have lifted 50,000 households from poverty, but fewer, better targeted and more generous program would have an even greater impact without additional resources.
- 73% of the aspirational group have some form of financial assets (88% of middle-/high-income households) but average values are low and inadequate to support a middle-class life into retirement.
- The Government could consider making matching contributions to retirement account of some of the aspirational group to boost their balances.
- These could be financed through more progressive personal income taxes, namely considering higher rates for top earners and enlarging the number of tax payers.