Malaysia Economic Monitor, December 2014 : Towards a Middle-Class Society
Malaysia has in many ways become a success story in shared prosperity. Shared prosperity means that all households experience income growth, but growth is higher for those households at the bottom of the distribution, a pattern that leads to lower...
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Format: | Economic Updates and Modeling |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
Washington, DC
2014
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2014/12/23035132/malaysia-economic-monitor-towards-middle-class-society http://hdl.handle.net/10986/21057 |
Summary: | Malaysia has in many ways become a
success story in shared prosperity. Shared prosperity means
that all households experience income growth, but growth is
higher for those households at the bottom of the
distribution, a pattern that leads to lower inequality. In
the past 40 years, Malaysia drew on its natural resources to
nearly eradicate absolute poverty, from 49 percent in 1970
to 1 percent in 2014. The number of Malaysians vulnerable to
falling into absolute poverty has also declined in this
period. To accelerate Malaysia s transformation into a
middle-class society, Malaysia may consider prioritizing
reforms that: (i) close the educational achievement gaps at
the post-secondary levels by compensating for family
background, including pursuing universal pre-primary
enrolment and otherpolicies to boost the quality
of the poorest performing schools; (ii) provide more
demand-driven post-secondary skills training for those
already in the labor markets; (iii) create an integrated
social safety net including both social insurance mechanisms
to protect households against shocks and old age (for
example by introducing unemployment insurance and
redirecting subsidy savings to matching contributions to
retirement accounts), and higher levels of social transfers
(by consolidating, improving targeting, and increasing
benefits of existing programs); and (iv) this safety net may
be financed through more progressive tax policy (for example
by reviewing the top marginal personal income tax rate and
expanding the number of taxpayers). |
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