Income inequality in Malaysia

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Abstract

The objective of this paper is to examine the changes in Malaysian income distribution during the last three and a half decades and the reasons for the changes. It was found that the Gini ratio for Malaysia peaked in 1976 and fell thereafter to 1990. However, inequality seems to reverse its direction since then. Policies that could explain the changes in income distribution include the promotion of export-oriented industrialization, education, and training, and the restructuring of equity ownership and assistance in asset accumulation. While the various other redistributive measures in the form of rural development helped in poverty eradication, their effectiveness in redistribution needs to be improved. Several hypotheses have been forwarded to explain the widening of income inequality after 1990. These include the difference in the growth rates of incomes of the rural and urban areas, trade and globalization, and impediments to the process of internal migration. © 2008 The Author Journal compilation © 2008 Japan Center for Economic Research.

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APA

Ragayah, H. M. Z. (2008). Income inequality in Malaysia. Asian Economic Policy Review, 3(1), 114–132. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1748-3131.2008.00096.x

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