Map on semiconductor is a simplified illustration based on public data.
Locations may not reflect full operational footprint.
Reference:
Malaysia Semiconductor Map: 350+ Factories, 60,000 Jobs by 2030, post
by Ariff Fathi on linkedin
Corporate Finance, Project Finance, Investment.
Map on semiconductor is a simplified illustration based on public data.
Locations may not reflect full operational footprint.
Reference:
Malaysia Semiconductor Map: 350+ Factories, 60,000 Jobs by 2030, post
by Ariff Fathi on linkedin
The proposed senior citizens bill is problematic because it turns filial responsibility into a legal obligation. Cases of elderly abandonment are serious. Nobody wants to see old people abandoned at hospitals or left uncared for. But laws affecting millions of families should not be created based on knee-jerk reactions.
Official
statistics showed that around 2,144
elderly persons were abandoned at hospitals nationwide between 2018 and
mid-2022. In 2025,
Malaysia recorded roughly 2.7
million elderly persons aged 65 and above, while senior
citizens aged 60 and above stood at about 4.1 million. Of these, 18.8% lived alone.
Source: https://www.wikihow.com
The bill appears intended for a very small number of cases, working out to less than 0.1% of the elderly population, yet its emotional and psychological effect extends to all families. If the government cannot handle less than 0.1% of abandonment cases through healthcare, welfare and support systems, then the problem lies with the short-sightedness of policymakers, not within ordinary families.
The biggest flaw in the bill is the assumption that all parents are good parents. In many cases, parents who fulfil their responsibilities do not need to force their children through legislation to care for them. In many cases, parents who failed to uphold their parental responsibilities are also the ones demanding legal financial support from their children. Furthermore, there are also no statistics showing how many parents who were genuinely loving and responsible were abandoned by their children.
While Singapore’s Maintenance of Parents Act is often mentioned as an example Malaysia could follow, it is also evident that the act has not been very effective. During parliamentary discussions there, an MP reportedly stated that about one in four cases at the Office of the Commissioner, and one in three tribunal cases involved children alleging abuse, neglect, or abandonment by their parents. That alone exposes the weakness of a blanket maintenance law. Some parents abused their children. Some neglected them emotionally. Some abandoned their families. Some treated children as future retirement plans instead of human beings. Family relationships are complicated. Legislation cannot assume all parents deserve care simply because they are parents.
In healthy families, children usually take care of their parents willingly. They do so out of gratitude, love and respect for the people who raised them. Taking care of parents should be a blessing, not a burden. The bill makes caring for parents a burden. Once filial responsibility becomes a legal obligation, the relationship changes and becomes transactional. What normally comes from love and willingness becomes compliance with the law. The bill also gives the impression that responsibility for elderly care is being pushed onto children instead of strengthening healthcare, retirement protection and support systems for senior citizens themselves.
If this bill gets approved, parents suing children may slowly become normalised in society, making the problem worse. Malaysia should focus on building stronger support systems for the elderly instead of legislating family relationships.
Reference:
Filial responsibility cannot be legislated,
Carolyn Khor, Newswav, 28 May 2026
The Malaysian
government is trying hard to find a solution to the petrol and diesel subsidy
bill that has exploded tenfold. The most attractive political targets are “the
rich”. Taking away subsidies from the wealthy feels socially equitable and
satisfies public envy with “Robin Hood” economics. The political quick fix is
rarely the most effective economic solution.
T20 = the top 20% of
Malaysian households by income. Nationally, that starts somewhere above
RM12,679 a month. But that’s a national cutoff; each state has its own income
distribution, which means the bar is different depending on where you live. The
most reliable state-level number DOSM gives us is the D9 median; the midpoint
income of households in the 9th decile, which is the lower half of T20. If your
household earns around this amount, you’re solidly in the top 20% of your
state.
Source: https://www.wikihow.com
So what’s the number
for your state?
|
State |
“You’re T20
here if you earn
around…” |
|
W.P.
Putrajaya |
RM21,570 |
|
W.P. Kuala
Lumpur |
RM19,494 |
|
Selangor |
RM18,105 |
|
Johor |
RM14,590 |
|
Pulau Pinang |
RM14,016 |
|
W.P. Labuan |
RM13,316 |
|
Melaka |
RM13,241 |
|
Negeri
Sembilan |
RM11,348 |
|
Sarawak |
RM11,150 |
|
Terengganu |
RM11,015 |
|
Sabah |
RM10,709 |
|
Perak |
RM9,567 |
|
Pahang |
RM9,167 |
|
Perlis |
RM9,135 |
|
Kedah |
RM9,107 |
|
Kelantan |
RM8,296 |
Based on D9 median
household gross income, DOSM Household Income Survey 2024.
Selangor’s D9 median
is RM18,105. Kelantan’s is RM8,296. That means the income that makes you top
20% in Kelantan is less than half of what you’d need in Selangor for the same
status. Same country, very different reality.
KL and Putrajaya sit
even higher, but they’re a bit of an outlier; small populations heavily skewed
towards senior civil servants, executives, and corporate professionals. Not
really representative of a typical state.
T20 isn’t one thing.
It splits into two halves; D9 and D10 and the gap between them is significant.
Take Selangor. D9 median is RM18,105. D10 median? RM28,901. That’s a RM10,000
jump between the two halves of the same bracket. In KL, D10 hits RM31,816. This
is why you’ll often see T20 averages quoted much higher than medians; a layer
of very high earners at the top of D10 pulls the average up. The median is the
more honest number for most people. These are household numbers, not individual
salaries. It’s gross income.
You cannot target
the “rich” efficiently or effectively. Relying on the T20 classification is
flawed because a household may fall into the T20 bracket collectively but the
individuals within it, stay-at-home parents or children, have little or no
personal income. Second, the MyKad, technology cannot identify these
individuals at the pump and the Padu system is incomplete. Third, factoring in
net disposable income shrinks the “no subsidy” group significantly.
If the goal is
fairness and efficiency, tiered pricing, like we have for electricity is
better. Instead of a binary “yes or no” based on income brackets, we should
make the transition to a use-based model where the more petrol you use, the
less subsidy you receive. For instance, a full subsidy could apply to the first
100 litres per month. The next 50 litres could be subsidised at 50% and the
next 50 litres at 25%. Above 200 litres, the market rate would apply. This
system is naturally progressive. Low-income groups, who typically buy less
fuel, would enjoy full subsidies. Wealthy individuals with high-consumption
vehicles would pay more but importantly, they are given the choice to
economise.
If a T20 individual
chooses to drive a fuel-efficient car or drive less, they can benefit from the
baseline subsidy too. This solves the identification problem and focuses on
consumption behaviour rather than flawed income data.
Remember, the top
15% of earners contribute 80% of total individual income tax. In contrast,
those earning below RM100,000 annually contribute only 14%. When you factor in
consumption taxes and investment taxes, the wealthy are already the primary
contributors to government revenue. High taxes act as a disincentive to work
and drive talent and entrepreneurs toward low-tax jurisdictions. We risk losing
the very human capital needed to make Malaysia a high-income nation.
It is time for a
fresh look at revenue that moves beyond the “Groundhog Day” debate of SST
versus GST. The latter, while transparent, is often preferred by businesses
because they can reclaim it, ultimately leaving consumers, especially the poor,
to bear the cost. Instead, we should look at the modern reality of our economy.
Over 80% of
transactions are now electronic, totalling RM1.4 trillion annually. A tiny
electronic payments tax (EPT) of just 1% on both buyers and sellers could raise
RM14 billion. The rate is low because the tax base is so massive. It is easy to
collect at the point of sale, nearly impossible to evade and so small that it
does not distort consumer behaviour or punish hard work in the way income tax
does. If not as I have said before, do a
Tobin tax, which levies a fraction of the forex transaction value each day and
that accumulated will pay for the subsidies. Try to be creative, not roll-out
measures that only irritate people!
References:
Why targeting the
rich is not the silver bullet, Geoffrey Williams, Free Malaysia Today, 16 May
2026
Here’s How Much Malaysians Need to Earn to Be
Considered T20, According To DOSM, WeirdKaya, 15 May 2026
The Ministry of Investment, Trade and Industry (Miti) has announced that all completely built-up (CBU) EV imports will be subject to two key conditions: a minimum cost, insurance and freight (CIF) value of RM200,000, and a revised minimum motor power requirement of 180 kilowatts (kW) and above, down from the previous 200kW threshold.
Is setting
a higher minimum vehicle value for imported EVs to encourage development and
strengthen localisation and domestic EV manufacturing in Malaysia? After over
40 years of operation, Proton's impact on developing a self-sustaining
Malaysian automotive vendor ecosystem remains mediocre to poor. Proton did
bolster vendor confidence, shifting toward high-tech, localized production
(e.g., in Tanjung Malim) and increased RM3.2B in local sourcing in 2025 but all
these happened post the Geely partnership.
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org
Proton, established in 1983 as Malaysia’s national carmaker, started ahead of China's domestic automotive boom, launching the Proton Saga in 1985. The initial objective for the set up of Proton was for the establishment of a fully competitive, local automotive industry. Since its inception, Proton was protected and had a price advantage that was unfair to the other car manufacturers and importers. That being so, Proton could possibly have felt that it was too strong, too well-placed, too invincible and so became callous in their approach towards long-term marketing. Or for that matter on R&D.
Proton then drifted off tangent. It did not focus and meet the quality requirements of the market, what the consumers want. The cars it sold had a lot of issues. Realising that they couldn’t do it on their own, they entered a partnership with China's Geely. Geely only started making passenger cars in 1997.
It has been over 40 years, but Proton has remained a bonsai! It has become common now that if we can’t compete in any industrialisation projects, the government will introduce new regulations to protect the failing project.
Just take a look at those few big GLC banks and see how they work. Lackadaisical. Yes, they report huge numbers in its profitability, but they are operating in a near `monoplistic’ environment in Malaysia. Open up the banking sector and see how they perform. A service transaction that needs only 10 minutes can take more than an hour!
Local manufacturers must be proud of the quality of the goods or services that they sell. They need to be committed not only to customer satisfaction but to customer delight. When that happens, the hope for efficient automotive vendor ecosystem that produces world class products will then evolve. And stop this ‘protectionist’ measures for a 40-year-old baby. It is either a bonsai or suffering from “Down Syndrome” (my apologies to those who unfortunately suffer from it). If you want to thrive, you must compete. Ask Geely or BYD. How do they do it? The Chinese government gives them subsidies for R&D and related areas. So, we should support in R&D through a National R&D Fund?
References:
PMX, do you really believe the new regulations on fully imported EV will spur growth of the local automotive sector? Opinion, FLK, Newswav, 16 May 2026
Malaysia raises entry bar for imported EVs from July 1, sets RM200,00
minimum price threshold, Syafiqah Salim, theedgemalaysia.com, 6 May 2026
Behind Malaysia’s impressive initial public offering (IPO) figures lies a far less flattering reality. The local stock exchange is not just producing many IPOs – it is also producing many small or micro-IPOs. Over the past several years, Bursa Malaysia has seen a wave of micro-IPOs raising less than RM50mil. Many companies come to market with fundraising exercises so small they resemble private placements more than meaningful public listings.
The conversation around Bursa Malaysia has long centred on the lack of mega or “blockbuster” IPOs. That remains a serious issue. Malaysia has not consistently produced the kind of billion-ringgit listings that dominate regional exchanges such as Hong Kong, India or even Indonesia. But the rise of micro-IPOs deserves equal scrutiny because it points to something deeper about the state of Malaysia’s capital markets.
Between March 2025 and May 6, 2026, out of 50 listings on the smaller ACE Market, micro-IPOs represent 29 of them, or 58% to be exact. This partly explains the decline in total funds raised in the IPO space last year, despite an increase in the number of listings (see chart). In 2025, while there were 60 IPOs on Bursa Malaysia, the total funds raised was RM5.96bil, compared to RM7.44bil in 2024 (55 IPOs). This represents a decline of almost 20% in total funds raised. Meanwhile, average funds raised dropped from RM135.3mil in 2024 to RM99.3mil in 2025.
The number of ACE Market IPOs has increased tremendously in less than a decade. From just six listings in 2017, a total of 44 IPOs were recorded on the ACE Market in 2025. This represents nearly three-quarters of total IPOs on Bursa Malaysia – across the Main, ACE and LEAP Markets combined. With this, Malaysia’s IPO market also topped South-East-Asia by volume. The 2025 performance was notably the highest since 2006. In 2025, the domestic equity market also saw a first secondary listing – UMS Integrated Ltd – as well as the listing of a subsidiary of a South Korea Exchange-listed company in Malaysia. Deloitte Southeast Asia Ltd, in its Southeast Asia IPO Capital Market 2025 report, said the largest IPO of 2025 – Eco-Shop Marketing Bhd – came from the consumer industry.
In 2024, the largest IPO – 99 Speed Mart Retail Holdings Bhd – was also from the same sector. While Malaysia led the region in terms of listing volume, Deloitte noted that none of South-East-Asia’s four “blockbuster” IPOs originated from the country. The four IPOs, each raising more than US$500mil, came from Singapore, Vietnam and the Philippines.
A stock exchange cannot thrive on listing volume alone. It needs depth. It needs scale. It needs companies large enough to attract institutional participation, analyst coverage, foreign interest and sustained liquidity. Without these, the market risks becoming crowded with small counters that generate excitement for a few trading sessions before fading into illiquidity.
The
worrying part is not merely the existence of micro-IPOs. Smaller companies
should have access to public capital markets, and many successful global firms
began as small listings. The issue lies in the concentration of such offerings.
When too many listings raise only modest sums, it raises uncomfortable questions
about the overall quality and maturity of the pipeline.
In some cases, IPO exercises appear driven more by branding, shareholder exits or short-term valuation gains rather than long-term expansion strategies. The danger is a gradual dilution of market quality. Investors begin viewing IPOs less as opportunities to participate in future corporate champions and more as short-term trading vehicles. Market confidence becomes increasingly dependent on listing pops instead of long-term value creation.
Malaysia cannot afford that outcome. It risks being trapped in an uncomfortable middle ground where it produces many IPOs, but too few that genuinely move the needle. The irony is that Malaysia does have companies capable of scaling into larger listings. The country has strong ecosystems in semiconductors, healthcare, industrial technology, digital infrastructure and consumer brands. Regulators may also need to actively scout high-quality regional companies for listing in Malaysia. This would require more proactive “door-knocking” efforts, rather than waiting for firms to approach the exchange.
Reference:
Many IPOs, little depth, Ganeshwaran Kana, The Star, 11 May 2026
The Institute for Democracy and Economic Affairs (IDEAS) found that during an election period in Malaysia, an established political party may spend as much as RM5 billion to support its candidates and campaigning cost.
Newer parties typically spent about RM1 million during an election period, said IDEAS. The think tank said the financing of political parties and candidates in Malaysia remains “costly, opaque, and uneven”, with established parties benefitting from stronger fundraising networks than newer ones as well as underrepresented groups.
Source: https://my.linkedin.com/company/ideasmalaysia
The report, which drew on interviews with politicians, party officials and political finance experts, said established parties are generally able to absorb higher operating costs and access more diversified funding streams, including corporate donations, party-linked businesses and state-linked resources. The study also highlighted rising expenditure on media and digital campaigning, including the use of analytics, videographers and social media teams to shape online narratives ahead of elections. The report also raised concerns over weak transparency and oversight in political financing, noting that parties are not legally required to disclose sources of donations, membership fees or detailed audited accounts.
The report warned that the high cost of politics risks entrenching incumbent parties and limiting democratic competition, particularly for women, youths, ethnic minorities and lower-income groups seeking political participation.
It also highlighted how rising financial demands increasingly shape candidate selection and internal party hierarchies, with those with access to financial resources find easier paths for political advancement. The opacity surrounding political financing, creates risks of undue influence, as donors and financiers may gain leverage over political parties and policymaking without public scrutiny.
IDEAS also noted that some political financing practices blur the line between party and state resources, particularly when government-linked entities, welfare allocations or constituency-related programmes are used for political mobilisation.
IDEAS called for the immediate enactment of a Political Financing Act to improve transparency and introduce clearer rules governing political donations and expenditure.
This is not unique problem to Malaysia. The U.S. is a prime example now of how money can drive elections and “transparent” corruption is acceptable. We can’t follow the U.S. model – it is headed for failure. We need to have the moral compass – “true North” – to frame how political funding can be regulated. Why can’t we have a pool of funds and a regulator that gives to a party according to number of members registered.
Reference:
Established
political party's election expenditure up to RM5b, IDEAS paper finds, Emir
Zainul, theedgemalaysia.com, 7 May 2026
There are
many recognised methods for reporting potholes. Citizens can lodge complaints,
submit photographs, contact local authorities or tag municipal agencies on
social media while hoping their vehicle suspension survives long enough to see
progress. But somewhere along the way, Malaysians appear to have developed an
alternative system, one involving agriculture. A recent social media post by @dahfollowbelum showed a
banana tree planted squarely inside a pothole. This has amused and impressed
netizens alike.
Source: https://focusmalaysia.my/@dahfollowbelum
According to the post, the authorities quickly came to repair the road after noticing the banana tree growing there. We all know that some potholes are so well established that they feel less like temporary damage and more like unofficial landmarks. Yet the moment greenery enters the picture, everything changes. A banana tree standing defiantly in the middle of a road has a way of transforming road damage into public theatre.
Then there are retired folks who try to repair potholes with their own tools. Why? Because they see danger for motorcyclists or even car drivers. They don’t have to do it, but it is just their way of helping local councils – who may have budget issues – tak ada bajet!
Better is to grow bananas, jagung or other fast-growing fruits for consumption. This may help achieve food security. The only drawback is night driving – for which we could use some cheap reflectors or solar lamps to help motorists?
Why can’t the Federal Government provide each constituency, local council with adequate funds to repair, re-tar roads? Then hold them accountable for outcomes? A re-tarred road is a great sight to see and feel. Many voters will support the initiative, something tangible and meaningful. It also provides contracts for small businesses, employment for locals and the multiplier effect locally. Today, even tolled highways are with potholes. The “tidak apa” attitude is all pervasive. Unless residents and citizens demand changes, we will have the finance minister sending money to Gaza!
Reference:
Plant trees in a pothole
to speed up the repair work, claims a netizen, CS
Ming, Focus Malaysia, 25 May 2026