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Income Inequality

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PLANNING MALAYSIA:

Journal of the Malaysian Institute of Planners


VOLUME 17 ISSUE 2 (2019), Page 12 – 26

INCOME INEQUALITY ACROSS STATES IN MALAYSIA

Nai Peng Tey1, Siow Li Lai2, Sor Tho Ng3, Kim Leng Goh4,
& Ahmad Farid Osman5

1,2,3,4,5
Faculty of Economics and Administration
UNIVERSITI MALAYA

Abstract
This paper examines income differentials across the 16 states/territories in
Malaysia, using quantile regression of income per capita on a nationally
representative sample of 24,463 households in 2014. The results show that the
vast differentials in income per capita across states are attenuated after taking into
account urban-rural and ethnic distribution, but remain significant. Income
differentials across states vary at different levels of income, being more
pronounced at the lower ends of the distributions. States and territory in the
central region had the highest income. The three states in the southern regions
fared better than those in the northern region (except Penang), and the eastern
region as well as East Malaysia. Other variables such as level of urbanisation, the
educational level, migration, employment structure, and female labour force
participation may also affect income differentials across states.

Keywords: Income, distribution, differentials, inequality, states, regions,


ethnicity, urban-rural, Malaysia, quantile regression

1
Research Fellow at the University of Malaya. Email: teynp@um.edu.my 13
Nai Peng Tey, Siow Li Lai, Sor Tho Ng, Kim Leng Goh, & Ahmad Farid Osman
Income Inequality Across States in Malaysia

INTRODUCTION
Malaysia consists of 13 states (11 in Peninsular Malaysia, and two on the Borneo
Island across the South China Sea) and three Federal Territories. The Northern
region comprises Perlis, Kedah, Penang, and Perak, the Central region includes
Selangor and the Federal Territories of Kuala Lumpur and Putrajaya, the
Southern region comprises Negeri Sembilan, Malacca, and Johore, the Eastern
region comprises Pahang, Terengganu, and Kelantan, while East Malaysia
comprises Sabah, Sarawak and the Federal Territory of Labuan.
Since independence in 1957, rapid socio-economic development has
transformed Malaysia from a low-income rural agricultural society to an
increasing reliance on the manufacturing and services sectors, with three-quarters
of its population living in the urban areas. The economy was growing at around
8% per annum for more than three decades before the Asian Financial Crisis in
1997. Apart from the recessions in 2001 and 2008 due to the global financial
crisis, the Malaysian economy has been growing at between 4.5% and 6% per
annum since 2002.
The GDP per capita rose from Ringgit Malaysia (RM) 20,870 (US$6,480)
in 2005 to RM38,853 (US$9,721) in 2016 (DOSM, 2017c). Malaysia is an upper
middle-income high Human Development Index (HDI) country (ranked 59th in
the world). Between 1970 and 2014, development efforts had eradicated absolute
poverty and reduced general poverty from 49.3% in 1970 to just 0.4% in 2016.
The Gini coefficient has come down from 0.513 in 1970 to 0.401 in 2014
(Economic Planning Unit, 2015).
The Malaysian economic policies pursued since the 1970s have been
underpinned by the development philosophy of growth with distribution,
focussing on poverty eradication to reduce economic imbalances between ethnic
groups and across regions. While the development programmes have succeeded
in reducing the incidence of poverty, wide economic disparities persist to this
day. In pursuing a more balanced regional development, the government has
created five development corridors in the northern, southern and eastern regions
in Peninsular Malaysia, as well as Sabah and Sarawak during the 9th Malaysia
Plan period (2006-2010). However, these efforts at redirecting employment
opportunities have so far not resulted in significant population redistribution. The
population continues to grow much more rapidly in the central region than in the
regions with the development corridors. There are still wide variations in income
across states. In 2016, the median and mean monthly household income ranged
from RM3,037 and RM4,214 in Kelantan to RM9,073 and RM11,692 in Kuala
Lumpur respectively (DOSM, 2017a).
There is a rather sizeable literature on income distribution and inequality
in Malaysia (Jomo, 2004; Khalid, 2011; Milanovic, 2006; Ragayah, 1999, 2008,
2009; Saari, Dietzenbacher, & Los, 2014; Shari & Ragayah, 1990; Shireen,
1998). Most of these earlier studies had focussed on ethnic differentials in

© 2019 by MIP 14
PLANNING MALAYSIA
Journal of the Malaysia Institute of Planners (2019)

income, as it was the main objective of the New Economic Policy (1970-1990)
to reduce economic disparities between the ethnic groups. A few recent studies
have explored regional income inequalities (Abdullah, Doucouliagos, &
Manning, 2015; Ali & Ahmad, 2009; Habibullah, Dayang-Afizzah, & Puah,
2012; Habibullah, Smith, & Dayang-Afizzah, 2008; Hooi, Nguyen, & Jen, 2011).
A significant finding by Abdullah (2012) based on meta-regression analysis and
panel data econometrics, is that regional income inequality has a positive effect
on growth; and that while income inequality has declined in general, there is a
tendency to increasing inequality between Malaysian states.
Past studies on income distribution and poverty in Malaysia have
consistently found significant ethnic and urban-rural differentials in income, even
after adjusting for other socioeconomic variables (Ismail & Jajri, 2012; Khalid,
2011; Ragayah, 2008; Rodríguez‐Pose & Tselios, 2009; Saari, Dietzenbacher, &
Los, 2014). However, to our knowledge, no research has been done on the
moderating effects of these two variables on state differentials in income in
Malaysia. Hence, this article seeks to analyse income inequality across states,
taking into account the ethnic and urban-rural distribution. Because income data
are not normally distributed, and the income differentials across states may not
be the same at different income level, quantile regression was used in this analysis
instead of the ordinary least square (OLS) method used in previous local and
international studies (Estudillo, Sawada, & Otsuka, 2008; Ismail & Jajri, 2012;
Ismail & Noor, 2005; Kajisa & Palanichamy, 2006; Milanovic, 2006;
Onyebinama & Onyejelem, 2010; Ragayah, 2008; Schafgans, 2000).
An analysis of the income differentials across states at different income
level, and the relevant factors affecting income differentials are needed to provide
some inputs to inform policy on reducing regional income disparity. This article
also aims to contribute to the literature on relative poverty and income
distribution in developing countries.

METHODOLOGY

Data
Data for this article came from the Household Income and Basic Amenities
Survey conducted by the Department of Statistics, Malaysia (DOSM) in 2014.
The sampling frame for the selection of sample for this survey used the updated
Household Sampling Frame, making up of urban and rural Enumeration Blocks
(EBs) created for the 2010 Population and Housing Census. The two-stage
stratified sampling design was adopted to select 10,432 EBs in the first phase,
and then systematic sampling was used to select 81,632 living quarters, covering
81,137 households to produce a representative sample of all the households in the
country. The Department of Statistics Malaysia provided raw data for a sub-
sample of 24,463 households for this analysis. At the time of the writing of this

15 © 2019 by MIP
Nai Peng Tey, Siow Li Lai, Sor Tho Ng, Kim Leng Goh, & Ahmad Farid Osman
Income Inequality Across States in Malaysia

report, the Department of Statistics Malaysia has not released the sample data for
the latest round of survey conducted in 2016.
The survey collected information on household income for twelve months.
The sources of income comprise paid employment, self-employment, property,
and investment income and current transfers received, received by all members
of households, both in cash and in kinds which repeatedly occur within a year.
The mean monthly gross household income for the sample in this study was
RM6,141, with relative standard error (RSE) of 0.4% or a standard error of
RM25.

Methods
The dependent variable for this study is monthly income per capita (monthly
income divided by household size). The income per capita was found to be not
normally distributed, and hence the regression analysis used the logarithm term
of income. The urbanisation level and ethnic distribution vary across the states.
The regression analysis included urban-rural and ethnic distributions as these two
variables are closely associated with income. Other relevant variables such as
migration, education, urbanisation, and employment structure were not included
in the regression model, as these variables refer to the characteristics of the
individuals, while the dependent variable is at the household level. Instead, this
paper examines the median household income for each state by selected socio-
demographic and economic conditions.
The differentials in monthly income per capita across states, taking into
account the level of urbanisation and ethnic distribution, were estimated using
quantile regression. As compared to OLS that merely estimates the conditional
mean of income, quantile regression has the advantage of allowing the estimation
of the parameter differentials across quantiles of the income distribution. The
quantile regression model, adapted from Koenker and Basset (1978), is shown as
follows:
𝑦𝑖 = 𝑥𝑖 𝛽 + 𝜀𝑖 (1)
where yi is monthly income per capita for household i, i = 1, 2, …, n, xi is the
vector of independent variables, β is the parameter, and εi is the disturbance term.
The estimators for a quantile θ, 0<θ<1, is obtained by minimizing the objective
function F over βθ, as shown below:
𝑁 𝑁

𝐹(𝛽𝜃 ) = 𝜃 𝑦𝑖 − 𝑥𝑖′ 𝛽𝜃 + (1 − 𝜃) 𝑦𝑖 − 𝑥𝑖′ 𝛽𝜃


𝑖𝜖 𝑖:𝑦 𝑖 ≥𝑥 𝑖′ 𝛽 𝜃 𝑖𝜖 𝑖:𝑦 𝑖 <𝑥 𝑖′ 𝛽 𝜃
(2)
Data were analysed using Eviews 9, based on the QREG method. The
standard errors of the estimators were estimated through bootstrapping, with 100
replications. The inverse variance-weighted average method was used to

© 2019 by MIP 16
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Journal of the Malaysia Institute of Planners (2019)

overcome under- or over-representation of each state, based on the "weight"


variable constructed for the 2014 Household Income and Amenities Survey.

RESULTS

Income Differentials across States


In 2014, the national mean and median monthly income per capita was estimated
at RM1,706 and RM1,197 respectively. Figure 1 and Table 1 show that income
per capita is not normally distributed and highly skewed to the right.
Transforming the income data into the logarithm term reduces the skewness
substantially, but the extreme values are still present in both tails. Hence, quantile
regression is more appropriate than OLS regression for analysing the income
differentials.
The skewness, kurtosis and the vast difference between the mean and
median values indicate the skewed distribution of the income data, and the large
standard deviation shows the wide dispersion of the data (Table 1). The Breusch-
Pagan-Godfrey test for constant variance (test statistic = 1742.35, p-value =
0.0000) indicates the presence of the problem of heteroscedasticity, and this
further justifies the use of quantile regression.

Figure 1 Box plot

Table 1 Summary statistics for monthly income per capita


Monthly income per capita Log of monthly income per capita
Mean 1705.8 7.12
Median 1197.0 7.09
Maximum 48007.6 10.78
Minimum 78.3 4.36
Std. Dev. 1863.1 0.77
Skewness 5.7 0.29
Kurtosis 62.0 0.33

17 © 2019 by MIP
Nai Peng Tey, Siow Li Lai, Sor Tho Ng, Kim Leng Goh, & Ahmad Farid Osman
Income Inequality Across States in Malaysia

The monthly income per capita varied widely across states, as shown in
Table 2. The mean income per capita in Kuala Lumpur and Putrajaya was 3.3-3.5
times that of Kelantan, the least developed state. Neighbouring state Selangor was
not too far behind. The three states in the southern regions fared better than those
in the northern region (except Penang), and the eastern region as well as East
Malaysia (except Federal Territory Labuan). Apart from Penang in the north and
Labuan in East Malaysia, the income variations across the states in the northern,
eastern and East Malaysia (Sabah and Sarawak) are relatively small.
The income per capita in the urban areas was about 1.8 times higher than
that in the rural areas. Despite the various programmes to reduce the ethnic
disparity in income, income per capita of the non-Bumiputera (comprising mainly
the Chinese and Indians) remained much higher than that of the majority
Bumiputera (comprising the Malays and other indigenous populations), at 1.5:1.

Table 2 Mean, median and standard deviation of income per capita by state
Monthly income per capita (RM)
Variable n % Gini
Mean Median Std. Dev.
coefficient
Total 24,463 100.00 1705.78 1197.00 1863.05 0.397
States
Johore 2,196 8.98 1613.14 1262.13 1421.91 0.329
Kelantan 1,523 6.23 936.55 662.50 945.10 0.386
Kedah 1,579 6.45 1235.04 871.56 1104.98 0.359
Malacca 783 3.20 1594.15 1252.68 1335.29 0.303
N. Sembilan 935 3.82 1600.07 1210.53 1536.39 0.354
Pahang 1,264 5.17 1173.86 899.90 965.86 0.343
Penang 1,481 6.05 1716.56 1293.78 1607.48 0.357
Perak 1,873 7.66 1297.24 988.08 1184.95 0.363
Perlis 485 1.98 1203.51 900.18 944.48 0.328
Selangor 2,729 11.16 2229.31 1636.00 2087.73 0.379
Terengganu 1,154 4.72 1136.04 861.67 892.49 0.341
Sabah 2,835 11.59 1337.33 888.39 1593.43 0.383
Sarawak 3,659 14.96 1414.15 997.42 1473.24 0.388
Kuala Lumpur 1,599 6.54 3300.92 2185.08 3663.80 0.399
Labuan 212 0.87 2039.47 1334.65 2640.32 0.423
Putrajaya 156 0.64 3008.49 2179.13 2176.95 0.369
Strata
Rural 7,546 30.85 1034.54 769.86 980.63 0.348
Urban 16,917 69.15 1907.05 1372.54 2011.91 0.386
Ethnicity
Bumiputera 17,021 69.58 1450.44 1044.67 1441.34 0.384
Non-
7,442 30.42 2186.60 1531.67 2396.05 0.402
Bumiputera

The overall Gini coefficient stood at 0.397. The Gini coefficients are
generally higher in the more urbanized states, and also among the non-
Bumiputera as compared to the Bumiputera.

© 2019 by MIP 18
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Journal of the Malaysia Institute of Planners (2019)

Table 3 The estimated weighted least square (WLS) and quantile regression
WLS q10 q25 q50 q75 q90
States
Kelantan (ref.)
Johore 0.4387*** 0.5440*** 0.5606*** 0.4656*** 0.3182*** 0.2430***
Kedah 0.1835*** 0.1929*** 0.2400*** 0.1874*** 0.1676*** 0.1137**
Malacca 0.3899*** 0.4828*** 0.5294*** 0.3987*** 0.3228*** 0.2111***
Negeri Sembilan 0.4131*** 0.4362*** 0.5064*** 0.4311*** 0.3669*** 0.2417***
Pahang 0.2064*** 0.2530*** 0.3012*** 0.2233*** 0.1277** 0.0637
Penang 0.3735*** 0.4997*** 0.5117*** 0.3899*** 0.2923*** 0.2021***
Perak 0.1685*** 0.2035*** 0.2328*** 0.1819*** 0.1458*** 0.0659
Perlis 0.2529*** 0.3267*** 0.3711*** 0.2660*** 0.2323** 0.1668
Selangor 0.6340*** 0.6046*** 0.6509*** 0.6485*** 0.6160*** 0.6370***
Terengganu 0.1937*** 0.2081*** 0.2509*** 0.2455*** 0.1800*** 0.0604
Sabah 0.1966*** 0.0617 0.1547*** 0.2116*** 0.2469*** 0.2881***
Sarawak 0.3087*** 0.2746*** 0.3277*** 0.3010*** 0.2998*** 0.2863***
Kuala Lumpur 0.9146*** 0.8383*** 0.9232*** 0.9065*** 0.8996*** 0.9995***
Labuan 0.5128*** 0.4144*** 0.5348*** 0.5286*** 0.5697*** 0.5845***
Putrajaya 1.0809*** 1.2740*** 1.1706*** 1.0139*** 1.0386*** 1.0500***
Strata
Rural (ref.)
Urban 0.3347*** 0.3139*** 0.3210*** 0.3347*** 0.3484*** 0.3396***
Ethnicity
Bumiputera (ref.)
Non-Bumiputera 0.2274*** 0.2224*** 0.2146*** 0.2302*** 0.2171*** 0.2455***
Constant 6.3872*** 5.5642*** 5.8801*** 6.3331*** 6.8360*** 7.3279***
Pseudo R2 - 0.1322 0.1264 0.1172 0.1046 0.1068
Adj. R2 0.2082 0.1316 0.1258 0.1166 0.1040 0.1061
Notes:
(a) Dependent variable is log of monthly income per capita.
(b) *** p<0.001, ** p<0.01, * p<0.05.
(c) WLS was used instead of OLS to take into account the effect of the "weight" variable.

Results from the weighted least square (WLS) show that after adjusting
for urbanisation and ethnic composition, the monthly income per capita was
highest in Kuala Lumpur and Putrajaya (about twice that of Kelantan), followed
by Selangor and Labuan (63% and 51% higher than Kelantan respectively). The
three states in the southern region – Johore, Negeri Sembilan, and Malacca had
an income level of about 40% higher than Kelantan (Table 3).
Table 3 shows the coefficients for the quantile regressions. The impacts
of each of the three predictors (state, urban-rural location, and ethnicity) in
income per capita are not the same at different quantiles, especially across the
states. Generally, state-level income differentials tended to be more pronounced

19 © 2019 by MIP
Nai Peng Tey, Siow Li Lai, Sor Tho Ng, Kim Leng Goh, & Ahmad Farid Osman
Income Inequality Across States in Malaysia

at the lower income levels (q10 and q25), as compared to higher income levels,
except Sabah and Labuan where the income differentials with other states were
less pronounced at q10 and q25 than at upper quantiles. Except for Kuala Lumpur,
Labuan, Sabah, and Putrajaya, q25 provides the most significant income
differentials across the states in Malaysia.
There are significant income differentials between the different ethnic
groups (Table 3). The non-Bumiputera had a higher income than the Bumiputera
in all quantiles, and the differential was most notable at q90. The urban-rural
income disparity was even more pronounced. Households in urban areas had a
much higher income than those in the rural areas in all the quantiles, and the most
significant differential was at q75.

Explaining the Income Differentials across States


Several factors such as urbanisation, ethnic distribution, education level, internal
migration, employment structure, female labour force participation, and
household size may affect the income differentials across the states. Some of
these variables are closely associated with one another. For instance, the
propensity to migrate among the higher educated is much higher than those who
have fewer years of schooling, and the Bumiputera are much more likely than the
non-Bumiputera to reside in the rural areas. The following sections examine the
association between the median income per capita and these variables by states,
as shown in Table 4.

Urbanisation
The urbanisation level varies from 47% in Kelantan to over 93% in Penang and
Selangor and 100% in Kuala Lumpur and Putrajaya. The median income per
capita is higher in the more urbanized states (Table 4). The 2017 Salaries and
Wages Survey Report shows that the average earning of a worker in the rural
areas, at RM2,040 (median RM1,400), was much lower than that of their urban
counterparts at RM3,038 (median RM2,260) (DOSM, 2018). The large income
differentials between urban and rural areas were in turn due to other factors such
as higher educational level, the availability of higher paid jobs as well as higher
female labour force participation rate in the urban areas. There are two conflicting
policies concerning migration in the 11th Malaysia Plan. While propelling sectoral
migration towards high-value-added and knowledge-intensive activities in the
cities, the Government has also taken initiatives to enable the mobilisation of rural
youths in entrepreneurship activities to minimise migration to urban areas
(Economic Planning Unit, 2015).

© 2019 by MIP 20
PLANNING MALAYSIA
Journal of the Malaysia Institute of Planners (2019)

Education
The educational level of workers varies widely by states. Tabulation of the 2%
sample data from the 2010 Population Census shows that the proportion of
population aged 20-60 years who had a post-secondary education was lowest in
Sabah and Sarawak (at around 16%-17%) and highest in Putrajaya (63%),
followed by Kuala Lumpur (45%) (Table 4). The income per capita is strongly
associated with the proportion of prime working age population with post-
secondary education. Higher education has a substantial premium in the
remuneration of the workers. The 2017 Wages and Salary survey showed that the
mean earned income ranged from RM1,649 among those with primary education
to RM2,055 among those with secondary education and RM4,300 among those
with tertiary education (DOSM, 2018).

Internal Migration
Migration tends to be selective of the high-skill workers. Being the
administrative, commercial, business, the industrial and educational hub of the
country, the central region comprising Kuala Lumpur, Putrajaya and Selangor has
been the main destination of migrants from all over the country. Data from the
2010 Population Census show that more than 60% of the working population
aged 20 to 60 years in Kuala Lumpur and Selangor were born outside the state
(Table 4). In comparison, only 9% of the people in Kelantan and 14% in Sarawak
were born outside the state. The economic opportunities in the more developed
states have acted as a pull factor for migrants in the receiving states, and the
inflows of highly educated and trained migrants have contributed to the higher
income level of the receiving states. On the other hand, the sending states are
further disadvantaged by the outflow of the more resourceful segments of the
population, thus exacerbating the regional income inequality. Table 4 depicts the
close association between internal migration and income level.

Occupation
The managers/administrators and the professionals are among the highest paid
workers, with a mean salary of RM7,847 (median RM5,800) and RM5,084
(median RM4,467) respectively, as compared to the national average of RM2,880
(median RM2,160) as of 2017 (DOSM, 2018). Hence, the higher income level in
Kuala Lumpur, Putrajaya and Selangor can be explained by the much higher
proportion of managers/administrators and professionals, as shown in Table 4.

21 © 2019 by MIP
Nai Peng Tey, Siow Li Lai, Sor Tho Ng, Kim Leng Goh, & Ahmad Farid Osman
Income Inequality Across States in Malaysia

Table 4 Median monthly income per capita and selected socio-demographic and
economic variables by state
% with
Median % born %
post- Female labour
monthly out of managerial
secondary force
income % Urban state or
education participation
per capita (aged 20- professional
(aged20- rate (%)
(RM) 60) (age 20-60)
60)
States
Kelantan 662.50 46.90 20.17 9.00 10.96 48.80
Johore 1262.13 75.60 27.94 26.49 9.34 50.80
Kedah 871.56 68.00 18.46 21.55 11.64 50.70
Malacca 1252.68 91.90 28.38 33.17 14.48 55.40
Negeri
1210.53 72.00 23.60 39.42 13.38 50.00
Sembilan
Pahang 899.90 55.20 23.52 38.45 9.87 50.30
Penang 1293.78 93.90 22.72 31.50 14.78 60.60
Perak 988.08 74.50 20.94 18.58 14.15 44.40
Perlis 900.18 59.90 20.32 28.21 14.39 44.10
Selangor 1636.00 93.00 35.02 63.96 22.41 60.30
Terengganu 861.67 63.50 21.47 16.02 13.30 44.30
Sabah 888.39 57.90 16.22 28.61 9.33 53.00
Sarawak 997.42 57.10 16.53 14.13 10.26 54.70
Kuala Lumpur 2185.08 100.00 45.02 61.48 23.88 59.30
Labuan 1334.65 85.10 18.58 67.18 13.35 48.80
Putrajaya 2179.13 100.00 62.97 100.00 26.93 80.90
Spearman
correlation 0.873 0.665 0.765 0.668 0.653
coefficient#
Notes:
(a) Data sources: DOSM (2011, 2017b).
(b) # Refer to the Spearman rank correlation coefficient between the median monthly income per capita with
each of the socio-demographic and economic variables.

Female Labour Force Participation


With rising education and cost of living, more and more women are working to
pursue their career and to contribute to the family’s finance. The female labour
force participation rate had risen from 46.4% in 2009 to about 54.1% in 2016
(DOSM, 2017b). In the 11th Malaysia Plan, the Government has taken several
measures to create job opportunities for women to increase the female labour
force participation rate to 59% by 2020 (Economic Planning Unit, 2015). The
higher female labour force participation rate in Putrajaya, Kuala Lumpur and
Selangor has contributed to the higher income per capita in these states/regions
(Table 4). On the other hand, the relatively larger family size in the less developed
states has resulted in lower income per capita. In 2016, the total fertility rate
ranged from 1.5 in the Federal Territory Kuala Lumpur to 3.2 in Kelantan and
Terengganu (DOSM, 2017a).

© 2019 by MIP 22
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Journal of the Malaysia Institute of Planners (2019)

DISCUSSION
This analysis shows that the wide income differentials across states and regions
are attenuated after taking into account the urbanisation level and ethnic
composition of the states. Both the urbanisation and ethnic variables are closely
related to the employment structure and income. Jobs in the services and
manufacturing sectors in the urban labour market tend to command a higher pay
due to the higher skill required. Perrela-Tallo (2017) argued that the growing
income inequality is due to biased technological change, as it increases the
income share of the wealthy households at a faster rate than the poorer
households. The urban services sector, the driver of Malaysia’s economic growth,
has been transforming rapidly toward more capital intensive and knowledge-
based activities that yield a higher premium. In terms of ethnicity, the non-
Bumiputera, in particular, the Chinese community has dominated the businesses
in Malaysia. Hence, states with a higher concentration of Chinese tend to have a
more developed business sector, which generates more wealth.
Malaysia’s substantial investment in education and skills training and the
creation of high paying jobs have been the key factors behind the rapid economic
growth and social development. With the provision of free education up to the
upper secondary level, and the liberalization of the education policy since the late
1990s, tertiary enrolment ratio has exceeded 40%, and females have overtaken
the males in higher education (World Bank, 2018). The higher educated youths
tend to seek jobs in the capital cities in the central region, depleting the human
resources in the sending areas. While increased female labour force participation
rate will result in raising the household and national income, such an increase is
likely to concentrate in the big cities where there is a higher demand for skilled
workers. All these trends will exacerbate regional inequality.
With the eradication of absolute poverty, the focus is now on raising the
income level of the bottom 40% of the income categories. Since 2012, the
government has been providing annual cash assistance to the poor. In the 2019
Budget, the government provided a yearly cost of living assistance (BSH) of
RM1,000 to households with a monthly income of RM2,000 and below, RM700
to households with monthly income from RM2,001 to RM3,000, and RM500 to
households with monthly income from RM3,001 to RM4,000. Hakim (2000)
found that a large portion of the total inequality in Malaysia was attributable to
labour income. The adoption of a minimum wage of RM1,100 in 2019 would
reduce the income gap between the rich and the poor. Efforts such as the
development corridors have also been made to create jobs in the less developed
states/regions.
As regional inequality remains an important policy issue, there is a need
for an assessment of the effectiveness of the various policies and programmes in
narrowing the regional income disparity for appropriate intervention strategies to
be undertaken. This analysis has explored some plausible reasons for the

23 © 2019 by MIP
Nai Peng Tey, Siow Li Lai, Sor Tho Ng, Kim Leng Goh, & Ahmad Farid Osman
Income Inequality Across States in Malaysia

persistence of income inequality across the states. More detailed studies are
needed to find out the underlying causes, and more effective programmes need to
be formulated and implemented. The effectiveness of the development corridors
in population and labour redistribution remains to be seen. While Malaysia takes
pride in the full employment situation, there is a concern about the continued
influx of migrant workers, who make up about one-fifth of the workforce. There
is a need to provide the necessary support and assistance to enable more women
and men to have a work-life balance while pursuing their career to increase the
household income. Policymakers and employers may consider a more flexible
employment structure and greater use of technology.
In conclusion, income inequality across states remains wide despite
various efforts to bring about a more balanced regional growth and development.
This analysis has shown that state-level differentials in ethnic and urban-rural
population distribution, educational level, migration pattern, and employment
structure are closely associated with income per capita. More detailed analysis is
needed to assess the impact of individual characteristics on their earning, as data
become available.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
We are grateful to the Centre of Poverty and Development Studies (CPDS),
Faculty of Economics and Administration, the University of Malaya for the
funding support. We are also grateful to the Department of Statistics, Malaysia
(DOSM) for the permission to use the data from the 2014 Household Income and
Basic Amenities Survey.

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Received: 20th September 2018. Accepted: 17th June 2019

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