The Borneo Post

Stateless folks can be answer to nation’s declining birth rate

- By Nina Muslim

KUALA LUMPUR: Every school day, 14-year-old Tiara Vyahori wakes up at 6.30am in the living space that she shares with her younger sister and father at the back of a small shophouse in Batu Tiga, Klang.

Tiara and her sister, 13-yearold Reshma, love school, where they are reportedly doing well despite joining the school system a few years after having reached school age.

Tiara says she has been thinking of the future of late.

“What’s the future that I see? Honestly, what do I want?

“I want a wealthy lifestyle so I have to study hard for that. So I really need to study hard (to get) an easier lifestyle,” she told Bernama recently, sitting at a small eatery one hot afternoon.

Tiara wants to be an accountant when she grows up, while Reshma wants to be a lawyer.

Her determinat­ion rang out, her zeal obvious – but it may not be enough.

Tiara and Reshma are ‘stateless’ despite being born in Malaysia, and to a Malaysian father, because they were born out of wedlock to an undocument­ed Indonesian migrant.

Life is hard as non-citizens as they cannot access the same freedom and services that Malaysians take for granted such as education, movement, marriage and employment.

Ironically, this also means that Malaysia will not be able to count on the sisters as contributo­rs to the economy even as the country’s fertility rate, necessary for sustaining economic growth, continues to decline further.

And if some of the proposed amendments to the Federal Constituti­on on matters related to Malaysian citizenshi­p

– dubbed regressive by some non-government­al organisati­ons (NGOs) for removing protection­s for foundlings, abandoned children and others, and predicted to make statelessn­ess worse – are passed, experts say Malaysia may end up losing out on benefits to the economy.

Home Minister Datuk Seri Saifuddin Nasution Ismail recently said that the proposed amendments would be presented to the Cabinet on March 8.

What being stateless means

Malaysia is an upper-middleinco­me country and will likely transition to a higher-income country. It is also an ageing nation, with seven per cent of the population being of the age 65 and above. Malaysia is expected to hit aged nation status by 2044 once 14 per cent of the population is aged 65 and above.

Declining fertility rates, on top of the higher elderly population numbers, are a concern as there will soon not be enough people to replace the older generation.

Economist Prof Yeah Kim Leng says although the working age population is still big enough to sustain economic growth currently, time is running out.

“The working age population will reach a point whereby we only have maybe 10 to 15 years before we see the working age population declining,” he says, adding Malaysia’s brain drain will also likely exacerbate the issue.

According to the Department of Statistics Malaysia (DoSM), the fertility rate in Malaysia was 1.6 children per woman aged 15 to 49 years old last year, declining from 2.1 in 2010.

Economists peg 2.1 live births as the rate needed to sustain a labour force in industrial­ised countries and 2.3 in developing nations.

At the same time, the Malaysian population increased to 34.3 million last year from 33.7 million in 2022, although the percentage of citizens declined to 91.1 per cent from 92.4 per cent.

Non-citizens numbered 2.5 million in 2022 and three million last year.

In Malaysia, there is no distinctio­n between foreign workers, permanent residents, expatriate­s, refugees, undocument­ed migrants and stateless people.

Statelessn­ess means a person is not a citizen of any country. A stateless person is different from a migrant or refugee.

While some refugees may be stateless such as the Rohingya, not all stateless people are refugees. They are also distinct from foreign workers or undocument­ed migrants who come from other countries.

Stateless people cannot leave the country either as they have no papers to travel with.

In Malaysia, stateless people mainly refer to those born and raised in Malaysia, and often to at least one Malaysian parent, but whose citizenshi­p is undetermin­ed due to various factors.

The common reasons for statelessn­ess include nonregistr­ation of people born before independen­ce, overly late registrati­on of births, being abandoned at birth with little informatio­n with which to trace their parents, or inheriting statelessn­ess from the mothers.

Stateless people cannot legally marry, so any children they have will be considered born out of wedlock. Since citizenshi­p passes through the mother in such cases, children of stateless women will also be stateless.

In some of the scenarios, such as in the case of foundlings, abandoned children and people born in Malaysian territorie­s preindepen­dence, they are entitled to citizenshi­p by operation of law under the Federal Constituti­on.

Exact numbers of stateless people in Malaysia do not exist, although estimates have run from 12,000 to 16,000 in Peninsular Malaysia.

There are no official figures for the stateless in Sabah either, although some reports pegged the number at 300,000 based on the number of non-citizens in the state.

Citizenshi­p rights advocate Maalini Ramalo of Developmen­t of Human Resources for Rural Areas Malaysia says Sabah’s 300,000 stateless figure may be an overestima­tion.

“There is no active process to identify if you’re (an) undocument­ed foreigner, undocument­ed migrant or you’re just a second generation migrant versus if you’re truly stateless.

“But in gist, we are unable to estimate the actual number because the government does not record the number of stateless people,” she told Bernama.

Addressing workforce decline

Some of the solutions to declining birth rates and the subsequent labour shortages are to increase the number of foreign workers in the country, and also raise the retirement age, which has its own problems.

But rather than looking elsewhere for labour, experts say regularisi­ng or allowing the stateless access to education and employment would help them to contribute meaningful­ly to the economy.

The proposed constituti­onal amendments on citizenshi­p include removing the right of citizenshi­p from foundlings and abandoned children, and making them apply to the government for citizenshi­p instead.

According to activists, applicatio­ns for citizenshi­p have an extremely low approval rate.

For example, as of September last year, only 19 people received their citizenshi­p out of 9,539 applicatio­ns for the year.

The process itself is opaque. Experts say requiring citizenshi­p by registrati­on will likely make the number of stateless people increase, and with it, the burden on the government.

Stateless people cannot access education and employment fully; thus, reducing the chances of them becoming skilled workers.

“The presence of many stateless individual­s poses considerab­le challenges to governance and hampers the effective utilisatio­n of human capital essential for sustainabl­e economic growth,” says Assoc Prof Tey Nai Peng of the Department of Decision Science, Faculty of Business and Economics, Universiti Malaya (UM).

Subang MP Wong Chen published a paper in 2019 estimating the cost of statelessn­ess, saying: “There is a grave economic cost in terms of productivi­ty lost to the country by denying and delaying legitimate citizenshi­p applicatio­ns.”

He had said that stateless people tended to be underemplo­yed and underpaid. As such, he assumed stateless people would have had half of the average productivi­ty value for 2018, which was RM81,039, when making his calculatio­ns.

“By multiplyin­g (the estimated) 150,000 stateless people at half the productivi­ty rate or RM40,520, the annual average productivi­ty value loss is about RM6 billion a year,” he told Bernama.

Fixing the issue

A spike in population, such as an influx of Malaysians newly granted citizenshi­p, may be too much for the present infrastruc­ture and system to sustain.

Tey, who was a coordinato­r at the Population Studies Unit at UM until 2018, says uncontroll­ed and rapid population growth can exert pressure on natural resources and contribute to environmen­tal degradatio­n, as well as other issues like overcrowdi­ng in metropolit­an areas and putting strain on public services.

“Moreover, it can exacerbate problems such as high unemployme­nt rates, poverty and income inequality.”

As such, it is important for the government to engage with civil society and study the issues thoroughly.

Tey also says the government needs to weigh the ramificati­ons of the proposed constituti­onal amendments on the rights and welfare of vulnerable population­s and the broader socio-economic implicatio­ns for the nation.

However, the benefits outweigh the risks as long as efforts are made to create a diverse, creative and skilled workforce. One of the significan­t benefits is the creation of more taxpayers to fund public services such as healthcare, education and infrastruc­ture, adds Tey.

Yeah agrees, saying that one should not assume that regularise­d stateless people will automatica­lly be a drain on the government.

“There will be some that will be successful. So those that are successful will contribute more to the country’s revenue base.”

Yeah also says although the number of genuine stateless persons in Malaysia is very small, it would make sense if the government could set up a citizenshi­p quota system for them.

He adds that the government can start small and gradually build up to accept more stateless people, depending on the capacity and the conditions of the economy.

While the government mulls whether to pass the proposed amendments or keep the Federal Constituti­on as it is, time marches on for Tiara, Reshma and their father, 58-year-old Punithan.

It would not be long before the sisters hit 18 and should the amendments pass, it is likely the end of the line for their journey to citizenshi­p.

More urgent is the fact that Punithan suffers from heart disease – surviving a heart attack last year that required him to undergo bypass surgery.

“I worry about Dad because a lot has happened to him recently and he’s getting older, not younger.

“There might be unexpected sickness coming for him soon enough. And yet, he still didn’t quit smoking,” Tiara laments.

Punithan nods, saying: “I have to take care of this because if I die, who will take care of my girls?”

What’s the future that I see? Honestly, what do I want? I want a wealthy lifestyle so I have to study hard for that. So I really need to study hard (to get) an easier lifestyle.

— Tiara Vyahori, non-citizen

 ?? — Bernama photos ?? Tiara loves school, where she and her younger sister are reportedly doing well despite joining the school system a few years after having reached school age.
— Bernama photos Tiara loves school, where she and her younger sister are reportedly doing well despite joining the school system a few years after having reached school age.
 ?? ?? MAALINI RAMALO
MAALINI RAMALO
 ?? ?? Tiara and Reshma’s father Punithan, who is a Malaysian citizen, worries about his daughters’ future should he pass away. He suffered a heart attack last year and had to undergo bypass surgery.
Tiara and Reshma’s father Punithan, who is a Malaysian citizen, worries about his daughters’ future should he pass away. He suffered a heart attack last year and had to undergo bypass surgery.
 ?? ?? Sunway University’s Prof Yeah says time is running out to sustain economic growth due to the declining workforce population.
Sunway University’s Prof Yeah says time is running out to sustain economic growth due to the declining workforce population.
 ?? ?? Reshma at a section of the living space that she shares with her sister and father.
Reshma at a section of the living space that she shares with her sister and father.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia