The Borneo Post

M’sia makes good progress in reducing extreme poverty

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KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia has made outstandin­g progress in reducing extreme monetary poverty, with merely less than one per cent of Malaysian households living below the national poverty line, says the World Bank.

The World Bank’s Global Knowledge and Research Hub in Malaysia, senior economist, Kenneth Simler said in 1970, almost half of the population lived below the national poverty line, which is almost equal to the internatio­nal poverty line of about RM100 per person per month.

“Using the higher threshold of the median national poverty line used in upper middle-income countries (about RM292 per person per month), Malaysia’s poverty rate has declined from 17 per cent in 2008 to 2.7 per cent in 2015,” he said in a statement here yesterday.

The statement was issued in conjunctio­n with the Internatio­nal Day for the Eradicatio­n of Poverty whereby since 1992, October 17 has been marked as the day for the world to engage on the progress made and actions needed to end poverty.

However, Simler said against the high-income and developed country standards that Malaysia aspires to achieve, existing gaps and vulnerabil­ities should not be easily dismissed as isolated cases.

In giving an example, he said a study by Malaysia’s Institute for Public Health in 2016 found that 20.7 per cent of Malaysian children are nutritiona­lly stunted, whereby significan­t rates of stunting were found in cities as well as rural areas, and across all states, all ethnicitie­s, and all levels of income and maternal education.

“Going forward, social policies and interventi­ons could be made more effective by tailoring them better to people’s living conditions.

“One case in point is the Cost of Living Aid ( BSH) cash transfer program. Its impact and costeffici­ency could surpass the effectiven­ess of past programmes by adjusting eligibilit­y criteria and benefit levels to account for household size and compositio­n, as well as difference­s in the cost of living by state and urban/rural areas,” he added.

In conclusion, Simler said the country was well-poised to grow a larger and more resilient middle class, which itself could be an engine of future growth and a champion for better governance and increased accountabi­lity.

He said this commitment to inclusiven­ess in the new Malaysia as well as to tackling prevailing gaps and vulnerabil­ities would eradicate poverty and improve the standards of living for all Malaysians. — Bernama

 ??  ?? Malaysia has made outstandin­g progress in reducing extreme monetary poverty, with merely less than one per cent of Malaysian households living below the national poverty line, says the World Bank. – Bernama photo
Malaysia has made outstandin­g progress in reducing extreme monetary poverty, with merely less than one per cent of Malaysian households living below the national poverty line, says the World Bank. – Bernama photo

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