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Malaysia in 2050: old, poor, sick and without children?

Nation has no policy to address ageing population issue

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Kuala Lumpur cityscape. Photo: SHUTTERSTOCK

By Billy Toh

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Malaysia’s aspiration to become a top 20 country in the world by 2050 under the 2050 National Transformation (TN50) initiative, will see a serious issue from a demographic perspective as experts pondered about a possible ugly truth for the country where the population is old, poor, sick and without children.

“As it stands, there is more of us from 6 million in 1957 to 30 million now and is going to be 40 million. But we are going to be an old society. Old, poor, sick, have to work and without children or grandchildren (by 2050),” said DM Analytics Malaysia chief economist Dr Muhammed Abdul Khalid, who spoke at the forum on Malaysia’s population in 2050: What Does This Mean Socio-Economically?. The forum is organised by The Institute of Strategic and International Studies (ISIS) Malaysia.

“Some will do better, but many of us will not. We will get worse. Therefore, you need adjustment in policies for this,” he added.

Muhammed said Malaysia at present does not have a comprehensive policy to address the issue of ageing population.

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He cited a presentation by Unicef Malaysia’s deputy representative and senior social policy specialist Dr Amjad Rabi’s projection which showed Malaysia will be an ageing population by 2035, with more than 15 per cent of the population aged 65 and above, compared with eight per cent now.

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