The high-income target set by Najib Razak in 2010 has eluded Malaysia for more than 15 years and looks no closer now than before, so focus should be on more meaningfulThe high-income target set by Najib Razak in 2010 has eluded Malaysia for more than 15 years and looks no closer now than before, so focus should be on more meaningful

Malaysia misses high income again, but does it matter?

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For decades, Malaysia has been caught in a psychological and political fixation of achieving “high-income nation” status.

The most recent World Bank data for 2025 puts Malaysia’s per capita income at US$12,380 or 86.1% of the high-income target of US$14,375 using their Atlas Method. This is the highest since 2019 and 2014 when the ratio was 85.8% and 85.1% respectively.

In fact, the ratio of Malaysian income to the high-income threshold has flat-lined. So, although Malaysia is slowly getting closer, the fundamental question remains: does it matter?

To understand where the obsession with this metric came from, we must look back to when the target was first formalised. It was explicitly set as a core policy objective in 2010 under the Economic Transformation Programme (ETP), which set a deadline for Malaysia to achieve high-income status by the year 2020.

When that deadline came and went, missed due to structural stagnation and political disruptions, the goalposts were simply moved further down the field. Now, even with organic growth, Malaysia would be 10 years late and will remain in the upper-middle income group beyond 2030.

Since 2010, a rising tide of global inflation and nominal growth means that a whole cohort of developing countries have entered the same upper-middle income classification alongside Malaysia, most recently including Vietnam, the Philippines and even Sri Lanka.

The truth is that the high-income label is profoundly misunderstood. First, it is not a comprehensive indicator of economic development or social well-being. The World Bank’s gross national income (GNI) per capita thresholds are administrative tools, originally designed simply to determine whether a country qualifies for financial assistance and concessionary loans.

Graduating to “high income” merely means Malaysia will lose access to certain multilateral benefits, including the closure of the World Bank office in Sasana Kijang. It does not magically transform the structural realities of the domestic economy.

Second, the threshold tells us nothing about income distribution. A country can have a high average GNI per capita but still have massive domestic income inequality. The United States sits firmly in the high-income category, yet it has extreme income inequality, widespread poverty in urban and rural centres and a fragile social safety net.

If a rising national average is driven entirely by the top tier of earners while the majority see their purchasing power stagnant or eroded, high-income status is nothing more than a statistical illusion.

Third, the metric says nothing about the underlying sophistication, complexity or resilience of an economy. Saudi Arabia has enjoyed high-income status for decades but despite its immense wealth, its economy remains heavily concentrated, structurally dependent on oil revenues and specialised sectors like Islamic finance, rather than a diversified, innovative, and competitive industrial base.

High income from resource extraction or low-complexity sectors does not signal a developed economy or society.

For Malaysia, the fixation on this arbitrary target is irrelevant and counterproductive. Chasing a nominal GDP or GNI figure encourages short-term policy fixes that look good on paper but do nothing for rakyat.

Instead, policy focus should shift away from arbitrary global benchmarks and prioritise resolving the structural issues that define the Malaysian experience: chronically stagnant wages, income and wealth inequality and the overall quality of economic growth.

These policy issues are not well handled in the World Bank high income classification nor in the conventional policy prescriptions coming from their office in Kuala Lumpur over the last decade since 2016.

True development is measured by the dignity of a universal pension, the purchasing power of an ordinary person and a fair share of economic value-add, not by a certificate of graduation from the World Bank.

The views expressed are those of the writer and do not necessarily reflect those of FMT.

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