Here, let us take a look at the Geography of Malaysia. Strategic location along Strait of Malacca and southern South China Sea. Mother's mean age at first birth is (), whereas, the Maternal mortality ratio is 21 deaths/100,000 live births (2020 est.)
Location | Southeastern Asia, peninsula bordering Thailand and northern one-third of the island of Borneo, bordering Indonesia, Brunei, and the South China Sea, south of Vietnam |
---|---|
Geographic coordinates | 2 30 N, 112 30 E |
Map references | Southeast Asia |
Tarrain | coastal plains rising to hills and mountains |
Natural Resources | tin, petroleum, timber, copper, iron ore, natural gas, bauxite |
Natural Hazards | flooding; landslides; forest fires |
Irrigated Land | 4,420 sq km (2020) |
Major rivers (by length in km) | |
Major aquifers | |
Land Boundaries | 2,742 km |
Border Countries | Brunei 266 km; Indonesia 1,881 km; Thailand 595 km |
Coastline | 4,675 km (Peninsular Malaysia 2,068 km, East Malaysia 2,607 km) |
Climate | tropical; annual southwest (April to October) and northeast (October to February) monsoons |
Area | |
Total Area | |
Land Area | 328,657 sq km |
Water Area | 1,190 sq km |
comparative Area | slightly larger than New Mexico |
Maritime Claims | |
Territorial sea | 12 nm |
Exclusive economic zone | 200 nm |
Continental shelf | 200-m depth or to the depth of exploitation; specified boundary in the South China Sea |
Elevations | |
Highest point | Gunung Kinabalu 4,095 m |
Lowest point | Indian Ocean 0 m |
Mean elevation | 419 m |
Land Use | |
Agricultural land | 23.2% (2018 est.) |
Agricultural land: arable land | arable land: 2.9% (2018 est.) |
Agricultural land: permanent crops | permanent crops: 19.4% (2018 est.) |
Agricultural land: permanent pasture | permanent pasture: 0.9% (2018 est.) |
Forest | 62% (2018 est.) |
Other | 14.8% (2018 est.) |
A highly uneven distribution with over 80% of the population residing on the Malay Peninsula
In Malaysia, the different Ethnic groups are such that we have: Bumiputera 63.8% (Malay 52.8% and indigenous peoples, including Orang Asli, Dayak, Anak Negeri, 11%), Chinese 20.6%, Indian 6%, other 0.6%, non-citizens 9% (2023 est.)
Population | |
---|---|
Pop growth rate | 0.99% (2024 est.) |
Birth rate | 14.2 births/1,000 population (2024 est.) |
Death rate | 5.8 deaths/1,000 population (2024 est.) |
Health expenditure | 4.1% of GDP (2020) |
Physicians Density | |
Hospital bed Density | 1.9 beds/1,000 population (2017) |
Total fertility rate | 1.73 children born/woman (2024 est.) |
Gross reproduction rate | 0.84 (2024 est.) |
Contraceptive prevalence rate | 52.2% (2014) |
Est married women (ages 15-49) | 59.3% (2023 est.) |
Literacy | age 15 and over can read and write |
Education expenditures | 3.9% of GDP (2020 est.) |
Net Migration rate | 1.5 migrant(s)/1,000 population (2024 est.) |
Nationality | Malaysian | Malaysian(s) |
Languages | |
Religions | Muslim (official) 63.5%, Buddhist 18.7%, Christian 9.1%, Hindu 6.1%, other (Confucianism, Taoism, other traditional Chinese religions) 0.9%, none/unspecified 1.8% (2020 est.) |
Age Structure | |
0-14 years | 22.2% (male 3,947,914/female 3,730,319) |
15-64 years | 69.4% (male 12,308,938/female 11,666,947) |
65 years and over | 8.4% (2024 est.) (male 1,409,360/female 1,501,332) |
Dependency Ratios | |
Total dependency ratio | 43.3 |
Youth dependency ratio | 32.9 |
Elderly dependency ratio | 10.4 |
Potential support ratio | 9.6 (2021 est.) |
Median Age | |
Total | 31.8 years (2024 est.) |
Male | 31.7 years |
Female | 31.9 years |
Urbanization | |
Urban population | 78.7% of total population (2023) |
Rate of urbanization | 1.87% annual rate of change (2020-25 est.) |
Major urban areas (Pop) | 8.622 million KUALA LUMPUR (capital), 1.086 million Johor Bahru, 857,000 Ipoh (2023). |
Sex Ratio | |
At birth | 1.07 male(s)/female |
0-14 years | 1.06 male(s)/female |
15-64 years | 1.06 male(s)/female |
65 years and over | 0.94 male(s)/female |
Total population | 1.05 male(s)/female (2024 est.) |
Infant Motality | |
Total | 6.4 deaths/1,000 live births (2024 est.) |
Male | 6.8 deaths/1,000 live births |
Female | 6 deaths/1,000 live births |
Life Expectancy at birth | |
Total population | 76.6 years (2024 est.) |
Male | 75 years |
Female | 78.4 years |
Drinking Water Sources | |
Improved: urban | urban: 99.4% of population |
Improved: rural | rural: 90.7% of population |
Improved: total | total: 97.5% of population |
Unimproved: urban | urban: 0.6% of population |
Unimproved: rural | rural: 9.3% of population |
Unimproved: total | total: 2.5% of population (2020 est.) |
Sanitation facility acess | |
Improved: urban | urban: 99% of population |
Improved: rural | rural: NA |
Improved: total | total: NA |
Unimproved: urban | urban: 0.1% of population |
Unimproved: rural | rural: NA |
Unimproved: total | total: (2020 est.) NA |
Alcohol consumption per capita | |
Total | 0.64 liters of pure alcohol (2019 est.) |
Beer | 0.48 liters of pure alcohol (2019 est.) |
Wine | 0.04 liters of pure alcohol (2019 est.) |
Spirits | 0.11 liters of pure alcohol (2019 est.) |
Other alcohols | 0.01 liters of pure alcohol (2019 est.) |
Tobacco use | |
Total | 22.5% (2020 est.) |
Male | 43.8% (2020 est.) |
Female | 1.1% (2020 est.) |
Malaysia’s multi-ethnic population consists of the bumiputera – Malays and other indigenous peoples – (62%), ethnic Chinese (21%), ethnic Indians (6%), and foreigners (10%). The majority of Malaysia’s ethnic Chinese and Indians trace their roots to the British colonialists’ recruitment of hundreds of thousands of Chinese and Indians as mine and plantation workers between the early-19th century and the 1930s. Most Malays have maintained their rural lifestyle, while the entrepreneurial Chinese have achieved greater wealth and economic dominance. In order to eradicate Malay poverty, the Malaysian Government in 1971 adopted policies that gave preference to the bumiputera in public university admissions, government jobs and contracts, and property ownership. Affirmative action continues to benefit well-off urban bumiputera but has done little to alleviate poverty for their more numerous rural counterparts. The policies have pushed ethnic Chinese and Indians to study at private or foreign universities (many do not return) and have created and sustained one of the world’s largest civil services, which is 85-90% Malay.
The country’s age structure has changed significantly since the 1960s, as fertility and mortality rates have declined. Malaysia’s total fertility rate (TFR) has dropped from 5 children per woman in 1970, to 3 in 1998, to 2.1 in 2015 as a result of increased educational attainment and labor participation among women, later marriages, increased use of contraception, and changes in family size preference related to urbanization. The TFR is higher among Malays, rural residents (who are mainly Malay), the poor, and the less-educated. Despite the reduced fertility rate, Malaysia’s population will continue to grow, albeit at a decreasing rate, for the next few decades because of its large number of reproductive-age women. The youth population has been shrinking, and the working-age population (15-64 year olds) has been growing steadily. Malaysia’s labor market has successfully absorbed the increasing number of job seekers, leading to sustained economic growth. However, the favorable age structure is changing, and around 2020, Malaysia will start to become a rapidly aging society. As the population ages, Malaysia will need to better educate and train its labor force, raise productivity, and continue to increase the number of women workers in order to further develop its economy.
More than 1.8 million Malaysians lived abroad as of 2015, including anywhere from 350,000 to 785,000 workers, more than half of whom have an advanced level of education. The vast majority of emigrants are ethnic Chinese, seeking better educational and job opportunities abroad because of institutionalized ethnic discrimination favoring the Malays. The primary destination country is nearby Singapore, followed by Bangladesh and Australia. Hundreds of thousands of Malaysians also commute across the causeway to Singapore daily for work.
Brain drain is an impediment to Malaysia’s goal of becoming a high-income country. The situation is compounded by a migrant inflow that is composed almost entirely of low-skilled laborers who work mainly in manufacturing, agriculture, and construction. Officially, Malaysia had about 1.8 million legal foreign workers as of mid-year 2017 – largely from Indonesia, Nepal, the Philippines, and Bangladesh – but as many as 3 to 4 million are estimated to be in the country illegally. Immigrants outnumber ethnic Indians and could supplant the ethnic Chinese as Malaysia’s second largest population group around 2035.
Want to know more about Malaysia? Check all different factbooks for Malaysia below.