Malaysias population hits 28m amid slowing growth

The census report also showed that Malaysias fertility rate is falling. wengyuen.wordpress.com pic

PUTRAJAYA, July 29 Malaysias population doubled in size from 13.7 million in 1980 to 28.3 million last year, revealed the 2010 census released today.

The rate of growth in the last 10 years, however, was two per cent, which was lower than the 2.6 per cent population growth recorded between 1980 to 1990 and from 1990 to 2000.

Bumiputeras numbered 17.5 million, or 67.4 per cent of the population, while Chinese made up 24.6 per cent of the population at 6.4 million, Indians 7.3 per cent of the population at 1.9 million while others made up 0.7 per cent of the population at 200,000.

Foreigners, meanwhile, made up 8.2 per cent of the population at 2.3 million.

Minister in the Prime Ministers Department, Tan Sri Nor Mohamed Yakcop, said at the launch of the census report here today that Malaysias fertility rate, although falling, was 2.3 per cent which is still higher than the replacement rate of 2.1 per cent.

This is good news, he said. We need the critical mass of people to drive consumption-led growth.

Asked about smaller countries such as Switzerland which has a population of just seven million but is one of the wealthiest and most advanced countries in the world, Nor Yakcop said that it was still good for Malaysia to have a growing population to support domestic industries.

Former prime minister Tun Mahathir Mohamed had, in the 1980s, wanted Malaysia to achieve a 70 million-strong population.

The UN recently projected that the worlds population will hit seven billion in October this year, which is one billion more than just 10 years ago, raising questions about the sustainability of the worlds population and the increasing strain on natural resources.

Commodity prices have already hit record levels due to increased demand from fast developing econo! mies suc h as India and China.

But while much of the worlds population growth is projected to take place in poor countries, developed economies are grappling with the problem of increasing longevity where a shrinking working population is expected to support a growing elderly population.

Nor Yakcop pointed out that based on the census, Malaysia enjoyed the opposite trend whereby its dependency ratio had decreased from over 50 non-working people being supported by every 100 workers, to 48.5 non-workers for every 100 workers in 2010.

This trend may not last, however, as the census shows that the proportion of the population aged below 14 had dropped from 33.5 per cent in year 2000 to 27.6 per cent last year due to falling fertility rates.

Another key trend identified by the census was the intensification of urbanisation.

Some 71 per cent of Malaysians lived in urban areas last year, up from 62 per cent last year.


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