cover image: A Silver Lining - Productive and Inclusive Aging for Malaysia

20.500.12592/j1csjp

A Silver Lining - Productive and Inclusive Aging for Malaysia

23 Nov 2020

In 2020, Malaysia passes a crucial milestone in its demographic trajectory and becomes an aging society. Driven by a precipitous decline in fertility accompanied by a sustained rise in life expectancy, in recent years Malaysia has seen an uptick in the pace of demographic change. Rapid aging will be one of the most crucial megatrends affecting Malaysia in coming decades, raising policy challenges in areas such as employment, income security, health care, and aged care. The term silver economy has been coined to encompass all sources of opportunities that arise from economic activities that serve the needs and demands of older persons. While rapid aging is crucially important and will become even more so in coming decades, through the right choice of policies, the government of Malaysia can help the country achieve productive and inclusive aging. The Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic has resulted in an unprecedented crisis with an enormous health and human toll, as well as exacerbated many of the policy challenges raised by aging both in the short term and more structurally. The report analyzes Malaysia’s demographic, socioeconomic and macroeconomic contexts, as well as three select key policy areas where critical knowledge gaps exist–employment, income security, and aged care.
malaysia public private partnership inequality aging industry silver adolescent health older worker poverty reduction person with disability female labor force participation activities of daily living population age structure public health care life expectancy at birth total fertility rate gender wage gap aged care alzheimer's disease healthy life expectancy health care services industry nutrition and population east asia and pacific social protections and labor privileges and immunity mining & extractive industry (non-energy) social protection system social assistance program vulnerable population group infrastructure and services labor market participation status in employment primary health care services share of woman pensions & retirement systems active labor market policy active labor market policies depth of poverty total factor productivity growth population growth rate productive working life improvements in health female life expectancy good quality of life civil service pension system education and gender poverty incidence curve per capita income threshold old-age dependency ratio social insurance scheme low health expenditure health child early stage of development rates of unemployment working age people employment rate of woman quality of growth living alone share of labor new market entrant challenges for woman increase tax revenue social service provision forms of employment old person old-age income security average number of child political economy considerations gender gap in employment entire labor force service delivery models slow population growth choice of policies minimum withdrawal age burden of taxation savings for retirement united nations population fund poverty line income qualitative field research decline in fertility unpaid family worker

Authors

Schmillen,Achim Daniel,Wang,Dewen,Yap,Wei Aun,Bandaogo,Mahama Abdel Samir Sidbewende,Simler,Kenneth,Binti Ali Ahmad,Zainab,Abdur Rahman,Amanina Binti

Disclosure Status
Disclosed
Doc Name
A Silver Lining - Productive and Inclusive Aging for Malaysia
Document Date
2020-11-22
Published in
United States of America
Rel Proj ID
MY-Malaysia Promoting Productive And Inclusive Aging -- P175541
Series Name
The Malaysia Development Experience Series
Total Volume(s)
1
Unit Owning
N/A
Version Type
Final
Volume No
1

Files

Related Topics

All