Malaysia has all the advantages and competitive edge (KL + Penang especially). Malaysia must welcome their local talent back and even highly skilled foreign talent.
Malaysia can produce whatever electronic products it wants, but if, Malaysia really wants to win must deliver innovative and competitively advantageous products, both in the supply chain and finished products.
@@Eniu7991 Indonesia the best. Indonesia the biggest country in southeast. The biggest island at word. Population number 4 after china india and Amerika. Indonesia the biggest economi and top size economi in southeast👍 by imf and word bank jakarta metropolitan city as central business in southeast not Singapore or kuala lumpur
The biggest issue that lead to "brain drain" is really the low wage. Malaysia did not have shortage of engineers. We have shortage of high paying job. We being told "just take the offer" or being labeled as "ungrateful" and "demanding". Which leads to employers throwing pay close to national minimum wage. To put into perspective, the minimum wage is MYR1,500 or USD320 per month. That's less than USD4,000 annually. Fresh graduates on engineering are not expected to get paid more than triple of that. Which is why Malaysian engineers left the country. They being paid so low while expected to pay back their student loan. The only fresh graduates engineers left are those who don't have enough connection to reach employers outside of the country to offer their skills.
Why do u talk about 20 years ago. Now, fresh graduate salary is about RM2400 - Ram2800. Senior engineer can achieve RM4500 - RM8000. The expert can achieve RM10 000 - RM20 000 in Malaysia.
@@rahimrazali409so why study engineering which requiring 100k+ while your first job only offer you 2800? And how many years to take to reach senior level?
Malaysia is currently a balanced country, not too advanced nor too underdeveloped. Most Malaysians think that our politic is unstable but if they actually look at other countries they will find out how messed up their politics actually are compared to Malaysia.
Don't compare to countries that don't have manufacturing chip capabilities...Try comparing Thailand and Vietnam...They have the work force and a stable country. Malaysia work force are imported and cost money.
@@xzdrtxyzxvn I was comparing our politics with the other big countries like the USA and France, they seem to be more advanced than us but in reality, their politics is way far more corrupted.
@nemi6570 Malaysia barely can make a car and penetrate world market and you want to compare to countries thet make flying aeroplane of Boeing and Airbus of one hundred year old legacy...LOL.. You only assumption in the utube video that paint a overreaction to get money from utube. In actual fact it us peaceful in USA and France ..There are a lot of tourist also a lot of demonstrations.
@nemi6570 Whah happened in US and France are one group of people the same type that cause much grief in Malaysia too. This group ate not groups that generated income to countries but financially bogged the country down.
But stupid opposition is growing. They will bring down Malaysia at whatever expenses. Just like Zionists, their ammunitions are slanders & lies. All states they managed are in shambles and backward, but they still dream to lead the country.
@@soluckyme910 Japan has domineering in that years ago. Hopefully the establishment of that train in your country brings more prosperity & significant improvement to Indonesians
I am Indonesian but I am jealous that our Malaysian brothers and sisters were ready to starting this very strategic chip businesses. Here in Indonesia, government still debating about the importance of internet speed, basically we are 100 years behind Malaysia in this field. Shsme on our own Government for getting us backwards, but we are very happy that our neighbor Malaysia can advancing to the next step of The Strategic Global Chip Production
Plus Indonesians are largely anti american this anti western that. Of course the investors are scared away. Pretty ironic because Malaysia is an even more strict 1slamic country than Indonesia..
Indonesia is trying to add value to unfinished products and reducing the exports of raw materials. But, exporting pure materials and products that are parts of finished products. Malaysia and India can be important partners while playing within ASEAN.
Wow, congratulations on your impressive investment success! Your discipline and focus on delayed gratification is truly inspiring. I'm curious, what are some of the key factors that you consider when making investment decisions? Do you have any tips for those of us who are just starting to dip our toes into the world of investing? Thanks for sharing your story!
As a Malaysian, I cannot thank Caspian Report and Shirvan enough for making a video about my country. Had always wanted to know more about my country's semiconductor industry, but couldn't find a good video. Thank you once again! 🎉🎉🎉❤❤❤
Asianometry is a tech, specifically chips, youtube channel with also an interest in recent Asian history. Highly recommend you check them out the definitely have some stuff on chips in Malaysia and it’s history in computation.
Its also important that he covered the NEP(bumiputra policy) and how it is one of the greatest factors holding back this growth by causing the brain drain of our most skilled and brightest talents abroad to Singapore, Taiwan/Hong Kong and Australia.
I am Taiwanese who work in the semiconductor industry, this topic is actually a complicated issue. It's about the cutting edge technic all around the world.Not just Taiwan, but also Japan, SK, NL, China and US etc, each of them plays an important role as Taiwan is the biggest one. Maybe this video can explain some of Malaysia's problems, but there is a lack of knowledge about the entire industry chain of chips. For example: Manufacturing(we called Foundry professionally) can be subdivided into plenty of parts, the chips for vehicals and the chips for iphone are totally different. Not to mention Design,Package ,System,Material,Aligner ... ,every part of it requires well educated people.
Agreed, seems like they just expecting foreign tech company just invest billions dollar project with no specific reason. And they can miraculous getting a share from it. They complete neglect supply chain problem, the raw material, electricity, equipment, educated work force (engineer and IT technician), component supplier(High end industry required massive low and mid level supplier, and it is mandatory) Also both japan, SK, China, Taiwan become a tech powerhouse by invest and incubate their own tech company rather than hope some foreign company gona doing it for them. Majority of the production still from their home country. This process takes least a decade and billions dollar of investment, its painful but worth it. For any industry that is heavy-asset, don't focus too much on labor cost, because it matters little. Provide cheap land, low interest loan or even some tax cut have way bigger impact on it. Raw material price, production cost, product cycle, electricity stability are way much more important. No factory, especially high-tech industry can afford power outage in the middle of the production.
Well as a Malaysian, I can say Intel, Texas and Western Digital has factories here back in 70s -2000s. To be fair this channel is primarly focus on geopolitics and not semiconductor industry.
Malaysian stock market has been the best performer in Southeast Asia for the past one year by HUGE margin. Since January KLCI is up 12%, even entering the longest bull rally in the past 13 years.
Stock market are Cook up by investors but it does not tansalate to the real productivity of Malaysia. Investors buy shares for speculation and not a true indication of productivity or profit.
Well research info. Need to finish seeing the whole video to understand the pros and cons. 4:13 Middle income trap. 5:47 Assembly, testing and packing semiconductor( not R&D or fabrication). 8:09 Lack of R&D. 13:37 Nationwide brain drain/labour shortage. 14:17 Housing issue. 15:54 Political instability. 18:49 Geopolitic set the rules. 19:46 In between 2 biggest economy.
Good to see positive news from Malaysia for a change. Malaysia has a lot of wealth and natural resources but this potential has been squandered for decades due to bad leadership and ethnic politics. Hopefully Malaysia grabs this opportunity. Thanks also for shedding light on Penang attracting a lot of tech companies and foreign investors.
@@Ali_artagreed. instability of politics, but i don’t just blame conservative malays, i blame every malaysian for sensationalising politics. look at our current government, very emotional. that being said, even with all this, we aren’t doing so bad. what needs to happen now is political stability and we’re set
@@bettyhello hi there! and should i identify as a young, non-conservative Malaysian with an interest for IT, and no intent for sensationalising emotion-driven politics, how might i capitalise on this? i humbly inquire the opinion of the public, from an individual/country pov
@@eimanyusry idk man. you’d be delighted to know how many people aren’t interested in sensationalised politics and are just interested in having a functional government, but the loudest ones online are always the emotional ones. just saying
I really love this country and keep wanting to visit again and again. It’s a beautiful blend of modernity, nature, cultural diversity, affordability and friendly people. ❤
@@human-wd8pghi, Malaysian here. Yes, Muslims are the majority here, Islam is the official religion and Malays are the majority. But, Buddhism, Hinduism, Christianity are the other religions that are freely practiced here. We have one of the biggest Hindu temples and the 3rd world's highest Hindu statue here in Malaysia. We have lived in harmony for decades and we celebrate Eid, Christmas, Chinese New Year, Deepavali here by giving each of them public holidays for all citizens of Malaysia.
Malaysia is actually industrialised, not the facade of modernity that other "developed" Muslim countries have because theirs is built on the back of foreign workers and oil.
@@lamchunting856 The gulf states *look* more developed, but once their oil money runs out and the foreign workers leave, they have no industry left. Their tourism is artificial, based on the apparent "developed" veneer of their countries, so no one will want to go there in the future. Malaysia on the other hand, has beautiful geography which is why it has a natural tourism industry to compliment the manufacturing industries
Malaysia is specialized towards memory chips, which isn't even an industry unique to it. It'll face tough competition even holding its own in its own industry, let alone expanding to processing chips.
I'm Malaysian, I hope for prosperity not just for Malaysia, but also for our neighbours Indonesia, Philippines and Thailand. I think we'll see a better future if we rise together.
Omg I love your insight and analysis! You are very right, Malaysia’s biggest mistake was to leave R&D! Our leaders and cultures are never into research and innovation, otherwise we would be already like South Korea. Sad. Good job!
Malaysia is specialized towards memory chips, which isn't even an industry unique to it. It'll face tough competition even holding its own in its own industry, let alone expanding to processing chips.
True, but this is mostly due to our best and brightest leaving for better opportunities and so causing the brain drain and lack of innovation, and that can mostly be blamed on the NEP(bumiputra policy) where skilled Malaysian-Chinese and Indians that make up 40% of the population don't see a future in Malaysia; Why work for a fifth of the pay while the country treats you as a 2nd-class citizen?
Jika di lihat di dalam peta Malaysia itu kedudukan kan betul2 di tengah yg mana bentuknya seperti jantung... Tempat strategik.. cuaca yg stabil masa yg sangat seimbang.. 12 jam siang 12 jam Malam..
You dont? Maybe u lack of news within our country? Its talkin by many news outlet not just local. But yeah, this just beginning as Malaysian join BRICKS
British Commonwealth country Malaysian mechanical engineers friends who works at Hong Kong, Taiwan, USA (California), Austria, Germany, Netherlands are happy to move back to Penang, Selangor, Melaka with USD$ pays 8k-9k. Malaysian mechanical engineers can speak and writing well in Mandarin and English. He can handling Germany's China Clients in Mandarin. Suzhou. 南洋中華華人。
Malaysia best bet right now for RnD is AI and Robotics. If they can hold this 2 and go big, they chances for they economic explosion is sealed. They will become the next Gargantua.
Malaysia does as a part supporting Singapore expansion in top tech manufacturing , 2nd the semiconductor test and packaging for foreign investors relying on lower cost of labour, 3rd is the AI data centre requires water and cheap electricity that Malaysia already has, 4th the high standard of living attracts digital normads continue working remotely in Kuala Lumpur.
As a South African, I think Malaysia is a beautiful nation that deserves this success. With Malaysia joining BRICS, both of our nations can reach their full potential without the West mocking us. 🇿🇦 ❤ 🇲🇾
@acerazak4087 I think it will. I am a South African with Cape Malay ancestry. I believe BRICS is the perfect fit for our two emerging economies, especially in terms of our historic ties. The West is in moral, economic and democratic decline, its time that Malaysia and SA start to rely on each other and not the western bullies that tell us who we can and can't be friends with or who is allowed to commit genocide and who is not.
@@delaneycloete5920 wow a south African with Cape Malay ancestry, I am a Malay btw. I am 💯 agreed with you. I am also proud that both our country stands up to these evil bully n working together to achieve common goal.
The West does not mock Malaysia and mostly dismisses SA as a dysfunctional state careening to failed state status. We once had hope for SA but endemic corruption, among other problems, have decimated growth. SA can't even keep the lights on 24/7 and has collapsing infrastructure and the government is doing nothing about. Foreign capital investment are leaving and will continue, as will SA's brain drain. Until SA changes its culture and government, until it reforms and rejects widespread corruption and tribal nepotism and cronyism it will never be worth investing in. Malaysia is comparatively well-educated and its geography places it at the center of global trade, something SA doesn't have. SA stands to temporarily benefit from instability in the Red Sea (Houthis, etc.) which forces most ships to go around Africa instead of Suez. AS for BRICS, it is perhaps worthy of mockery as it is more of a PR stunt than an actual cohesive entity. None of its members share common ideologies or interests and are in fact enemies (India-China) or frenemies (Russia-China), their only unifying theme is simmering resentment to real and perceived sleights from the West (which they exploit in post-colonial Africa to great effect). Brazil talks big on anti-Imperialism (mostly directed at the US--not entirely wrong) but somehow ignores Russia and China's imperialism and expansionism. None have solid and transparent banking systems and low levels of corruption and proper rule of law making everything from investments, to free trade deals, currency swaps or the ludicrous idea of shared currency difficult or impossible. India doesn't want Rubles, and Brazil has no use for Rupees, but all need USD to buy commodities on international markets. Which brings me to de-Dollarization. It's not happening anytime soon despite the rhetoric. The USD will remain the reserve currency for a long time, especially in an age of increasing instability and where Russia and China are in irreversible demographic decline and Brazil's total fertility rate is rapidly decreasing. None of the BRICS countries can rely on immigration to compensate for low birth rates because none of them are attractive to immigrants for obvious reasons. BRICS is a pipe-dream, a joke. More logical and cohesive economic and political blocs could be formed in Africa and South America.
@electrosyzygy Thank you for this comprehensive and concise reply. I'm not going to reply point by point, but I will point a few things out. Your reply serves as proof of my statement regarding being mocked by the West, although I should perhaps have put mocked in inverted commas. South Africa has just gone though a national election which saw a 30 year old government go into coalition with its main rival. There are positive things to come for the country, with even the financial markets in agreement. South Africa has a parliament of proportional representation, unlike the British democracy in which the Reform Party received 15% of the vote but only 3 seats in Parliament. SA further maintains 3 independent arms of state, unlike the US supreme court giving the president the American crown, and can also change a 30 year old government without the need for insurrection by the losing party. The French and Germans are dealing with a right wing surge, with the French almost incapable of forming a government. SA has many problems, we acknowledge this, but we thank our lucky stars that we now have a competent government which we haven't had for the last 20 years at least. We are also grateful to have enough muscle to be able to toe the line between the G20 and BRICS and not get upset when the Americans badmouth us because we don't toe their party line. We have lost all moral respect for anyone who can support a genocide. BRICS is thankfully not ideological, but it is the best way for SA and Malaysia to look after their own citizens. South Africans, ordinary and wealthy alike, are seeing the benefit of this on a daily basis, especially seeing as our masses can afford EVs from China without 100% tariff markups on them. The West has all but abandoned us, given up on us, but through our own sheer will, as well as help from others, we are on the rise for our own people.
Been subscribing to this channel for awhile, really enjoyed the creator's deep dive into geopolitics worldwide, but never thought my own country Malaysia would be included in his deep dive as well. So proud that Malaysia getting a shoutout.🎉
British Commonwealth country Malaysian mechanical engineers friends who works at Hong Kong, Taiwan, USA (California), Austria, Germany, Netherlands are happy to move back to Penang, Selangor, Melaka with USD$ pays 8k-9k. Malaysian mechanical engineers can speak and writing well in Mandarin and English. He can handling Germany's China Clients in Mandarin, Suzhou city.
Malaysia has all the advantages and competitive edge (KL + Penang especially). Malaysia must welcome their local talent back and even highly skilled foreign talent.
Malaysia should encourage the establishment of home grown companies such as offering grants for local talents and universities to establish unique AI chip manufacturing.
Some of the smartest Malaysians I know who studied in Mechatronis, Aviation Engineering, and Actuarial Science eventually moved to Singapore and the US. Malaysian salaries didn't justified for them staying back, they're earning 10-20 times the salaries offered in Malaysia. Brain drain is a real issue.
It's good thing that microchip companies prefer to invest in Malaysia over the Philippines because in the Philippines, they aren't allowed to buy and own lands to put up their microchip manufacturing plants and as corporations, they aren't allowed to invest more than 40% equity and the rest of the 60% equity must be invested by Filipino corporation partners.
Malaysia is specialized towards memory chips, which isn't even an industry unique to it. It'll face tough competition even holding its own in its own industry, let alone expanding to processing chips.
KL + Penang combined can be the regional tech hub for ASEAN and even Asia. 10% growth per year should do. Latest stat for Q2 already show 5.8% nationally so KL + Pen should be about double that
I worked in a company that does a Malaysia government project back 10 years ago. The government wanted to setup a free trade zone for foregin tech investors to come and setup companies with benefit of tax free. The government did not want to pay anything to build up the facilities, my old company thought this was a great opportunity and invested a lot with the telco infrastructure on a certain zone. We were told that a lot of investors registered and ready to move in. After two year past, we only had 1% occupancy rate. At the time I had weirdest fairwell as nearly everyone in our company was sacked. Well I hope they can do better this time. I wish them luck.
Malaysia has all the advantages and competitive edge (KL + Penang especially). Malaysia must welcome their local talent back and even highly skilled foreign talent.
Malaysia's strategic location offers significant advantages that make it an attractive hub for various industries, including the semiconductor sector. In my opinion, Intel, Nvidia, and Infineon have played pivotal roles in advancing Malaysia's semiconductor industry, contributing to its potential emergence as a significant player in global chip production.
The problem with Malaysia is the government never follows through on anything. So many half assed, half finished initiatives litter the landscape you can’t drive 15 minutes without running into giant abandoned buildings.
@@akatsukihajime6100sometimes it’s the private sector’s fault too. a lot of abandoned construction sites because developers decide to stop. i also partially blame the government for approving these projects. many of these companies just want to make money, like housing projects, but i think the government should be more strict and reject a lot of these projects based on outlook analysis
If you read the news on OSRAM it's more about they are losing Apple as business partner that cause them not to expand. It's not because of political reason.
@@delmaregalsit’s not a “smart move”. It was the only move / outcome because Apple cancelled micro-LED orders for their products and decided for OLED instead.
Had to agree, our country is one of the most luckiest countries in the world. No war, no natural disasters, no crisis, a ton of natural resources, neutral weather. We malaysians regardless of race all hope that malaysia can continue foward to be a developed tech country but also keeping our heritage from being engulfed by globalisation.
I not saying this as racial issues but if you realize, every land Allah give to muslim is rich with natural resources Arab with oil, Afghanistan with precious stones and oil, Malaysia and Indonesia are rich with gold and spices. Meanwhile Europe got none of this, their own resources already drain more than 100 years ago. No wonder they invaded other countries
This would be the second time for Malaysia to become a global chip giant again. In the 1990s, Malaysia was the largest chip producer in the world before most of the chip companies moved their production to China.
we are a small country with a limited army. In order to remain safe, Tun Mahathir placed foreign economic interests here. which is certain that the country protects Malaysia for their own interests as well.
@@arx117 Fun Fact, Mahathir signed a defense pact with the US in 1982. This allows Malaysia to save money on defence while spend the rest on foreign business. That's why we are close partners to US military.
Despite the never ending predictions of her demise by a certain community, Malaysia is still steadily charting its future with balanced judgments. It will never be a Singapore, Taiwan or Hong Kong.
the Malay race is not as competitive as the East Asian, Chinese , korean or Japanese but strangely they have higher quality of life since they value other things , family, balanced development, religion ,peace of mind. If you are in China , Japan or Korea you get the feeling their whole life is spend at work ,bt in Malaysia you see well balanced life and i dare to say a better quality of life.
Malaysia quite misfortune in become high income country. In the 60s they fought against communist until 90s. then just when they about to recover, the 1998 financial crisis hit. then again in 2000s they about to recover, same thing happened 2008 financial crisis hit, then again in 2014. After that they gain good momentum in recovering 2017 saw the economy booming and then like usual political instability and corona virus hit them push them back down.
All these shocks also affected other countries, not just Malaysia. The real problem in Malaysia is a lack of educated labour and brain drain. The racial policies of successive UMNO governments have entrenched a system in which ethnic Malays feel entitled to subsidized housing, school and university places irrespective of merit and guaranteed jobs - all purely based on their race. While other non-Malay (but still Malaysian citizens) groups compete on merit they see no hope in a country stuck in the middle income trap where jobs are handed out based not on merit and performance but on racial quotas. This is at the heart of the problem, and unless the Anwar administration gets real and tackles this effective apartheid Malaysia's 2030 dream will turn out to be another false dawn like 'Vision 2020', which was preceded by Najib looting billions in taxpayer funds for corrupt use and personal enrichment. Anwar needs to reverse the brain drain. To do that it needs to rectify the failed race based policies. I was speaking to a business owner from Europe a few years ago, who was looking to expand in SE Asia. I recommended Malaysia, but when he learned about the Malay job quota rules, he lost interest - corporations don't like to operate in nations where hiring is dictated by political agendas. Failed political agendas. Read Dr M's 'The Malay Dilemma' for more info.
These are all excuses. Every major economy went through that. Saw how Singapore and Korea recovered and prospered, but Malaysia? Lazy culture, takpe mindset, rasuah, racism, are all the cause of our own misfortune.
@@azhariarifyes...plus we're not western puppet where they could build their military base on foreign soil...it's like we doubt our own people to protect their land...just like the old time
Malaysia already did great from the 1970s up to 1997-98. The peak and symbol by the great klcc.. Unfortunately, a man with his peoples ruined the country for about two decades. Now, they try hard to fix the damage. Hopefully, they will fulfil all the promised...🤔
As if Malaysians were as smart and hardworking as Taiwanese. Malaysia needs to lift its affirmative action policies against non-Malays if they want a shot as competing with the dynamic, intelligent, hardworking East Asians. Malaysia has plenty of Chinese. Let them use their talents fully.
@@bluebottlecoffeeaddict6529 affirmative action is supported by the US. They know that certain groups are more deprived than others so by giving them opportunities it brings equality
@@bluebottlecoffeeaddict6529 I think Malaysian of ethnic Chinese descent can be “utilized” as much as Taiwanese Engineers. After all many are of very similar culture. A pays of MYR 15K-30K per month You will fill the factory in no time with decent talent But, will The Malaysia Gov fix that terrible Penang traffic too?
PAP & DAP are the problem since 1963 prior that led to the racial tension in Singapore 1964-1965 and in 1969 in Kuala Lumpur...ever since that DAP continue to stir racial harmony in Malaysia with its racist tactics in politics and twisted laws - people in Malaysia should ban DAP since 1967 - they are real culprits ever since.
Special mention for politicians. Most of us tolerate each other because we don't want our children to grow up in an unstable country. Of course there are issues, but it will disappear after 2-3 months. Politicians bring up issues only to stay relevant and for political mileage.
As a Singaporean, looking at the history of both of countries, Malaysia needs to stabilize their government and racial and religious politics to see progress. Your video makes it very positive for Malaysia, but the reality is not close to it. Malaysian government has continually disappoint Singapore as well as their own Malaysians. I wish the best for them, and i think Anwar on is headed in the right direction. Hopefully he can command the stability needed in Malaysian politics and given the sufficient opportunity to drive the growth. Remember, Malaysia has so much resources. Singapore has nothing. Everything is expensive in Singapore. Malaysia has energy independence, there should be no reason for Malaysia to not outpace Singapore, just like how China has overtook Hong Kong in progress.
As a malay in Malaysia, I heavily support this. Politicians keep using religion to win votes and most Malays keep falling for that dumb trick. In the end, corruption and incompetent leadership is what we get. Not only that as it's difficult to establish a stable and harmonious environment with the constant racism in Malaysia (illegal immigrants is another story though). Plus most Malays and bumiputeras relied heavily on their privileges just to get a decent job. I'm not saying Malaysia should be secular and liberal though Extra: For Malays, I think most of us should change our thinking when picking a career. A lot of us still look for the easy way out. For example, many SPM graduates only have bare minimum scores to get into politeknik. Why do they do this? "Lepas SPM aku kerja grab je lah", "So aku taknak study" (Translation: After SPM I wanna work as a delivery driver, so i don't need to study) We have just as much potential to become doctors as other people do yet our country has a shortage of doctors. We had to take in foreign workers for this.
Henryhoe Singapore was not exactly a backward island when Malaysia kicked Singapore out in 1965. It has been a thriving island for more than 1 century. In 1965 ,Singapore GDP' s percapitq is already the highest in South East Asia after Brunei. And Singapore is unique as it did not suffer brutality under Malaysian rule. If you care to be observant, you can appreciate that Singapore was lucky as it did not to wage war to get sovereignty. Look at Timur Leste, South Philippines or South Thailand or Acheh ,Papua and you would realise how benevolent then PM If Malaysia back then. I am not denying the
@@shamshulanuar7718 Seriously Singapore NEVER wanted to be independent in the first place they were EXPELED, voted out by the parliment. Wage war to get sovereignty?? WTF? There was no brutality involved since Singapore was having a similar status like Sabah and Sarawak; The Federation of Malaysia was formed when Malaya, Singapore, Sabah and Sarawak signed the formation. Note that Brunei declined the invitation to join the Federation, for what its worth till date it was a good decision on their part. Malaysia (more like Malaya political parties at that time) main concern of Singapore at that time was their differences in political view and how to spearhead the Malaysian Federation at that time. That differences in oppinion lead to UMNO lead parties (BN - BN at that time was huge and they single handedly dominate Malaysian Federation politics at that time this include Sabah and Sarawak but not in Singapore) to vote Singapore out of the Federation. Now all is history and we could see what came out of each leaders visions at that time.
If you like the west : Malaysia was a European colony for over 4 centuries. If you like China and Chinese : Malaysia population is 20% Chinese. If you are a Muslim : Malaysia is a Muslim majority country. Malaysia basically appeals everyone.
** I am from Singapore and i can tell you FINALLY i am proud to actually say that Msia is my neighbour - reason being they really CHANGE and IMPROVE towards being a useful (and proper) nation that is within ASEAN. If you are wondering on what grounds am i trying to say this, it is completely NO secret that the previous (msian) government is mainly built up on JEALOUSY, lack of cooperation and friendly dialogue with Singapore. As of now - Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim has proven to QUITE IMPRESSIVE. When he first came to power he was FULL OF IDEAS to enhance TRADE AND ECONOMIC TIES with Singapore. Which is why MANY of PM Anwar smart economic plan is focused around Johor (which is linked to Singapore via the causeway.) ( ** For those that don't know - the previous strategy of malysia that completely FAILED, was to excessively over shower resources and money into kula lumpur to be a "global and international city" - this was the reason why malaysia failed as a country the past 30 years. It was a disastrous and tragedy idea that malaysians needs to do their best to bury with their previous administration and at least over shadow it with some form of international success.)
Things would not change if the conservative Malays themselves doesn't change their mindset. All those protest against foreign investments because the company model doesn't align with their religious beliefs, and the malays that forcefully wanting the Malay language to be prioritized by neglecting English, these would be the downfall of Malaysia and no one else to blame but themselves.
But that doesn't mean we could eventually leaving Malay language for good. Getting juggling on having polyglot mentality are especially should be upheld on the same par as having our mother tongue too.
Not to mention the inequility in treating the other ethnic minorities, that law should've been long gone, we all work the same hours, we should expect the same reward. Plus the amount of corruption going on with influx of foreign workers really destroy the landscape for the locals, the under cutting of pays and low wages are all a result of this
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@@joeyh3167 South Korea and Taiwan went big in semiconductor because there have their own indegenous,local champion and investing in R&D for years. You cannot expect foreign big companies will dump their latest cutting edge technology in Malaysia, Malaysia, through it local champion, must involve in the global supply chain.
the improvement of KL was necessary. it's true that state/provincial development should also have kept pace, but the rise of KL was never against Penang per se.
Great video man! Learnt so much about my own country. Just one tiny thing, you mentioned Infineon plans to expand to Malacca but they've already been there for at least 3 decades. I should know - I'm originally from Malacca and even did an internship at Infineon there haha
Exactly. I’m 1/2 Malaysia and many of Malaysian that were forced to study abroad never when home. But I still love Malaysia and all its people and wish it well.
@@azrulaznizan If some Malays and Indians can learn Mandarin then surely you can too. If you don't want to learn a new language then let others that are more suitable take the job, it is not racist to want people who have language literacy for a job.
What a wonderful video. Very informative. Malaysia is still in transition from a middle income per capita towards high income per capita, eventually I believe Malaysia will be more successful in time. What I'm more worried is the escalating cost of living. Once a country becomes a first world nation with high income per capita, there's no way back on the outrageous high cost of living and high cost of operations for business.
Malaysia has always had a lot of potential. But historically, it has been held back by its own internal divisions. Power is centralised yet fundamentally insecure in such a massive, ethnically diverse country. And as we have seen from Penang's example, when give a choice between economic success and political security, KL will always choose political security.
How tf malaysia is centralised? Ffs we practicing federal system. In fact we are the most decentralised in Asean. Each Malaysian state sometimes act like their own country, have their own constitution and laws. This guy..
Its called a FEDERATION STATE dude !!.. Each country enjoys its freedom in land, mineral resources .. And some state has sacrificed for other state to develope. 85% of PENANG Fresh Water comes from Kedah..😂. Penang dosent hv to pay a cent to maintain the FOREST RESERVES and Loss of tax /usage. So come on... lets not be HYPOCRITE. Everyone helps laaa..
Probably no body talk about the effect of fast growing economy bring catastrophic effect to the ppl and culture...while malaysia has done well in maintaining the status quo between them.
Nah, can't do it without the permission from its master the same way the USA needs permission from them before selling arms to certain countries. Yes, it's the law.
Wrong. China has all the talent and dominance in emerging photonic semiconductors on graphene, which are 30,000 times faster and use 1-million times less energy, which will spell the end of silicon chips, like how mobile phones killed landline phones. China has the only working general-purpose photonic chip prototypes and 98% of the engineering science for it - and all the rare earths required to make it. These will be commercialized in 4 years, then game over.
Reling heavily on investment from foreign companies is not so good in the long run. You need some equivalent of Samsung, Hynix, TSMC or MediaTek to domesticate global semiconductor industry to itself. Foreign companies will leave Malaysia once its wage and land price become expensive for middle-income economy.
you think your phone can only run only with microchips? majority of non semiconductor firms that supplies non semiconductors to those firms like pcbs, wires, memories, transistor are made by malaysian firm.. we also has our own fabrication local semiconductor firms like silterra mention in the video...
@@zarith87 my man, that is not what he is saying at all. He's saying Malaysia needs to find a way domesticate the entire production chain and take a piece of the tech production pie because guess what happens to our local upstream component manufacturers once their clients run to the next cheap place? Our historical hint of what could be the result is the Japanese economic stagnation and industrial implosion of the 90s Malaysia's saving grace however will always be that the Malaysian economy is quite diversified and not reliant on one industry doing well. But the pain will be felt and stagnation will happen. Just look at the damage to china done from manufacturers moving to vietnam, thailand and indonesia because the chinese wage is now too expensive. Their government isn't being obvious about how painful it is for the country yet but from the common people it is very obvious damage was done and the world is watching how the chinese government will react.
Thanks Odoo for sponsoring this video! Click www.odoo.com/r/zYW9 to check out Odoo for yourself now!
8:15 Not wealth "redistribution", it's affirmative action like in the US to help poorer people get the same opportunities
Malaysia has all the advantages and competitive edge (KL + Penang especially). Malaysia must welcome their local talent back and even highly skilled foreign talent.
Hello CIA !
Please make a report on India also. Love to see it.
Malaysia can produce whatever electronic products it wants, but if, Malaysia really wants to win must deliver innovative and competitively advantageous products, both in the supply chain and finished products.
Malaysia; Great country, great people. I love it when i hear good news from Indonesia and Malaysia. Best wishes from Turkey!
Teşekkürler.. Türkiye is a great nation , once the leader of all Muslims too!😊
@Dr.M-ot9orTf bro🗿
We all had common hate as well
Atatürk is the worst leader of turkey he was not even an actual muslim
Erdogan is the real goat
Wishing all the best for Malaysia and other ASEAN countries from Poland.
thanks from malaysia
Love from MY
We bought your main battle tanks!
@@yangenlee8960 Thank you and hope you will make good use of them.
@@Eniu7991 Indonesia the best. Indonesia the biggest country in southeast. The biggest island at word. Population number 4 after china india and Amerika. Indonesia the biggest economi and top size economi in southeast👍 by imf and word bank jakarta metropolitan city as central business in southeast not Singapore or kuala lumpur
The biggest issue that lead to "brain drain" is really the low wage. Malaysia did not have shortage of engineers. We have shortage of high paying job. We being told "just take the offer" or being labeled as "ungrateful" and "demanding". Which leads to employers throwing pay close to national minimum wage. To put into perspective, the minimum wage is MYR1,500 or USD320 per month. That's less than USD4,000 annually. Fresh graduates on engineering are not expected to get paid more than triple of that.
Which is why Malaysian engineers left the country. They being paid so low while expected to pay back their student loan. The only fresh graduates engineers left are those who don't have enough connection to reach employers outside of the country to offer their skills.
Agreed, need more pragmatic change towards economy upgrades
My curiosity, which engineers is he talking about, there are a lot of engineering areas
Why do u talk about 20 years ago.
Now, fresh graduate salary is about RM2400 - Ram2800.
Senior engineer can achieve RM4500 - RM8000.
The expert can achieve RM10 000 - RM20 000 in Malaysia.
@@rahimrazali409 You just proved my point that fresh grad is not paid more than triple the minimum wage.
MYR1,500 x 3 = MYR4,500
@@rahimrazali409so why study engineering which requiring 100k+ while your first job only offer you 2800? And how many years to take to reach senior level?
Way to go, Malaysia. Love from Indonesia.
❤ Thank you 👍 neighbour Indonesia and Malaysia are siblings country
Tumben sadar😂😂😂
@@saramedia1809Great news from our Asian friends,from your friends in AUSTRALIA.
TQ mas ❤
love you too anak kucing
Malaysia is currently a balanced country, not too advanced nor too underdeveloped. Most Malaysians think that our politic is unstable but if they actually look at other countries they will find out how messed up their politics actually are compared to Malaysia.
Don't compare to countries that don't have manufacturing chip capabilities...Try comparing Thailand and Vietnam...They have the work force and a stable country. Malaysia work force are imported and cost money.
@@xzdrtxyzxvn I was comparing our politics with the other big countries like the USA and France, they seem to be more advanced than us but in reality, their politics is way far more corrupted.
@nemi6570 Malaysia barely can make a car and penetrate world market and you want to compare to countries thet make flying aeroplane of Boeing and Airbus of one hundred year old legacy...LOL..
You only assumption in the utube video that paint a overreaction to get money from utube. In actual fact it us peaceful in USA and France ..There are a lot of tourist also a lot of demonstrations.
@nemi6570 Whah happened in US and France are one group of people the same type that cause much grief in Malaysia too. This group ate not groups that generated income to countries but financially bogged the country down.
But stupid opposition is growing. They will bring down Malaysia at whatever expenses. Just like Zionists, their ammunitions are slanders & lies. All states they managed are in shambles and backward, but they still dream to lead the country.
Good luck Malaysia! A country I always loved to visit and look forward to visiting once more soon.
Malaysia also build the largest data center in Johor.
World's largest? Region's largest? Country's largest? State's largest?
@@darkless60 no need to be specific lah, leave it to own interpretation
@@yunusibrahim2474 Lol this is international standard not kampung standard..
😂😂😂 data center very outdated lah. Data center is very energy consumption and need lot of space and create little job after setup.
@@MerlionWarrior it creates money and also help facilitate website. Without it, you can say goodbye to your facebook and youtube
Malaysia is a pretty cool country, I wish the best for them! Malaysia leaving the middle income trap would be a great thing.
@@theconqueringram5295 whoosh whoosh yes the best in southeast now 👍
A lot of Taiwanese women are heading to Malaysia. Maybe they like Tamil Indian men there.
Thanks for your kind words, ameen! Wish the same for you & your country too ❤
@@azwasaaidns3936 whoosh bullet train Indonesia the best in southeast now 👍
@@soluckyme910 Japan has domineering in that years ago. Hopefully the establishment of that train in your country brings more prosperity & significant improvement to Indonesians
I am Indonesian but I am jealous that our Malaysian brothers and sisters were ready to starting this very strategic chip businesses. Here in Indonesia, government still debating about the importance of internet speed, basically we are 100 years behind Malaysia in this field. Shsme on our own Government for getting us backwards, but we are very happy that our neighbor Malaysia can advancing to the next step of The Strategic Global Chip Production
we already start since 50 years ago in 1970s. most malaysia export are electronics
Indonesia cukup expor tki tkw babu kuli seluruh dunia. 1000 tahun dpn aja gak akan mungkin maju. Itu semua orang tau lah
Tiap negara itu ada kelebihan dan kekurangan...tak perlu malu..
@@bella8145-d9z I thank mahathir for that, but still, would hope he'll hold back his racism nowadays
.
Indonesia is not so far behind, your country leadership is way smarter.
This is a really good summary on Malaysia and it's manufacturing industry. Well done on the research!
While in Indonesia :
- Fast internet? What for?
- Hacker please don't attack!
That's why no company want to invest in Indonesia because of inefficient Government to protect cyber system....
Plus Indonesians are largely anti american this anti western that. Of course the investors are scared away. Pretty ironic because Malaysia is an even more strict 1slamic country than Indonesia..
While in the Philippines
Chinese hackers are the everyday normal 😊
Indonesia is trying to add value to unfinished products and reducing the exports of raw materials. But, exporting pure materials and products that are parts of finished products. Malaysia and India can be important partners while playing within ASEAN.
Mendunia!
Thank you for recommending Sarah Jennine Davis on one of your videos. I reached out to her and :nvesting with her has been amazing.
Wow, congratulations on your impressive investment success! Your discipline and focus on delayed gratification is truly inspiring. I'm curious, what are some of the key factors that you consider when making investment decisions? Do you have any tips for those of us who are just starting to dip our toes into the world of investing? Thanks for sharing your story!
Do you mind sharing info on the adviser who
assisted you? I'm 39 now and would love to
grow my portfolio and plan my retirement
@@FreyaFreya3 Sarah Jennine Davis is highly recommended
You most likely should get her basic info when you search her on your browser.
@@mayor-o1wHow do I access her ? I really need this
+156
As a Malaysian, I cannot thank Caspian Report and Shirvan enough for making a video about my country. Had always wanted to know more about my country's semiconductor industry, but couldn't find a good video. Thank you once again! 🎉🎉🎉❤❤❤
CNA regularly covers Malaysia's semicon growth
Asianometry is a tech, specifically chips, youtube channel with also an interest in recent Asian history. Highly recommend you check them out the definitely have some stuff on chips in Malaysia and it’s history in computation.
Indonesia the best. Whoosh whoosh yes 👍
Its also important that he covered the NEP(bumiputra policy) and how it is one of the greatest factors holding back this growth by causing the brain drain of our most skilled and brightest talents abroad to Singapore, Taiwan/Hong Kong and Australia.
@@deathdrone6988funnily enough most of the brain drain cane from bumi folk themselves
Im a Malaysian. Im very proud if the government can make this reality. The cost of living is too high here now
Might actually make it worse unless ypu have a job with the raising tide
@@ethanniedorowski116he’s toasted either way 😅
It won't happen, you guys have a close tie with China
Whoosh whoosh yes the best in southeast now 👍
With the economic policy that's going on rn? Things might get worse
I am Taiwanese who work in the semiconductor industry, this topic is actually a complicated issue. It's about the cutting edge technic all around the world.Not just Taiwan, but also Japan, SK, NL, China and US etc, each of them plays an important role as Taiwan is the biggest one.
Maybe this video can explain some of Malaysia's problems, but there is a lack of knowledge about the entire industry chain of chips.
For example: Manufacturing(we called Foundry professionally) can be subdivided into plenty of parts, the chips for vehicals and the chips for iphone are totally different. Not to mention Design,Package ,System,Material,Aligner ... ,every part of it requires well educated people.
aye government should hand out chip war by chis miller to all secondary school students lol
Agreed, seems like they just expecting foreign tech company just invest billions dollar project with no specific reason. And they can miraculous getting a share from it. They complete neglect supply chain problem, the raw material, electricity, equipment, educated work force (engineer and IT technician), component supplier(High end industry required massive low and mid level supplier, and it is mandatory)
Also both japan, SK, China, Taiwan become a tech powerhouse by invest and incubate their own tech company rather than hope some foreign company gona doing it for them. Majority of the production still from their home country. This process takes least a decade and billions dollar of investment, its painful but worth it.
For any industry that is heavy-asset, don't focus too much on labor cost, because it matters little. Provide cheap land, low interest loan or even some tax cut have way bigger impact on it. Raw material price, production cost, product cycle, electricity stability are way much more important. No factory, especially high-tech industry can afford power outage in the middle of the production.
Well as a Malaysian, I can say Intel, Texas and Western Digital has factories here back in 70s -2000s. To be fair this channel is primarly focus on geopolitics and not semiconductor industry.
video is malaysia becoming a potato chip giant
@@xijinpig7978 semiconductor chip not potato chip.
Malaysian stock market has been the best performer in Southeast Asia for the past one year by HUGE margin. Since January KLCI is up 12%, even entering the longest bull rally in the past 13 years.
Any underdogs you recommend to check?
@@heyjohnsmithmost malaysia stocks are undervalued, but for tech stocks, probably can go for inari, vitrox or natgate that were endorsed by Nvidia
Whoosh whoosh yes the best in southeast now 👍
Stock market are Cook up by investors but it does not tansalate to the real productivity of Malaysia. Investors buy shares for speculation and not a true indication of productivity or profit.
I lost money with DNEX. I bought because Silterra is it's subsidiary!
Well research info. Need to finish seeing the whole video to understand the pros and cons.
4:13 Middle income trap.
5:47 Assembly, testing and packing semiconductor( not R&D or fabrication).
8:09 Lack of R&D.
13:37 Nationwide brain drain/labour shortage.
14:17 Housing issue.
15:54 Political instability.
18:49 Geopolitic set the rules.
19:46 In between 2 biggest economy.
Well said
Forever developing country with low salary to live
Ghost city issue
Good to see positive news from Malaysia for a change. Malaysia has a lot of wealth and natural resources but this potential has been squandered for decades due to bad leadership and ethnic politics. Hopefully Malaysia grabs this opportunity.
Thanks also for shedding light on Penang attracting a lot of tech companies and foreign investors.
funny, this country was driven by ethnic politic for 70 years. the rome wasn't build in a day.
stop playing ethnic victim mentality for yr own weakness
Not only in penang loh..johor too..
Malaysia from my research has the biggest potential in the region for growth 📈 as they have been in this for long now.
Too many old people, Conservative malays and IT-lack people. Vote using their emotion rather than logical. Resulting to the instability of politics
@@Ali_artagreed. instability of politics, but i don’t just blame conservative malays, i blame every malaysian for sensationalising politics. look at our current government, very emotional. that being said, even with all this, we aren’t doing so bad. what needs to happen now is political stability and we’re set
@@bettyhello hi there! and should i identify as a young, non-conservative Malaysian with an interest for IT, and no intent for sensationalising emotion-driven politics, how might i capitalise on this? i humbly inquire the opinion of the public, from an individual/country pov
Thanks for explaining, our political party real behavior@@bettyhello
@@eimanyusry idk man. you’d be delighted to know how many people aren’t interested in sensationalised politics and are just interested in having a functional government, but the loudest ones online are always the emotional ones. just saying
I really love this country and keep wanting to visit again and again. It’s a beautiful blend of modernity, nature, cultural diversity, affordability and friendly people. ❤
Malaysia is muslim majority country right ?
Malaysia is muslim dominant country right ? Like Indonesia ?
@@human-wd8pg yes it is. Other religions are well respected and practiced.
Correct & majority chilled out people.@@human-wd8pg
@@human-wd8pghi, Malaysian here. Yes, Muslims are the majority here, Islam is the official religion and Malays are the majority. But, Buddhism, Hinduism, Christianity are the other religions that are freely practiced here. We have one of the biggest Hindu temples and the 3rd world's highest Hindu statue here in Malaysia. We have lived in harmony for decades and we celebrate Eid, Christmas, Chinese New Year, Deepavali here by giving each of them public holidays for all citizens of Malaysia.
Malaysia getting better and better
Malaysia is actually industrialised, not the facade of modernity that other "developed" Muslim countries have because theirs is built on the back of foreign workers and oil.
The bar isn't exactly set high though.
@@lamchunting856 The gulf states *look* more developed, but once their oil money runs out and the foreign workers leave, they have no industry left.
Their tourism is artificial, based on the apparent "developed" veneer of their countries, so no one will want to go there in the future.
Malaysia on the other hand, has beautiful geography which is why it has a natural tourism industry to compliment the manufacturing industries
@@John3.36 then why do you tell Muslims to keep Sharia in their countries if you're still going to complain? 😂
We are kinda backed by foreign labour for some construction
Depends on where you are. It's mostly around the capital that this holds, no so much the rest of the country.
if Malaysia become the next global chip giant. we can call their capital city KUALA LUMRICH
Ahahahaahaaaaaa
Kuala Dhaka, because in malaysia many bangladesh Peoples
😂
@@tulalit14295 million indonesian and only 500k from Bangladesh
Malaysia is specialized towards memory chips, which isn't even an industry unique to it. It'll face tough competition even holding its own in its own industry, let alone expanding to processing chips.
As a Malaysian myself, I can finally say this,
"KITA MENDONIAAA" 🇲🇾💪
Hahaha jangan ketar ketir dilihat jiran 😂
Malaysia to the world🇲🇾
kini standing, in the eyes of the world
Walaun said NO. lol
Now I know the Malaysian version of "ADA INDONESIA COYY" 😂
Wish you guys the best!
Bro finally got that sponsor 💀
Can we get a photo of Shirvan, is he still alive
@@rowdyduterte8476 Shirvan is long gone, his mind and body being absorbed into cyberspace.
Bruh why u even watching it I almost skip virtually sponsors from any RUclips videos
Bro was holding out on uploading just to find a sponsor. Jooish.
Bot 🙄
Keep going Malaysia 🇲🇾 try you best to become next globe chip giant ❤
Chip giant?
Name me one chip company from Malaysia that is relevant globally
@@dearcoolz bruh, what part of "becoming the next" do you not understand
@@dearcoolzwhatever, we have Made in Malaysia mark on AMD's processor 😉
@@dearcoolz I smell jealousy + hatred. HAHAHAHA
support
I'm Malaysian, I hope for prosperity not just for Malaysia, but also for our neighbours Indonesia, Philippines and Thailand. I think we'll see a better future if we rise together.
@@lilyhomes4967 I agree. A rich neighbour is a good neighbour.
Glad you found a sponsor, man and able to produce this episode
Omg I love your insight and analysis! You are very right, Malaysia’s biggest mistake was to leave R&D! Our leaders and cultures are never into research and innovation, otherwise we would be already like South Korea. Sad. Good job!
Lack of skilled worker is the main reason... Malaysian that have skill are better paidoff in other countries..
Malaysia is specialized towards memory chips, which isn't even an industry unique to it. It'll face tough competition even holding its own in its own industry, let alone expanding to processing chips.
Mahatir fault 22 years ruling no big achievement
Indonesia the best. Whoosh whoosh yes 👍
True, but this is mostly due to our best and brightest leaving for better opportunities and so causing the brain drain and lack of innovation, and that can mostly be blamed on the NEP(bumiputra policy) where skilled Malaysian-Chinese and Indians that make up 40% of the population don't see a future in Malaysia; Why work for a fifth of the pay while the country treats you as a 2nd-class citizen?
Jika di lihat di dalam peta Malaysia itu kedudukan kan betul2 di tengah yg mana bentuknya seperti jantung... Tempat strategik.. cuaca yg stabil masa yg sangat seimbang.. 12 jam siang 12 jam Malam..
I didn't know the latest announcements of FDI's in Malaysia were this significant. Good to hear my country being mentioned.
Indonesia the best, whoosh whoosh yes 👍
@@soluckyme910 Hello my brother from across the strait.
You dont? Maybe u lack of news within our country? Its talkin by many news outlet not just local. But yeah, this just beginning as Malaysian join BRICKS
@@dailykanzaithey simply don't care about what's going on to their country 😅
British Commonwealth country Malaysian mechanical engineers friends who works at Hong Kong, Taiwan, USA (California), Austria, Germany, Netherlands are happy to move back to Penang, Selangor, Melaka with USD$ pays 8k-9k. Malaysian mechanical engineers can speak and writing well in Mandarin and English. He can handling Germany's China Clients in Mandarin. Suzhou. 南洋中華華人。
Malaysia best bet right now for RnD is AI and Robotics. If they can hold this 2 and go big, they chances for they economic explosion is sealed. They will become the next Gargantua.
Indonesia the best. Whoosh whoosh yes 👍
Jaraknya hanya 140 /km sahaja. Malu ya.
Malaysia does as a part supporting Singapore expansion in top tech manufacturing , 2nd the semiconductor test and packaging for foreign investors relying on lower cost of labour, 3rd is the AI data centre requires water and cheap electricity that Malaysia already has, 4th the high standard of living attracts digital normads continue working remotely in Kuala Lumpur.
Construction industry is shifting. Penang/Kulim not have much semicon proj anymore. But lot of datacenter going to build up at Johor.
@@soluckyme910 Jom buat whoosh whoosh dari klcc ke kampung baru lepas tu boleh claim mendonia ahaha h asal ada 😂
Excellent video, as always 👌
And so, so interesting 🤗
Thanks a lot!
As a South African, I think Malaysia is a beautiful nation that deserves this success. With Malaysia joining BRICS, both of our nations can reach their full potential without the West mocking us. 🇿🇦 ❤ 🇲🇾
Thank you as Malaysian we appreciate it 🙏 let's hope BRICS will be success n break the monopoly from the west especially the big bully: America
@acerazak4087 I think it will. I am a South African with Cape Malay ancestry. I believe BRICS is the perfect fit for our two emerging economies, especially in terms of our historic ties. The West is in moral, economic and democratic decline, its time that Malaysia and SA start to rely on each other and not the western bullies that tell us who we can and can't be friends with or who is allowed to commit genocide and who is not.
@@delaneycloete5920 wow a south African with Cape Malay ancestry, I am a Malay btw. I am 💯 agreed with you. I am also proud that both our country stands up to these evil bully n working together to achieve common goal.
The West does not mock Malaysia and mostly dismisses SA as a dysfunctional state careening to failed state status. We once had hope for SA but endemic corruption, among other problems, have decimated growth. SA can't even keep the lights on 24/7 and has collapsing infrastructure and the government is doing nothing about. Foreign capital investment are leaving and will continue, as will SA's brain drain. Until SA changes its culture and government, until it reforms and rejects widespread corruption and tribal nepotism and cronyism it will never be worth investing in.
Malaysia is comparatively well-educated and its geography places it at the center of global trade, something SA doesn't have. SA stands to temporarily benefit from instability in the Red Sea (Houthis, etc.) which forces most ships to go around Africa instead of Suez.
AS for BRICS, it is perhaps worthy of mockery as it is more of a PR stunt than an actual cohesive entity. None of its members share common ideologies or interests and are in fact enemies (India-China) or frenemies (Russia-China), their only unifying theme is simmering resentment to real and perceived sleights from the West (which they exploit in post-colonial Africa to great effect). Brazil talks big on anti-Imperialism (mostly directed at the US--not entirely wrong) but somehow ignores Russia and China's imperialism and expansionism. None have solid and transparent banking systems and low levels of corruption and proper rule of law making everything from investments, to free trade deals, currency swaps or the ludicrous idea of shared currency difficult or impossible. India doesn't want Rubles, and Brazil has no use for Rupees, but all need USD to buy commodities on international markets. Which brings me to de-Dollarization. It's not happening anytime soon despite the rhetoric. The USD will remain the reserve currency for a long time, especially in an age of increasing instability and where Russia and China are in irreversible demographic decline and Brazil's total fertility rate is rapidly decreasing. None of the BRICS countries can rely on immigration to compensate for low birth rates because none of them are attractive to immigrants for obvious reasons. BRICS is a pipe-dream, a joke. More logical and cohesive economic and political blocs could be formed in Africa and South America.
@electrosyzygy Thank you for this comprehensive and concise reply. I'm not going to reply point by point, but I will point a few things out.
Your reply serves as proof of my statement regarding being mocked by the West, although I should perhaps have put mocked in inverted commas.
South Africa has just gone though a national election which saw a 30 year old government go into coalition with its main rival. There are positive things to come for the country, with even the financial markets in agreement.
South Africa has a parliament of proportional representation, unlike the British democracy in which the Reform Party received 15% of the vote but only 3 seats in Parliament. SA further maintains 3 independent arms of state, unlike the US supreme court giving the president the American crown, and can also change a 30 year old government without the need for insurrection by the losing party. The French and Germans are dealing with a right wing surge, with the French almost incapable of forming a government.
SA has many problems, we acknowledge this, but we thank our lucky stars that we now have a competent government which we haven't had for the last 20 years at least. We are also grateful to have enough muscle to be able to toe the line between the G20 and BRICS and not get upset when the Americans badmouth us because we don't toe their party line. We have lost all moral respect for anyone who can support a genocide.
BRICS is thankfully not ideological, but it is the best way for SA and Malaysia to look after their own citizens. South Africans, ordinary and wealthy alike, are seeing the benefit of this on a daily basis, especially seeing as our masses can afford EVs from China without 100% tariff markups on them. The West has all but abandoned us, given up on us, but through our own sheer will, as well as help from others, we are on the rise for our own people.
Obligatory Malaysian reaction:
Yay! Our unknown country got featured on Caspian report!😮😮😮
Let the people be happy man
@@shain46 i swear the only asean the west see is Singapore 😭
Obligatory dingus reaction:
Idk a country so it's an unknown country.
"unknown country".... imagine being brunei
@@the_shadow_clasher BRUNEI MENTIONED 🇧🇳🇧🇳🇧🇳
Apa yang kita tanam itu la yang kita tuai..sukur jadi anak Malaysia...😘
Sabah leaders ja yang dungu semua. Tak pandai rebut peluang.
I'm from Malaysia and good to see my favorite geopolitics RUclipsr talking about the country I'm currently living in
Indonesia the best. Whoosh whoosh yes 👍
@@soluckyme910Finish your train project first bro.
@@arian2042 whoosh whoosh yes keren guys 👍
Whoosh whoosh zimbabwe 2.0 huge debt 😂@@soluckyme910
Ha, Malaysia mentioned. But in all honesty, I am really glad with the current direction my country is taking in regards to its semiconductor industry.
Rise Malaysia Rise Asia! 🥰😍😘
Me, a Malaysian: ONE OF MY FAVOURITE YT CHANNELS IS TALKING ABOUT US OMG 🇲🇾🐯❤🔥 MALAYSIA MENTIONED RAHHHH ❤🔥🐯🇲🇾
Indonesia the best. Whoosh whoosh yes 👍
Normal day 🥴🥴🥴
Been subscribing to this channel for awhile, really enjoyed the creator's deep dive into geopolitics worldwide, but never thought my own country Malaysia would be included in his deep dive as well. So proud that Malaysia getting a shoutout.🎉
British Commonwealth country Malaysian mechanical engineers friends who works at Hong Kong, Taiwan, USA (California), Austria, Germany, Netherlands are happy to move back to Penang, Selangor, Melaka with USD$ pays 8k-9k. Malaysian mechanical engineers can speak and writing well in Mandarin and English. He can handling Germany's China Clients in Mandarin, Suzhou city.
Over proud country
It’s crazy the strategic growth happening in Malaysia and Southeast Asia. Keeping eyes in the region
Dyson has recently announced that they are moving all their operations to Malaysia too
Malaysia has all the advantages and competitive edge (KL + Penang especially). Malaysia must welcome their local talent back and even highly skilled foreign talent.
The funny thing is that most Malaysians are still skeptics about the growth we are having.lol
Astonishingly Malaysians are like 'katak bawah tempurung'. Yes now Malaysian economy is not good, but relatively not bad as Syria or Afghanistan.
Indonesia the best. Whoosh whoosh yes 👍
Malaysia should encourage the establishment of home grown companies such as offering grants for local talents and universities to establish unique AI chip manufacturing.
Some of the smartest Malaysians I know who studied in Mechatronis, Aviation Engineering, and Actuarial Science eventually moved to Singapore and the US.
Malaysian salaries didn't justified for them staying back, they're earning 10-20 times the salaries offered in Malaysia.
Brain drain is a real issue.
Indonesia the best. Whoosh whoosh yes 👍 18:23
Yeah it ludicrously hard to scale up a company here without encountering bs law
true, i'd like to add one thing though. Its not that Malaysians don't move back, they always do, its just that their careers are always elsewhere
@@soluckyme910 gaji juta2 pak tapi masih miskin🤣🤣...warga bule gak bisa melabur di dunia konoha pak🤣
They probably also wanted actual freedom of religion, which doesn't' exist in Malaysia
It's good thing that microchip companies prefer to invest in Malaysia over the Philippines because in the Philippines, they aren't allowed to buy and own lands to put up their microchip manufacturing plants and as corporations, they aren't allowed to invest more than 40% equity and the rest of the 60% equity must be invested by Filipino corporation partners.
Malaysia meanwhile: cutting corporate tax gradually to 20% from 40% in the 80s
Malaysia is specialized towards memory chips, which isn't even an industry unique to it. It'll face tough competition even holding its own in its own industry, let alone expanding to processing chips.
KL + Penang combined can be the regional tech hub for ASEAN and even Asia. 10% growth per year should do. Latest stat for Q2 already show 5.8% nationally so KL + Pen should be about double that
@@leealex24 true, also KL still has many vacant room for offices
Sabah belongs to Malaysia and filipina is belong to China
I worked in a company that does a Malaysia government project back 10 years ago. The government wanted to setup a free trade zone for foregin tech investors to come and setup companies with benefit of tax free. The government did not want to pay anything to build up the facilities, my old company thought this was a great opportunity and invested a lot with the telco infrastructure on a certain zone. We were told that a lot of investors registered and ready to move in. After two year past, we only had 1% occupancy rate. At the time I had weirdest fairwell as nearly everyone in our company was sacked. Well I hope they can do better this time. I wish them luck.
Church zone and what telco?
Malaysia has been neutral ground between US, Taiwan & China
Indonesia the best. Whoosh whoosh yes 👍
If im not mistaken theres study where they interview bunch of malaysian wheter they prefer china or US the %of favour almost balanced
Are they not joining BRICS?
@@delaneycloete5920we are. But Malaysia is one of those countries that would probably never see a big war for at least the next 100 years
erm no Malaysia bias to China but not Taiwan, we don't even have an embassy of Taiwan
Malaysia has all the advantages and competitive edge (KL + Penang especially). Malaysia must welcome their local talent back and even highly skilled foreign talent.
those local "talent" should stay out. they've made their bed.
@@enkryptron as if they'd come back even if you begged them. they left for a good reason. we all know why
Hard lo. Too much 包头佬
@@bryanchen4879 cant you read?. we ask them to stay out
@@enkryptron before they said they can get better life in US and EU, let's hope they stay there forever and don't come back here. 😂
Many global companies are shifting from Singapore to Malaysia recently.
Yes.. i think SG is going down already and Malaysia will overtake SG soon… Malaysia boleh!
@@waulaueh not with out free trade
Malaysia's strategic location offers significant advantages that make it an attractive hub for various industries, including the semiconductor sector. In my opinion, Intel, Nvidia, and Infineon have played pivotal roles in advancing Malaysia's semiconductor industry, contributing to its potential emergence as a significant player in global chip production.
Oh damnnn we moving up
Lesgo my fellow Malaysians
im soo happy to see you upload. first time I clicked a sponsor because I really like your videos and want to support you. great video
Great to have more content!
Since the new government established under Anwar Ibrahim .he really focus on data centre and semiconductor
caspian report has done it. now im waiting for economic explained to make one about malaysia. thank you shirvan and caspian report
The problem with Malaysia is the government never follows through on anything. So many half assed, half finished initiatives litter the landscape you can’t drive 15 minutes without running into giant abandoned buildings.
Exactly this. Malaysia government has been promising these grand plans over the years and how many are fulfilled? Singaporeans are laughing
So true. there a construction site near my home that is discontinued for the past 5 YEAR
And too many complaints
Good to know all government are the same
@@akatsukihajime6100sometimes it’s the private sector’s fault too. a lot of abandoned construction sites because developers decide to stop. i also partially blame the government for approving these projects. many of these companies just want to make money, like housing projects, but i think the government should be more strict and reject a lot of these projects based on outlook analysis
It’s a pity that OSRAM cancelled their new fab in Malaysia
Smart move
If you read the news on OSRAM it's more about they are losing Apple as business partner that cause them not to expand. It's not because of political reason.
Indonesia the best. Whoosh whoosh yes 👍
@@nashwise4everGMyes, cancellation of micro-LED. This is the right fact and not such other twister that dislike Kulim.
@@delmaregalsit’s not a “smart move”. It was the only move / outcome because Apple cancelled micro-LED orders for their products and decided for OLED instead.
Comprehensive documentary. Keep up the good work 👍🏻
Had to agree, our country is one of the most luckiest countries in the world. No war, no natural disasters, no crisis, a ton of natural resources, neutral weather. We malaysians regardless of race all hope that malaysia can continue foward to be a developed tech country but also keeping our heritage from being engulfed by globalisation.
I not saying this as racial issues but if you realize, every land Allah give to muslim is rich with natural resources
Arab with oil, Afghanistan with precious stones and oil, Malaysia and Indonesia are rich with gold and spices.
Meanwhile Europe got none of this, their own resources already drain more than 100 years ago. No wonder they invaded other countries
This is what a blessing is. Let’s be thankful and God will give more blessing to us.
Yeah ur actually right ngl. Indeed Allah is the most humble to his creation
Thanks to our people - mainly Malay who is Laidback, chinese who is mostly Money minded, Indian - adding the color. So its a blend.
...but plenty of corrupted (mohamedan) politicians
Congrats to Malaysia. Let us make it a reality.
Indonesia the best. Whoosh whoosh yes 👍
mangkrak
This would be the second time for Malaysia to become a global chip giant again. In the 1990s, Malaysia was the largest chip producer in the world before most of the chip companies moved their production to China.
Hard drives, controller chips
That was what Malaysia producing, bottom-dollar items.
we are a small country with a limited army. In order to remain safe, Tun Mahathir placed foreign economic interests here. which is certain that the country protects Malaysia for their own interests as well.
US give free radar to Malaysia and Malaysia joined excersice for air force, seem suspicous
Singapura have biggest Navy than Malaysia
Bottom line, i don't want here to end up as Ukraine.
@@arx117 Fun Fact, Mahathir signed a defense pact with the US in 1982. This allows Malaysia to save money on defence while spend the rest on foreign business. That's why we are close partners to US military.
Malaysia friends with everyone.
Despite the never ending predictions of her demise by a certain community, Malaysia is still steadily charting its future with balanced judgments. It will never be a Singapore, Taiwan or Hong Kong.
the Malay race is not as competitive as the East Asian, Chinese , korean or Japanese but strangely they have higher quality of life since they value other things , family, balanced development, religion ,peace of mind. If you are in China , Japan or Korea you get the feeling their whole life is spend at work ,bt in Malaysia you see well balanced life and i dare to say a better quality of life.
Malaysia Good Country ❤❤❤ 🇲🇾
Meanwhile minimum wages here are still just Rm1500 around 350 usd. As a fresh grad degree holder wages are just Rm2500 around 600 usd per month 😅
Terperangkap dengan status negara medium income 😊
@@cmfad7427x boleh cakap middle income, upper middle sbb middle income ada 2 jenis
This is due to exchange rate. The RM was much stronger in the past
1500 luar kl selangor. 1500 kat klang valley mmg tak kan dpt pekerja. Kiosk f&b rata2 offer 2k.
Malaysia quite misfortune in become high income country. In the 60s they fought against communist until 90s. then just when they about to recover, the 1998 financial crisis hit. then again in 2000s they about to recover, same thing happened 2008 financial crisis hit, then again in 2014. After that they gain good momentum in recovering 2017 saw the economy booming and then like usual political instability and corona virus hit them push them back down.
All these shocks also affected other countries, not just Malaysia. The real problem in Malaysia is a lack of educated labour and brain drain. The racial policies of successive UMNO governments have entrenched a system in which ethnic Malays feel entitled to subsidized housing, school and university places irrespective of merit and guaranteed jobs - all purely based on their race. While other non-Malay (but still Malaysian citizens) groups compete on merit they see no hope in a country stuck in the middle income trap where jobs are handed out based not on merit and performance but on racial quotas. This is at the heart of the problem, and unless the Anwar administration gets real and tackles this effective apartheid Malaysia's 2030 dream will turn out to be another false dawn like 'Vision 2020', which was preceded by Najib looting billions in taxpayer funds for corrupt use and personal enrichment. Anwar needs to reverse the brain drain. To do that it needs to rectify the failed race based policies. I was speaking to a business owner from Europe a few years ago, who was looking to expand in SE Asia. I recommended Malaysia, but when he learned about the Malay job quota rules, he lost interest - corporations don't like to operate in nations where hiring is dictated by political agendas. Failed political agendas. Read Dr M's 'The Malay Dilemma' for more info.
These are all excuses. Every major economy went through that. Saw how Singapore and Korea recovered and prospered, but Malaysia? Lazy culture, takpe mindset, rasuah, racism, are all the cause of our own misfortune.
@@missiejin Agreed.
@@missiejinKorea economy was propped up by USA to fight China and North Korea. So was Japan. Singapore is just as developed as KL.
@@azhariarifyes...plus we're not western puppet where they could build their military base on foreign soil...it's like we doubt our own people to protect their land...just like the old time
Malaysia already did great from the 1970s up to 1997-98. The peak and symbol by the great klcc..
Unfortunately, a man with his peoples ruined the country for about two decades. Now, they try hard to fix the damage. Hopefully, they will fulfil all the promised...🤔
Who is orangnya bro ?
Growth of the Malaysian semiconductor industry is at the expense of Taiwan & South Korea.
Diversification is good
@@user-op8fg3ny3jTaiwan is always on the edge of an emperor's army.
As if Malaysians were as smart and hardworking as Taiwanese. Malaysia needs to lift its affirmative action
policies against non-Malays if they want a shot as competing with the dynamic, intelligent, hardworking East Asians. Malaysia has plenty of Chinese. Let them use their talents fully.
@@bluebottlecoffeeaddict6529 affirmative action is supported by the US. They know that certain groups are more deprived than others so by giving them opportunities it brings equality
@@bluebottlecoffeeaddict6529 I think Malaysian of ethnic Chinese descent can be “utilized” as much as Taiwanese Engineers.
After all many are of very similar culture.
A pays of MYR 15K-30K per month
You will fill the factory in no time with decent talent
But, will The Malaysia Gov fix that terrible Penang traffic too?
Alhamdulillah Malaysia Majuuuu.
Saya orang Indonesia,dan saya Suka Lihat Malaysia Maju,biar Pemerintah Indonesia Nangis.
jangan macam tu, biar kita sama-sama maju.
@@dadangkkurniawan8442 Indonesia yang maju dan kaya adalah bagus untuk negara-negara jiran termasuk Malaysia.
Impressive! As a Malaysian I am impressed with the detail you are able to gathered and structured out so well in this video.
I subscribed because I’m a Malaysian
Is true that we are facing political and racial / religious issues but we citizens lives in harmony
PAP & DAP are the problem since 1963 prior that led to the racial tension in Singapore 1964-1965 and in 1969 in Kuala Lumpur...ever since that DAP continue to stir racial harmony in Malaysia with its racist tactics in politics and twisted laws - people in Malaysia should ban DAP since 1967 - they are real culprits ever since.
Just like the former Yugoslavia
@@marcusaurelius6012even today, Balkan are not rich as malaysia
Special mention for politicians. Most of us tolerate each other because we don't want our children to grow up in an unstable country. Of course there are issues, but it will disappear after 2-3 months. Politicians bring up issues only to stay relevant and for political mileage.
@@marcusaurelius6012 malaysia are even richer than china and russia. Yugoslavia who.
As a Singaporean, looking at the history of both of countries, Malaysia needs to stabilize their government and racial and religious politics to see progress. Your video makes it very positive for Malaysia, but the reality is not close to it. Malaysian government has continually disappoint Singapore as well as their own Malaysians. I wish the best for them, and i think Anwar on is headed in the right direction. Hopefully he can command the stability needed in Malaysian politics and given the sufficient opportunity to drive the growth.
Remember, Malaysia has so much resources. Singapore has nothing. Everything is expensive in Singapore. Malaysia has energy independence, there should be no reason for Malaysia to not outpace Singapore, just like how China has overtook Hong Kong in progress.
Indonesia the best. Whoosh whoosh yes 👍
As a malay in Malaysia, I heavily support this.
Politicians keep using religion to win votes and most Malays keep falling for that dumb trick.
In the end, corruption and incompetent leadership is what we get.
Not only that as it's difficult to establish a stable and harmonious environment with the constant racism in Malaysia (illegal immigrants is another story though).
Plus most Malays and bumiputeras relied heavily on their privileges just to get a decent job.
I'm not saying Malaysia should be secular and liberal though
Extra: For Malays, I think most of us should change our thinking when picking a career.
A lot of us still look for the easy way out. For example, many SPM graduates only have bare minimum scores to get into politeknik.
Why do they do this?
"Lepas SPM aku kerja grab je lah",
"So aku taknak study"
(Translation: After SPM I wanna work as a delivery driver, so i don't need to study)
We have just as much potential to become doctors as other people do yet our country has a shortage of doctors. We had to take in foreign workers for this.
As if SG politics is democratic… M happy with malaysia’ democracy which the best in the region
Henryhoe
Singapore was not exactly a backward island when Malaysia kicked Singapore out in 1965.
It has been a thriving island for more than 1 century.
In 1965 ,Singapore GDP' s percapitq is already the highest in South East Asia after Brunei.
And Singapore is unique as it did not suffer brutality under Malaysian rule.
If you care to be observant, you can appreciate that Singapore was lucky as it did not to wage war to get sovereignty.
Look at Timur Leste, South Philippines or South Thailand or Acheh ,Papua and you would realise how benevolent then PM If Malaysia back then.
I am not denying the
@@shamshulanuar7718 Seriously Singapore NEVER wanted to be independent in the first place they were EXPELED, voted out by the parliment. Wage war to get sovereignty?? WTF? There was no brutality involved since Singapore was having a similar status like Sabah and Sarawak; The Federation of Malaysia was formed when Malaya, Singapore, Sabah and Sarawak signed the formation. Note that Brunei declined the invitation to join the Federation, for what its worth till date it was a good decision on their part.
Malaysia (more like Malaya political parties at that time) main concern of Singapore at that time was their differences in political view and how to spearhead the Malaysian Federation at that time. That differences in oppinion lead to UMNO lead parties (BN - BN at that time was huge and they single handedly dominate Malaysian Federation politics at that time this include Sabah and Sarawak but not in Singapore) to vote Singapore out of the Federation.
Now all is history and we could see what came out of each leaders visions at that time.
If you like the west : Malaysia was a European colony for over 4 centuries.
If you like China and Chinese : Malaysia population is 20% Chinese.
If you are a Muslim : Malaysia is a Muslim majority country.
Malaysia basically appeals everyone.
Or the opposite?
** I am from Singapore and i can tell you FINALLY i am proud to actually say that Msia is my neighbour - reason being they really CHANGE and IMPROVE towards being a useful (and proper) nation that is within ASEAN. If you are wondering on what grounds am i trying to say this, it is completely NO secret that the previous (msian) government is mainly built up on JEALOUSY, lack of cooperation and friendly dialogue with Singapore. As of now - Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim has proven to QUITE IMPRESSIVE. When he first came to power he was FULL OF IDEAS to enhance TRADE AND ECONOMIC TIES with Singapore. Which is why MANY of PM Anwar smart economic plan is focused around Johor (which is linked to Singapore via the causeway.)
( ** For those that don't know - the previous strategy of malysia that completely FAILED, was to excessively over shower resources and money into kula lumpur to be a "global and international city" - this was the reason why malaysia failed as a country the past 30 years. It was a disastrous and tragedy idea that malaysians needs to do their best to bury with their previous administration and at least over shadow it with some form of international success.)
singapore is malay land. it is temasek under johor government
@@bella8145-d9z terpaling bangsa johor..
Damn your comment feels performative as hell as a malaysian i had to cringe 🤮🤮
Yes, a rich neighbour is a good neighbour. This is also the reason why Singapore is investing in Indonesia.
Things would not change if the conservative Malays themselves doesn't change their mindset. All those protest against foreign investments because the company model doesn't align with their religious beliefs, and the malays that forcefully wanting the Malay language to be prioritized by neglecting English, these would be the downfall of Malaysia and no one else to blame but themselves.
But that doesn't mean we could eventually leaving Malay language for good. Getting juggling on having polyglot mentality are especially should be upheld on the same par as having our mother tongue too.
shallow minded people like I is the downfall of Msia
Conservative Malays didn't vote for PH during ge-14 😂😂😂
So, China can use mandarin, but Malays cannot use BM? When in Rome, do what the Romans do!
Not to mention the inequility in treating the other ethnic minorities, that law should've been long gone, we all work the same hours, we should expect the same reward. Plus the amount of corruption going on with influx of foreign workers really destroy the landscape for the locals, the under cutting of pays and low wages are all a result of this
After hundreds of Video,Finally content about malaysia is arrive.Thanks from,Malaysians viewers here since 2016
Majulah Malaysia! 🇲🇾🫡
So proud to be a Malaysian !
proud of what ???
@@halalpork4667 not much positives in Malaysia. so a YT video about malaysia is good enough to be proud.
malaysia is one of the diplomacy master. i have good faith in malaysia's skill to sort out the geopolitic issues of the region
true, we just like to fight online, but otherwise everything is relatively peaceful
@@komradblin2189 on this i can be proud at we very good at diplomatic relations thats why our passports is top 12 in the world
May Allah bless Malaysia and Indonesia.
Aminn
Ameen.
Aminn
Malaysia mentioned
The Malaysian MYR has been the top performing currency in the world in the last few months.
Thailand:😲
Philippines:😲
Indonesia:😲
Vietnam:😲
Malaysia:🗿
😮
Semua negara itu di bawah Malaysia...
1.Singapore
2.Brunei
3.Malaysia
TOP 3 countries IN ASEAN...the rest are LOW...🙃🙃🙃
Sebagai orang Indonesia, saya selalu iri terhadap negara tetangga yang 10kali telah maju meninggalkan tetangga, jadi tak heran knp setiap tahun warga Indonesia banyak yang berganti kewarganegaraan, karena minim lapangan pekerjaan, bagi org indo ayo kita kerja diluar negeri jadi warga sana, INDONESIA MAU HANCUR ❤
Malaysia more superpower country than indonesia😮
Proud to be malaysian🇲🇾
Malaysia mendonia🇲🇾
Aduh kenapa mau sangat Indonesia hancur, gak apek, lebih bagus ikut seperti negara Europa, setiap Negera di Europa maju dan setiap Negara Europa ada kekuatan sendiri, win win situation untuk semua orang di South East Asia
@@sovietdeathstroke6713Indonesia jgn takut apek ri akan beri adukasi,selagi apek ri ada Indonesia dalam keadaan selamat.
Ya pegi aje bos...elu jgn cmn jd beban di mari yg gk punya sumbangsih😂😂😂😂
@@imanmanimanman7667 iyo mas, Amiin🙏🏽🤲🏽
Excellent content
Every. Time.
Merci
If not their own company , everything is meaningless , is just being a role in someone games . Malaysia need their own giants company .
meaningless? Do you know how much foreign investment can contribute to a country economy ???
U better living in the jungle and produce ur own food...😂😂
@@joeyh3167 South Korea and Taiwan went big in semiconductor because there have their own indegenous,local champion and investing in R&D for years. You cannot expect foreign big companies will dump their latest cutting edge technology in Malaysia, Malaysia, through it local champion, must involve in the global supply chain.
Bersabar Dan lihat kemajuan satu tingkat ke satu tingkat seterusnya...takkan jadi sehari Dua..ayyo
@@mohdhafiz7871usa also collect foreign talent to build the giant company in usa. Whats the difference
the improvement of KL was necessary. it's true that state/provincial development should also have kept pace, but the rise of KL was never against Penang per se.
Indonesia the best. Whoosh whoosh yes 👍
Yeah im a bit puzzled when the host said that in the video like when did KL envy on Penang lol 😅😂
@@soluckyme910Mangkrak
@@matmotor7572 Indonesia maju guys i👍
@@matmotor7572 Indonesia maju guys, whoosh whoosh yes 👍
Great video man! Learnt so much about my own country. Just one tiny thing, you mentioned Infineon plans to expand to Malacca but they've already been there for at least 3 decades. I should know - I'm originally from Malacca and even did an internship at Infineon there haha
The problem with Malaysia is the political instability and corruption.
Malaysia is politically stable now under Anwar Ibrahim.I think He is also The Least corrupt Leader in Malaysia so far
@@Hasanaljadid we shall see.
@@Hasanaljadid Least corrupt leader? Who is his deputy PM again?🤣
Malaysia to the world🇲🇾
Malaysia needs to produce more engineers. A lot more. Its racist policies against non-Malays work against its development.
Exactly. I’m 1/2 Malaysia and many of Malaysian that were forced to study abroad never when home.
But I still love Malaysia and all its people and wish it well.
Mandarin speaking only
@@azrulaznizan ?
@@azrulaznizan If some Malays and Indians can learn Mandarin then surely you can too. If you don't want to learn a new language then let others that are more suitable take the job, it is not racist to want people who have language literacy for a job.
True, laser focus on talent.
What a wonderful video. Very informative. Malaysia is still in transition from a middle income per capita towards high income per capita, eventually I believe Malaysia will be more successful in time. What I'm more worried is the escalating cost of living. Once a country becomes a first world nation with high income per capita, there's no way back on the outrageous high cost of living and high cost of operations for business.
Malaysia has always had a lot of potential. But historically, it has been held back by its own internal divisions. Power is centralised yet fundamentally insecure in such a massive, ethnically diverse country.
And as we have seen from Penang's example, when give a choice between economic success and political security, KL will always choose political security.
Affirmative action
How tf malaysia is centralised? Ffs we practicing federal system. In fact we are the most decentralised in Asean. Each Malaysian state sometimes act like their own country, have their own constitution and laws. This guy..
KL + Penang combined can be the regional tech hub for ASEAN and even Asia. 10% growth per year should do.
Its called a FEDERATION STATE dude !!.. Each country enjoys its freedom in land, mineral resources ..
And some state has sacrificed for other state to develope. 85% of PENANG Fresh Water comes from Kedah..😂. Penang dosent hv to pay a cent to maintain the FOREST RESERVES and Loss of tax /usage.
So come on... lets not be HYPOCRITE. Everyone helps laaa..
@@user-op8fg3ny3jaffirmative action fixed a lot of issues
Probably no body talk about the effect of fast growing economy bring catastrophic effect to the ppl and culture...while malaysia has done well in maintaining the status quo between them.
CONGRADULATION!!! Truly wish Malaysian better
USA will try to make Malaysia into a junior ally if Malaysia wants to be a chip making giant
Yes, especially now that they indent on joining BRICS
Nah, can't do it without the permission from its master the same way the USA needs permission from them before selling arms to certain countries. Yes, it's the law.
Wrong. China has all the talent and dominance in emerging photonic semiconductors on graphene, which are 30,000 times faster and use 1-million times less energy, which will spell the end of silicon chips, like how mobile phones killed landline phones. China has the only working general-purpose photonic chip prototypes and 98% of the engineering science for it - and all the rare earths required to make it. These will be commercialized in 4 years, then game over.
Reling heavily on investment from foreign companies is not so good in the long run. You need some equivalent of Samsung, Hynix, TSMC or MediaTek to domesticate global semiconductor industry to itself. Foreign companies will leave Malaysia once its wage and land price become expensive for middle-income economy.
you think your phone can only run only with microchips? majority of non semiconductor firms that supplies non semiconductors to those firms like pcbs, wires, memories, transistor are made by malaysian firm.. we also has our own fabrication local semiconductor firms like silterra mention in the video...
@@zarith87 my man, that is not what he is saying at all. He's saying Malaysia needs to find a way domesticate the entire production chain and take a piece of the tech production pie because guess what happens to our local upstream component manufacturers once their clients run to the next cheap place?
Our historical hint of what could be the result is the Japanese economic stagnation and industrial implosion of the 90s
Malaysia's saving grace however will always be that the Malaysian economy is quite diversified and not reliant on one industry doing well. But the pain will be felt and stagnation will happen. Just look at the damage to china done from manufacturers moving to vietnam, thailand and indonesia because the chinese wage is now too expensive. Their government isn't being obvious about how painful it is for the country yet but from the common people it is very obvious damage was done and the world is watching how the chinese government will react.
Thanks again 💙
Your old back ground music
Was perfect 💚.
Those new ones
Are disturbing ⁉️
Type-type di Malaysia, tolong tengok ini video, sama-sama kita mengembang ekonomi kita. Kita sama rakyat Malaysia, mari kerjasama ❤
Setuju, sy dah 11tahun dlm bidang semicon cip.
Thanks!
Thank you kindly.
Thats very well researched. Great vid