Malaysia

Wealth tax push sparks fear of capital flight amid cost-of-living crisis

A proposal to impose a two per cent wealth tax on Malaysia’s richest citizens has triggered an increasingly polarised debate, with supporters arguing it could ease mounting fiscal pressures

Updated 2 months ago · Published on 11 May 2026 7:44AM

Wealth tax push sparks fear of capital flight amid cost-of-living crisis
Critics warn it risks driving investors, businesses and skilled workers out of the country - May 11, 2026

by Ian McIntyre

FRESH calls for a wealth tax on Malaysia’s richest individuals have intensified debate over how the government should respond to rising living costs, widening inequality and mounting fiscal pressure linked to the global energy crisis.

Former Klang MP Charles Santiago has urged the government to introduce a two per cent levy on the country’s wealthiest citizens, arguing that extraordinary profits accumulated by the ultra-rich should be used to help offset the economic burden facing ordinary Malaysians.

The proposal comes as Malaysia grapples with soaring subsidy costs, elevated fuel prices and growing concern over the impact of instability in the Middle East on global energy markets.

Santiago said the government was confronting an estimated RM10 billion fiscal shortfall after introducing spending reductions aimed at containing rising subsidy expenditure caused by shortages in oil and diesel supplies.

He argued that a targeted wealth tax could provide urgently needed revenue while easing pressure on lower- and middle-income households already struggling with inflation and higher living expenses.

Citing reports on the rapid expansion of private wealth, Santiago noted that the fortunes of Malaysia’s 50 richest individuals had increased by RM103 billion within a year, bringing their combined wealth to RM458 billion.

According to Santiago, even a modest tax on extreme wealth could contribute more than RM1 billion to state revenues.

However, the proposal has drawn concern from the business community, with industry leaders warning that aggressive taxation could weaken Malaysia’s attractiveness to investors and accelerate the outflow of capital and skilled labour.

William Ng, president of the Small and Medium Enterprises Association of Malaysia, said the country was already experiencing the effects of policies perceived as unfriendly to businesses and high-income professionals.

“The threat of capital flight is already a reality, as Malaysia’s fiscal policies are driving talent and capital toward more tax-friendly regional economies,” he said.

Ng argued that the wealth tax proposal reflected a short-term response to deeper structural weaknesses that policymakers had failed to address.

“We have rather ignored the issues of competitiveness and leakages.”

He warned that continued reliance on higher taxes would not resolve long-term economic challenges and could instead discourage entrepreneurship, investment and business expansion.

Malaysia’s small and medium-sized enterprises are already under pressure from existing fiscal measures, including a 24 per cent corporate tax rate and a two per cent dividend tax introduced under the 2025 federal budget.

Ng said these policies were contributing to what he described as a “self-inflicted exodus” of Malaysians seeking opportunities in lower-tax economies such as Singapore.

“We lose roughly 135,000 Malaysians annually. This is the primary reason Malaysia is failing to achieve the 8% to 9% annual growth rates we are capable of,” he said.

Figures cited from the World Bank and TalentCorp indicate that approximately 1.86 million Malaysians are currently living and working overseas, while the country’s brain drain rate has reached 5.5 per cent of the working-age population.

Supporters of the proposal insist the government can no longer ignore widening inequality as living standards deteriorate for many households.

Senior lawyer S. Raveentharan said policymakers appeared to be running out of options to contain rising prices and protect vulnerable groups.

“We have blamed the external factors such as Iranian war but the average working class person is not bothered about who is causing it. They want to know to how to survive to put food on the table daily. We must find ways to alleviate their burden.”

Raveentharan warned that Malaysia risked becoming increasingly divided between a wealthy elite and struggling lower-income communities if stronger redistributive policies were not introduced.

“We need to reduce the gap of the wealthy and the poor,” he said.

The growing dispute over wealth taxation reflects broader anxiety over Malaysia’s economic direction as the country faces slower regional growth, volatile energy prices and intensifying competition for investment and skilled talent across Southeast Asia. - May 11, 2026

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