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Data InsightsMalaysia is an outlier: richer than its neighbors but doing worse on child nutrition

Malaysia is an outlier: richer than its neighbors but doing worse on child nutrition

Childhood stunting in Malaysia has increased in recent decades, while its neighbours have made progress

Line chart showing prevalence of stunting among children younger than five in selected Southeast Asian countries from 2000 to 2024, y-axis 0% to 60%, x-axis years 2000 to 2024. Most countries (Laos, Philippines, Bangladesh, Indonesia, Cambodia, Vietnam, Thailand) show steady declines in stunting over the period. Malaysia is the notable exception, with rates rising from about 20% to 24% in the last 25 years and crossing above some neighbours by 2024 — this is highlighted by an on-chart note: "Rates in Malaysia have increased from 20% to 24% in the last 25 years." Data source in footer: World Health Organization (2025).

If we look at income levels across countries in South and Southeast Asia, Malaysia is far richer than many of its neighbors. Its gross domestic product (GDP) per capita has almost doubled since 2000. It is now more than three times higher than that of Cambodia, Laos, and Bangladesh, and more than double that of Indonesia and Vietnam.

But if we look at measures of childhood nutrition, Malaysia is not doing better. You can see this in the chart. While its neighbors have made progress on childhood stunting — the share of children under 5 who are too short for their age — Malaysia has regressed. In 2000, 20% of children were “stunted”, and this has increased to 24%.

Malaysia also stands out at a global level. When we plot the share of children who are stunted against GDP per capita, the country is a clear outlier for its level of income. Most other countries at this level of economic development have rates below 10%.

Malaysia also does relatively poorly on other measures of malnutrition. On childhood wasting — when a child’s weight is too low for their height — it has one of the highest rates in the region.

The country is off track or worsening on most global nutrition targets.

Read our explainer on stunting: how it’s measured, and why it matters.

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