MAPPING POVERTY HOT SPOTS IN PENINSULAR MALAYSIA USING SPATIAL AUTOCORRELATION ANALYSIS

Authors

  • M. Rafee Majid UNIVERSITI TEKNOLOGI MALAYSIA
  • Abdul Razak Jaffar UNIVERSITI TEKNOLOGI MALAYSIA
  • Noordini Che Man UNIVERSITI TEKNOLOGI MALAYSIA
  • Mehrdad Vaziri UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH FLORIDA
  • Mohamed Sulemana UNIVERSITY FOR DEVELOPMENT STUDIES, GHANA

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21837/pm.v14i4.144

Keywords:

Poverty Distribution, Spatial Analysis, Malaysia

Abstract

In September 2000 The Millennium Summit adopted the UN Millennium Declaration, committing nations to a new global partnership to reduce extreme poverty with a deadline of 2015. Eight Millennium Development Goals were formulated of which the eradication of poverty given top priority. However, Malaysia's participation with the UN in dealing with poverty, precede this when it committed itself with the United Nations Decade for the Eradication of Poverty (1997-2006) programme, which was then reinforced when the Millennium Declaration was made in 2000. Nationally, poverty eradication as well as bridging the inequality gap among the major ethnic groups and states has been the main development goal in Malaysia's development agenda since independence. In this regards, the principle of “growth with equity has been the central theme in all Malaysia's development policies and efforts since independence. Although Malaysia has made significant achievements in reducing the incidence of aggregate poverty across the country from 8.9% in 1995 down to 1.7% in 2012, there still exist pockets of poverty in the rural areas, in certain states/regions and among ethnic groups, as well as in some urban areas. This shows that formulating planning and policy implementation to eradicate poverty now needs to be more spatially focused for the implementation to be more effective. Recognising the incidence of poverty through standard statistical data tables alone is no longer adequate in formulating planning and policy implementation. Through spatial autocorrelation analysis the pattern of distribution of poverty in space over a period of time can easily be visualised and hotspots of incidence of poverty identified. This paper attempts to show how this analysis can assist in focusing efforts to eradicate poverty in Malaysia.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Department of Statistics Malaysia. (2010). Monthly Statistical Bulletin. Retrieved from http://www .statistics. gov.my

Henderson, J. David Hulme, Richard Phillips and Noorul Ainur M Nur. (2005).

Economic Governance and Poverty Reduction in Malaysia. Globalisation and Poverty. May, 2005.

IFAD. (1998). Annual Report 1997: International Fund For Agricultural Development. Kamarudin Muhamed and Shahriman Haron. (2011). Poverty Mapping: An Effective Approach in Determining The Poor Area

– Case Study Of Johor, Journal of The Department of Statistics, Malaysia, Volume 1, 2011,Department Of Statistics, Malaysia, 2011

Misturelli, F., & Heffernan, C. (2010). The Concept Of Poverty: A Synchronic Perspective. Progress In Development Studies, 10(1), 35-58.

Muda, M.A, (2005). Implementation of The First United Nations Decade for The Eradication of Poverty (1997-2006), At The Second Committee of The 60th Session The United Nations General Assembly New York, 15 November 2005.

OECD (2003, 2010). Rural Poverty Report. The Challenge of Ending Rural Poverty. New York: Oxford University Press Inc.

Osutongun, A. (1975). Poverty As An Issue In Rural Development Policy: A Case Study From The Western States Of Nigeria. In Poverty In Nigeria, The Nigerian Economics Society, Department of Economics, University of Ibadan, 191–199.

Steiner, S. (2007). Decentralisation and Poverty: Conceptual Framework and Application To Uganda. Public Administration and Development, 27, 175–185.UNDP, (2007). Malaysia Measuring and Monitoring Poverty and Inequality, United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), Malaysia.

United Nations. (2011). Malaysia: The Millennium Development Goals At 2010. United Nations Country Team, Kuala Lumpur: Malaysia.

Voelkner, H. (1981). Monitoring Poverty By Basic Needs Items In Clayton, E. and Pétry, F. Editors, . Monitoring Systems For Agricultural And Rural Development Projects, 12.

Worldbank. (2000). World Development Report 2000/2001. Attacking Poverty. Oxford University Press For The World Bank.

Zainal Azman Bin Abu Seman. (2013). Poverty and Inequality in the Context of Malaysia Development Strategy, Poverty and Inequality in Asia workshop, Bali, Indonesia on 7-9 May 2013.

Zulkarnain A. Hattal & Isahaque Ali. (2013). Poverty Reduction Policies In Malaysia: Trends, Strategies And Challenges, Asian Culture And History; Vol. 5, No. 2; 2013. Published By Canadian Center of Science And Education

Downloads

Published

2016-07-30

How to Cite

Majid, M. R., Jaffar, A. R., Che Man, N., Vaziri, M., & Sulemana, M. (2016). MAPPING POVERTY HOT SPOTS IN PENINSULAR MALAYSIA USING SPATIAL AUTOCORRELATION ANALYSIS. PLANNING MALAYSIA, 14(4). https://doi.org/10.21837/pm.v14i4.144

Most read articles by the same author(s)

1 2 > >>