PUTRAJAYA, July 28 — The median monthly wage for Malaysia’s formal sector rose 5.5 per cent to RM3,000 in March, up from RM2,844 last year, showed the Employee Wages Statistics (Formal Sector) Report for the First Quarter of 2025, released by the Statistics Department (DOSM) today.
In a statement today, chief statistician Datuk Seri Mohd Uzir Mahidin said the increase reflects the country’s continued economic growth and the impact of the revised minimum wage policy, which has positively influenced the labour market.
As of March, he said the formal sector workforce stood at 6.8 million — 55.1 per cent men and 44.9 per cent women.
The median wage for male employees remained at RM3,000, while female employees saw a 6.5 per cent increase to RM2,982, compared with a 3.4 per cent rise for men.
The highest year-on-year wage growth was recorded among workers under 20, with their median wage rising 13.3 per cent to RM1,700, largely driven by the reimplementation of the minimum wage policy in February. However, a slight drop was observed in the number of workers aged 20 to 24.
He added that the mining and quarrying sector posted the highest median wage at RM8,800, although it accounted for just 0.6 per cent of total formal employment. The agriculture sector remained the lowest, with a median wage of RM2,200.
Geographically, Kuala Lumpur logged the highest median monthly wage at RM4,445 in March, followed by Selangor at RM3,300.
At the other end of the spectrum, Sabah posted a median wage of RM2,000, while Kelantan and Perlis recorded the lowest at RM1,800.
Uzir said 27.4 per cent of Malaysian formal sector workers earned below RM2,000 per month as of March, down 3.8 percentage points from 31.2 per cent in the same month last year.
He added that a percentile analysis revealed workers in the bottom 10th percentile earned RM1,700 or less, while those in the top 10th percentile earned at least RM11,000 per month.
“This reflects an income gap where the top 10 per cent earn six times more than the bottom 10 per cent,” he said.
— Bernama