Malaysia: Economic growth ebbs in the first quarter of 2026
Deceleration in line with market estimates: Malaysia’s GDP increased 5.4% in annual terms in Q1, following a downwardly revised 6.2% expansion in the previous quarter. The figure was revised up from the flash estimate of 5.3% and was largely in line with the deceleration that market analysts had projected.
On a seasonally adjusted quarter-on-quarter basis, GDP stagnated in Q1, following 1.4% growth in the previous quarter.
Slowdown in domestic demand weighs on GDP growth: Compared to the prior quarter’s data, readings in Q1 softened for private consumption (+4.7% on a year-on-year basis vs +5.6% in Q4), government consumption (+4.1% vs +6.6% in Q4), fixed investment (+7.3% vs +9.3% in Q4), exports of goods and services (+5.2% vs +6.3% in Q4) and imports of goods and services (+4.6% vs +9.0% in Q4).
Domestic demand remained the main engine of GDP growth, as civil service pay increases plus festive demand around Lunar New Year and Hari Raya helped cushion the slowdown. Nevertheless, fixed investment growth slowed amid more moderate spending on machinery and equipment, while government consumption eased due to softer outlays on supplies and services. Meanwhile, rising inflation likely weighed on household spending.
On the production side, growth also moderated across all major sectors. The key industrial sector—worth almost 40% of GDP—was held back by declining mining and quarrying activity due to lower crude oil and natural gas output, as well as an early-March shutdown at Malaysia’s largest petrochemicals complex—linked to tighter crude supply following the U.S.-Iran war. Still, strong AI-related demand continued to support manufacturing, with electrical and electronic products recording robust output growth.
GDP growth to moderate through year-end: Malaysia’s economy is expected to continue to lose steam through end-2026, with full-year growth set to average a three-year low. The manufacturing sector could face production shortages from Q2 onward if Middle East-linked supply disruptions persist, while higher inflation is likely to further erode household purchasing power. Still, targeted government measures to cushion the fallout from the U.S.-Iran war—including higher diesel cash assistance, targeted subsidies, a stronger biodiesel mandate and steps to safeguard fuel supplies—together with robust AI-driven demand, should help keep GDP growth close to the ASEAN average. Fiscal pressure could intensify due to Malaysia’s sharp increase in fuel-subsidy spending, which in April was likely around 10 times higher than before the war started; a faster-than-expected rollback of these subsidies poses a downside risk to GDP growth.