Special economic zones are among the most widely used instruments in development policy, yet their capacity to deliver inclusive growth alongside rapid investment attraction poses persistent governance challenges. This report examines Malaysia's deployment of two structurally distinct SEZs in the context of competing policy objectives: attracting high-value investment while addressing uneven regional development.
The report focuses on the Johor-Singapore Special Economic Zone (JS-SEZ), formalized in January 2025, and the East Coast Economic Region SEZ (ECER SEZ), established in 2008-2009. Both zones operate within the same national framework but pursue divergent objectives and produce markedly different outcomes. The JS-SEZ spans a cross-border corridor integrating southern Malaysia with Singapore, combining Malaysia's cost and labour advantages with Singapore's financial infrastructure and global market access. Within nine months of launch, the zone attracted RM68 billion (USD17 billion) in approved investments, positioned within a broader context of global supply chain diversification. The ECER SEZ, by contrast, targets structurally disadvantaged east coast states where geography, limited logistics connectivity, and lower investor visibility have constrained momentum, with committed investments reaching RM13 billion (USD3.3 billion) by 2021 against a long-term target of RM90 (USD22.6 billion).
The comparative analysis suggests that location and pre-existing connectivity are more decisive determinants of SEZ performance than policy design alone. Zones embedded in established economic networks scale rapidly; zones designed to compensate for structural disadvantage require sustained public investment and yield slower returns. This divergence generates a distributional risk: concentrating growth in well-connected corridors may deepen regional inequality even as it raises overall national investment totals.
Malaysia's experience illustrates the difficulty of using SEZs simultaneously as tools for growth acceleration and for reducing regional disparities. Governance capacity, infrastructure readiness, and cross-border coordination emerge as preconditions for zone success.
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Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung Malaysia OfficeAbout this series
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