For reasons best known to himself, the chairman of the Malaysian Rubber Board who happens to be the MP for Jasin, asked the government whether the gap between the rich and the poor was widening in Malaysia. The government’s response was: “No way!”
The government’s response was that Malaysia uses the Gini coefficient to measure income inequality and that the Gini for 2014 is 0.421, which is smaller than the Gini for 2012 (0.431) and for 2009 (0.441). The claim is “lower Gini, therefore lower inequality”.
Yet those who monitor such data know that in 1989, the Gini coefficient was 0.422. So, if the Gini coefficient were the only measure of inequality, the government would have to say that the inequality in 2014 was the same as it was 25 years ago.