Malaysia’s Incomplete Revolution
Jeremy Lim, Secretary, Imagined Malaysia
23-Jan-24 14:00
Embed Podcast
You can share this podcast by copying this HTML to your clipboard and pasting into your blog or web page.
Close
Why are our economic narratives often convoluted and incohesive? Malaysia is a capitalist country, but why do some economists say we don't have a cohesive capitalist class? We vote for MPs to sit in Parliament, but where else does power reside? What are the competing interests?
We often try to understand Malaysian politics by looking at it through the prism of race and religion. But to understand contemporary politics -- to understand why Malaysia is the way it is and who holds power in our society -- it is more important to look at political economy and how it has evolved over the years. It is important to understand the relationship between the state and the various classes.
Jeremy Lim, secretary of Imagined Malaysia wrote a paper for the Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung titled Malaysia’s Incomplete Revolution: From Comprador Capitalism to State-Led Development to State-Dependent Development, which details the shifts in Malaysia’s political economy over the decades. We speak to Jeremy.
Also mentioned in this podcast:
Traditionalism and the Ascendancy of the Malay Ruling Class in Malaya, by Donna J. Amoroso.
Image Credit: Shutterstock Ai
Produced by: Dashran Yohan
Presented by: Dashran Yohan
This and more than 60,000 other podcasts in your hand. Download the all new BFM mobile app.
Categories: politics, government, Law/Activism, education
Tags: capitalist revolution, the bigger picture, beyond the ballot box, capitalism, revolution,