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Malaysians’ trust in the system plunges to all-time low, according to survey

More than half of Malaysians believe the current system is unfair and offers little hope for the future

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(From left) Edelman Southeast Asia and Australasia chief executive officer Iain Twine, co-founder and managing director of Teach for Malaysia Dzameer Dzulkifli, Khairul, Munro-Kua, Ho and Kay at the Malaysian launch of the 2017 Edelman Trust Barometer. Photo: Kenny Yap/The Edge

By Billy Toh & Neily Syafiqah Eusoff

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More than half of Malaysians (52 per cent) believe the current overall system has failed them — it is unfair and offers little hope for the future — while only 12 per cent believe it is working, a new survey by Edelman revealed.

For the first time, Malaysia fell on the “distrustful” end of Edelman’s index, which gauges respondents’ trust in the government, business, media and non-governmental organisations (NGOs).

The Malaysia’s edition of the 2017 Edelman Trust Barometer pointed to corruption and immigration as respondents’ main concerns.

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Edelman Malaysia managing director Robert Kay said among the 1,150 public respondents to the survey, more than 80 per cent expressed concern about corruption as a hindrance to make changes necessary to solve their problems and compromises the safety of citizens, and that these concerns could be driven by the higher visibility of success by the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC), which made several high-profile arrests in 2016.

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