Cover of MSN Policy Paper on Advancing Labour Rights in Malaysian Supply Chains
Policy Paper

Advancing Labour Rights in Malaysian Supply Chains

An analysis of forced labour indicators, corporate accountability gaps, and policy recommendations for the Malaysian manufacturing sector

15 March 2026


Malaysia’s position as a major hub for global manufacturing and export processing has generated significant economic growth over recent decades, yet this growth has come at a profound and largely unaccounted social cost. This paper documents widespread violations of labour standards across the electronics, palm oil, rubber glove, and textile sectors.

Corporate accountability frameworks — including the EU Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive and the US Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act — are beginning to reshape the expectations placed on companies sourcing from high-risk jurisdictions.

The audit-based compliance model that multinational buyers rely upon has proven structurally incapable of detecting the conditions that give rise to labour exploitation.

This paper concludes with a set of actionable policy recommendations directed at the Malaysian government, importing-country regulators, and industry stakeholders.