Published: 14:25, April 22, 2024
Malaysia plans Southeast Asia's largest integrated circuit design park
By Reuters
This photo taken on Jan 29, 2024 shows a night view near Petronas Twin Towers in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. (PHOTO / XINHUA)

KUALA LUMPUR - Malaysia plans to build Southeast Asia's largest integrated circuit design park and will offer incentives including tax breaks, subsidies, and visa exemption fees to attract global tech companies and investors, the government said on Monday.

Malaysia is aiming to turn Kuala Lumpur into a regional digital hub, with the goal of being among the top 20 countries in the global startup ecosystem index by 2030.

Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim said the proposed integrated circuit design park was part of Malaysia's efforts to move beyond backend chip assembly and testing and into high-value front-end design work

Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim said the proposed integrated circuit design park was part of Malaysia's efforts to move beyond backend chip assembly and testing and into high-value front-end design work.

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The country is a major player in the semiconductor industry, accounting for about 13 percent of global testing and packaging.

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The park, to be backed by Malaysia's central Selangor state, will house world-class anchor tenants and collaborate with global companies such as British chipmaker Arm Holdings, Anwar said, without providing further details.

Malaysia's Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim delivers a keynote address at the opening ceremony of the Energy Asia 2023 conference in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, June 26, 2023. (PHOTO / XINHUA)

Malaysia's sovereign wealth Khazanah Nasional will also launch a fund to invest in innovative high-growth Malaysian companies, with an initial allocation of 1 billion ringgit ($209 million), Anwar told the KL20 Summit event, aimed at launching new policies to support Malaysian start-ups.

Economy Minister Rafizi Ramli said the government will offer incentives including subsidized office spaces, exemptions on employment passes, relocation services, and lower corporate tax rates for foreign venture capital firms, tech entrepreneurs, and unicorns - startups reaching a $1 billion valuation - looking to invest in Malaysia.

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"We want to attract global unicorns to enter Malaysia, so that high-skilled and high-value jobs are created, besides developing a pipeline of future entrepreneurs and senior leaders in tech," Rafizi said.