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Digital curbs could cost Malaysia RM792m in VC

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PETALING JAYA: Findings from a newly released Oxford Economics study, commissioned by Digital Prosperity Asia (DPA), reveal that digital regulations have increasingly become a structural force in Malaysia’s startup ecosystem, shaping how startups manage compliance, allocate talent, invest in innovation, and access capital.


The study finds that Malaysia currently adopts a broadly enabling approach to digital regulation, with safeguards in higher-risk domains while preserving openness across the broader digital economy.


However, regulatory design choices over the coming decade could have significant implications for Malaysia’s startup ecosystem.


“The study highlights how regulations influence decisions across Malaysia’s startup ecosystem,” said Oxford Economics economic consulting managing director Henry Worthington.


“Startups face immediate pressures as they navigate compliance across a broad range of digital regulations. Meeting these requirements often demands specialised talent and changes to operating models, diverting resources from innovation and growth. Investors also consider a startup’s ability to meet regulatory obligations when making investment decisions. The implication is not that safeguards should be weakened, but that regulatory design, proportionality, and predictability will be critical to sustaining Malaysia’s startup momentum.”


For many Malaysian startups, compliance is no longer a one-off adjustment. It is becoming embedded in day-to-day operations, requiring startups to reorganise internal processes, invest in compliance capabilities, and shift resources away from other business priorities.


Startups are making structural adjustments in response, with over two-thirds (68%) having taken active steps to respond to digital regulatory requirements. This includes building new compliance processes, shifting workloads to compliant cloud service providers, and engaging external legal and advisory services.


Key insights include 88% of startups in Malaysia report operational constraints from digital regulations, with 23% describing the impact as major or severe; 81% of startups say digital regulations increase compliance-related costs. Slightly over eight in 10 startups allocate more than 5% of their operating costs to compliance, while 39% of these firms devote more than 15% of operating costs to compliance; 68% of startups have taken steps to respond to digital regulatory requirements including building new compliance processes, shifting workloads to compliant cloud service providers, and engaging external legal and advisory services.


Digital regulations are significantly affecting how Malaysian startups allocate financial, technical, and human resources. Many startups report that compliance requirements are affecting workforce planning and increasing talent-related costs, particularly due to growing demand for expertise in compliance, cybersecurity, and data governance.


These pressures are also affecting innovation activity. Startups indicate that digital regulations are influencing innovation efforts, with financial resources increasingly being directed towards compliance-related activities rather than research and development. As a result, some startups are experiencing slower innovation cycles, delays in product development, and longer time-to-market.


Key insights include 87% of startups in Malaysia report that digital regulations have affected workforce costs or management; 74% of startups report rising human capital costs, particularly for compliance, cybersecurity, and data governance expertise; 67% of startups indicate that financial resources are being diverted from R&D towards compliance, a trend also observed by 64% of both VCs and incubators and 57% of startups report delays in product development or longer time-to-market, while 59% of VCs note a slowdown in innovation momentum.


Access to capital remains critical for startup growth, and digital regulations are becoming an increasingly important consideration in investment decision-making in Malaysia.


Expectations of tighter regulation may also dampen investment sentiment. Under a more restrictive regulatory scenario, the share of startups expecting increased investment falls from 47% to 27%.


In response, investors are adopting more cautious approaches, including strengthening compliance requirements and incorporating regulatory risk assessments into their investment processes.


Key insights include 63% of startups say digital regulations increase uncertainty in the market and make it more difficult to raise capital; 73% of VCs say digital regulations heighten uncertainty around returns from their investments; economic modelling shows that more restrictive regulations in Malaysia could reduce VC funding by 26% over 2026 to 2035 (~RM792 million/year less on average). Conversely, a shift to more enabling regulations would increase VC funding by 6% (~RM198 million/year more on average) over the same period.


“Malaysia has made important progress in building a digital economy that supports innovation, and its relatively enabling regulatory approach is an important asset for startups,” said Koh Liang Wei from the DPA Secretariat. “As Malaysia’s rules on data, cybersecurity and AI continue to evolve, the priority should be to preserve that balance.


For SMEs and startups, clear, coherent and consultative regulation is not just a policy preference. It shapes whether limited resources go into compliance, or into hiring, product development and regional expansion. DPA looks forward to supporting constructive dialogue between policymakers and the startup ecosystem to ensure regulations safeguard trust while enabling growth.”

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