Comparative study of rural development in Malaysia, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh: An Asian perspective
International Journal of Development Research
Comparative study of rural development in Malaysia, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh: An Asian perspective
Received 12th March, 2026 Received in revised form 24th April, 2026 Accepted 20th May, 2026 Published online 30th June, 2026
Copyright©2026, Rimjim Borah. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Rural development has been a central concern for Asian nations characterised by large rural populations, agrarian economies, and persistent poverty. This paper presents a comparative study of rural development experiences across three Asian nations-Malaysia, Sri Lanka, and Bangladesh, which represent different stages of economic development and have pursued distinct policy pathways. Through an analysis of their planning frameworks, key programmes, land reform measures, welfare initiatives, and institutional arrangements, this paper identifies the factors underlying the relative successes and limitations of each country’s rural development trajectory. The study concludes that while no single model is universally replicable, critical lessons emerge regarding the centrality of institutional support, land equity, human capital investment, and the need to balance welfare orientation with asset-building strategies for sustained rural transformation.