Abstract

Journal of Business & Technology (JBT) is an open-access journal published by the Department of the Commerce and Financial Management of the University of Kelaniya, Sri Lanka. The journal follows a double-blind peer-review process and is published bi-annually (January, July). JBT aims to publish scholarly research, critical reviews, case studies, practitioner reviews and technology reviews in the fields of business and technology.

Highlights

  • HRD is a research agenda, started in 2001 to discuss the people development issues at national level, other than corporate organizational level. Mclean (2004) highlighted that the recently developed nations, transitioning and developing nations practices HRD at higher levels other than corporate organizational levels

  • Most of the HRD related problems, faced at organizational level, are unresolvable since the root cause for such problems have been rooted at a higher level

  • This study contributes to National Human Resource Development (NHRD) research by studying NHRD in Malaysia

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Summary

Introduction

HRD is a research agenda, started in 2001 to discuss the people development issues at national level, other than corporate organizational level. Mclean (2004) highlighted that the recently developed nations, transitioning and developing nations practices HRD at higher levels other than corporate organizational levels. HRD is a research agenda, started in 2001 to discuss the people development issues at national level, other than corporate organizational level. In its national planning context, there is evidence of NHRD practices, yet Malaysia had not identified such HRD practices as NHRD until Devadas et al conceptualized such evidence as Malaysia’s NHRD in 2016 which considered a planning period from 1950 to 2010. This current study is an extension of conceptualizing the meaning of NHRD in Malaysia covering a period from 1950 to 2030. 69.6% of Bumiputra, 22.6% of Chinese, 6.8% of Indians and 1.0 of other category have been estimated in the year 2020 (Department of Statistics Malaysia) Malaysia’s most valuable mineral resources are; reserves of petroleum and natural gas, metallic ores such as Tin, bauxite (aluminum), copper, iron, manganese, antimony, mercury, and gold (Britannica)

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