When Tun Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, fondly known as Pak Lah passed away on 14 April 2025, at the age of 85, Malaysia lost more than a former Prime Minister. It lost a statesman who believed in building the nation through humility, ethics, and human dignity. While his leadership from 2003 to 2009 is often remembered as calm and understated, the true impact of his contributions continues to shape Malaysia in ways that many only realise today.
Between the booming modernisation era of Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad and the controversy-filled years of Datuk Seri Najib Razak, Pak Lah’s tenure offered something rare: stability without spectacle. His reforms were quiet but lasting, his values strong but never forceful.
Here are five enduring legacies of Pak Lah that continue to speak volumes, even in silence.
1. He prioritised people through human capital development

Pak Lah believed that a nation’s true strength lies in its people, not in its skyscrapers or budget surpluses. Earning him the title Father of Human Capital Development, his policies placed Malaysians at the heart of progress.
In 2007, civil servants received one of the biggest salary adjustments in history, with increments ranging from 7.5% to 35%, benefiting over 1 million public employees including police and armed forces. The cost of living allowance (COLA) was increased by 100%, and military personnel received an additional 20% hike on top of existing adjustments.
He also allowed 40,000 civil servants who had previously opted for the Employees Provident Fund (EPF) scheme to return to the government pension scheme. For the first time ever, pensions for retired civil servants were revised to reflect inflation and rising living costs, providing much-needed relief for pensioners and their families.
2. He brought development to all corners of Malaysia
While others focused on urban megaprojects, Pak Lah turned his gaze toward regional balance. Under the 9th Malaysia Plan, he introduced five major economic corridors, each designed to harness the natural strengths of different regions:
- Iskandar Malaysia (launched in 2006) in Johor
- Northern Corridor Economic Region (NCER) covering Perlis, Kedah, Penang, and Perak
- East Coast Economic Region (ECER) spanning Kelantan, Terengganu, Pahang, and Mersing
- Sabah Development Corridor (SDC)
- Sarawak Corridor of Renewable Energy (SCORE)
These corridors aimed to stimulate long-term investments, create jobs, and reduce development inequality. Iskandar Malaysia alone attracted over RM300 billion in investments by 2020, and has become one of Southeast Asia’s key economic zones.
Pak Lah’s development vision also included a heavy focus on agriculture to reduce urban-rural inequality. He allocated RM11.4 billion to the agriculture sector, 84% more than previous allocations, to modernise farming through biotechnology and encourage agro-entrepreneurship.
Between 2005 and 2007, Malaysia’s agricultural exports surged from RM37.5 billion to RM52.4 billion, a 39.7% increase in just two years. These efforts not only improved food security but also lifted thousands out of rural poverty.
3. He quietly reformed the public sector
Pak Lah knew that for policies to work, the government machinery itself had to function better. Without headlines or fanfare, he initiated sweeping reforms to make public services more responsive and transparent.
He frequently conducted surprise visits to government offices and was known for catching even the most senior officers off-guard, not to punish them, but to observe how public services truly operated.
His reforms delivered measurable improvements:
- Income tax refunds were processed in two days, compared to two weeks previously.
- e-Filing was introduced nationwide, making tax submissions easier and faster.
- 14 licenses previously required for hotel operators were merged into a single application.
- Business license renewals, once a one-day affair, could be done in 15 minutes.
- The PEMUDAH task force was created in 2007 to remove red tape and ease government-to-business transactions.
Land offices also saw major overhauls. By 2008, 98% of property-related backlogs dating as far back as 2001 had been resolved, showcasing the quiet but meaningful improvements happening on the ground.
4. He saw agriculture as the future, not the past

In a time when shiny towers and mega-projects symbolised progress, Pak Lah took an unpopular but visionary stance: investing in agriculture. His government didn’t just throw money at the sector,it modernised it.
Agriculture was seen as a tool to fight poverty, create jobs, and reduce dependency on food imports. Under his leadership, biotech innovations, modern irrigation, and downstream product development became part of Malaysia’s agricultural strategy.
During his administration, not only did agro-exports surge, but rural entrepreneurship also grew, spurred by incentives that encouraged SMEs and community-based farming. By the end of his term, the agriculture sector had evolved into a robust economic contributor, not just a safety net for the poor.
5. He positioned Malaysia as a global leader in halal and Islamic moderation

Pak Lah’s religious roots ran deep as his grandfather, Tuan Guru Abdullah Fahim, was a mufti and nationalist figure who helped determine Malaysia’s independence date. Pak Lah inherited that legacy and elevated it on a global scale.
In 2006, he launched the Halal Development Corporation (HDC) to standardise and promote Malaysia’s halal certification systems. Today, Malaysia is recognised as a world leader in halal governance, and Pak Lah’s early foresight helped lay the foundation for a global halal market worth over US$2.3 trillion.
His signature policy, Islam Hadhari, was introduced as a progressive framework to guide Muslim societies in embracing knowledge, ethical leadership, justice, and development. The initiative gained international recognition, with Pak Lah even receiving the King Faisal International Prize in 2011 for Service to Islam.
Even after stepping down, he chaired the World Islamic Economic Forum (WIEF) and served on global diplomacy platforms like the InterAction Council and the Asian Peace and Reconciliation Council (APRC).
A Leader Who Let His Work Speak for Itself
Pak Lah’s slogan, “Work with me, not for me,” perfectly captured his leadership style. He didn’t command attention. He built trust. He didn’t yell for loyalty. He earned respect.
His strength was in his silence, his calm, and his belief in serving with integrity. He didn’t build towers to mark his legacy, but he helped build lives, institutions, and values that will stand the test of time.
In a world that often rewards noise over nuance, Pak Lah reminded us that quiet leadership can still echo for generations. He may be gone, but his quiet revolution continues to shape the soul of Malaysia.
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