Selangor - Population and Demographics

Population and Demographics

Selangor is Malaysia's most populous state with the nation's biggest conurbation, the Klang Valley. Selangor's geographical position in the centre of Peninsular Malaysia contributed to the state's rapid development as Malaysia's transportation and industrial hub. This created jobs and attracted migrants from other states as well as overseas, especially from Indonesia, the Philippines, Vietnam, Myanmar, Bangladesh, India, Pakistan, and China. In recent decades, the influx of illegal immigrants, particularly from Indonesia, has further contributed to Selangor's population.

Rank Districts Population 2010
1 Petaling 1,782,375
2 Hulu Langat 1,141,880
3 Klang 848,149
4 Gombak 682,996
5 Kuala Langat 222,261
6 Sepang 212,050
7 Kuala Selangor 210,406
8 Hulu Selangor 205,049
9 Sabak Bernam 106,158

Selangor has the largest population in Malaysia at 5,411,324 as of 2010. The state's ethnic composition consists of Malay 52.9%, Chinese 27.8%, Indian 13.3%, and other ethnic groups 6%. The ten most populated cities in Selangor as of 2010 are:

Rank City Population 2010
1 Subang Jaya 1,553,589
2 Klang 1,113,851
3 Ampang Jaya 804,901
4 Shah Alam 671,282
5 Petaling Jaya 638,516
6 Cheras 601,534
7 Kajang 448,243
8 Selayang Baru 265,297
9 Rawang 194,577
10 Taman Greenwood 157,967

The traditional culture of Selangor's Malay majority is influenced by those of Bugis, Johor, Minangkabau, Mandailing and Javanese ancestry, most of whom are Muslim. Javanese ancestry were dominant in west coast district such as Sabak Bernam, Kuala Selangor, Klang, Kuala Langat and Sepang. Selangor's population also has ethnic Chinese and Indian influences; those two groups have the larger minority populations. With its state of development, Selangor has more international ties through trade, business and education than other, more rural states..

Read more about this topic:  Selangor

Famous quotes containing the word population:

    The paid wealth which hundreds in the community acquire in trade, or by the incessant expansions of our population and arts, enchants the eyes of all the rest; the luck of one is the hope of thousands, and the bribe acts like the neighborhood of a gold mine to impoverish the farm, the school, the church, the house, and the very body and feature of man.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)