Malaysia vs Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha

Overall Mutual Score: 42.2%

Overall Fit Rank42.2%
Trade Pull0.0%
Mutual Win Potential43.4%
Risk Drag18.1%

Malaysia profile

Market Size84.3%
Resource Strength17.8%
Tech Readiness99.0%
Human Capital94.7%
Infrastructure100.0%
Energy Position7.5%
Climate Pressure49.9%
Governance58.7%

Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha profile

Market Size20.4%
Resource Strength0.0%
Tech Readiness0.0%
Human Capital0.0%
Infrastructure0.0%
Energy Position0.0%
Climate Pressure0.0%
Governance0.0%

What These Countries Should Do Together

Top joint action plans ranked by expected shared benefit.

Technology Transfer and Joint R&D

63.4%

Capability gaps plus adequate skills make co-development and diffusion efficient.

Malaysia

65.8%

Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha

61.1%

Shared gain

43.4%

Trade Corridor and Supply-Chain Integration

47.0%

Large combined demand and logistics compatibility improve bilateral trade surplus potential.

Malaysia

51.9%

Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha

42.1%

Shared gain

26.6%

Skills Mobility and Human Capital Partnership

38.5%

Labor-market complementarity and digital readiness increase long-run productivity in both economies.

Malaysia

43.1%

Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha

33.8%

Shared gain

17.9%

Food-Water-Climate Resilience Pact

29.4%

Climate asymmetry and natural-capital differences hedge systemic shocks for both countries.

Malaysia

30.8%

Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha

28.0%

Shared gain

9.3%

Critical Resource and Energy Exchange

12.1%

Asymmetric resource endowments and energy profiles support mutually beneficial contracts.

Malaysia

15.8%

Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha

8.5%

Shared gain

0.0%