Business News

Banning Social Media for Children Won’t Build Digital Resilience, Education Will

Kuala Lumpur, 20 January 2026 — The Consumer Choice Center (CCC) strongly opposes the Malaysian government’s proposal to impose a blanket ban on social media use for individuals under the age of 16 beginning in 2026, warning that the policy is unrealistic, unenforceable, and likely to create greater risks for young users rather than reducing harm.

While CCC recognises the importance of protecting minors from online dangers, the organisationargues that prohibition is the wrong tool for a complex digital policy issue. Instead of improving safety, the ban risks pushing teenagers toward unsafe platforms, anonymous spaces, and circumvention tools that place them beyond the reach of parental guidance and regulatory protection.

CCC Malaysia Country Associate, Tarmizi Anuwar, said the proposal reflects political optics rather than effective policymaking.

“Banning social media does not fix the underlying problem. It only hides it. This policy assumes access is the disease when in reality the real issue is education, behaviour, and guided responsibility.”

Academic Evidence Shows Bans Do Not Solve the Problem

A growing body of academic research warns that outright bans on adolescent social media use are unlikely to improve mental health or online safety in any meaningful way.

A 2024 study published by the reputable health journal JMIR Mental Health concluded that there is insufficient evidence to support blanket bans as an effective response to youth mental health concerns. The paper argues that adolescent well-being is closely linked to emotional regulation skills and digital behaviour, rather than access itself. Removing access does not build self-control, resilience, or critical digital skills.

Additional research from Associate Professor Jennifer Alford at Griffith University and the Australian Academy of the Humanities supports this conclusion, warning that age bans are blunt policy tools that may delay digital maturity, suppress healthy online engagement, and limit access to social support networks for young people.

“If the objective is safer and stronger young users, the evidence points away from prohibition and toward education,” said Tarmizi. “A ban teaches avoidance, not responsibility.”

Delaying Access Does Not Build Digital Maturity

CCC warns that shielding young Malaysians from digital platforms until the age of 16 does not prepare them for a connected adult life.

“Social media today is a communication infrastructure,” said Tarmizi. “It is where young people learn social boundaries, information discernment, and interpersonal skills. Removing access does not create resilience. It postpones it.”

Digital maturity, CCC argues, is developed through careful exposure, guidance, and responsibility, rather than artificial isolation from technology, which remains unavoidable in modern society.

A Smarter Alternative: Education, Responsibility, and Choice

The Consumer Choice Center urges the government to adopt forward-looking solutions that empower families and young people rather than impose universal restrictions.

Policy efforts should focus on:

1) Better digital education and media literacy in schools

2) Stronger parental involvement and awareness

3) Support for emotional resilience and critical thinking among young people

4) Preserving individual choice based on family values and maturity levels

“Good policy builds capacity. Bad policy builds walls that young people climb anyway. We should build digitally confident young Malaysians, not raise a generation unprepared for the realities of online life,” he concluded. 

Asir Fatagar

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