Shocking reasons why Malaysians are living beyond their means.
PETALING JAYA: Shopaholics and poor management of
personal finances - these best describe a good number of Malaysian consumers.
On average, 41 are declared bankrupt
every day, mostly due to credit card debts, while every weekend, about five
million throng the 300-odd shopping complexes in the country.
These habits are among the shocking
revelations on why Malaysian consumers cannot cope with the rising cost of
living.
Fomca discovered that many of those
declared bankrupt due to credit card debts were below 40 years old.
“And they do not care about the
consequences,” said Fomca chief executive officer Datuk Paul Selvaraj.
“Many are facing financial
difficulties too early in life,” he told the Protect Our Pockets roundtable
conference at Menara Star here on Tuesday night.
Selvaraj said Fomca would embark on a
financial education push next month with emphasis on teaching the young.
“In one of our surveys, we were
shocked that many children did not even know where money came from,” he said,
adding that most replied “the ATM (automated teller machine).
“And, they do not believe that their
parents have to work to earn money,” Selvaraj added.
Malaysian Association of Shopping and
Highrise Complex Managementpresident H.C. Chan said its statistics showed that
one in five Malaysians visited a shopping mall on a weekend. “And the country
has about 320 shopping complexes,” he pointed out.
The roundtable session is organised
by The Star as part of an initiative to highlight key issues faced by
Malaysians in the face of the rising cost of living.
Other field experts who form the
panel are Malaysian Retailers-Chains Associations secretary-general Valerie
Choo, Carrefour marketing communications (Singapore and Malaysia) director Low
Ngai Yuen,Performance Management and Delivery Unit (Pemandu) senior manager
Phillip See, Pemandu director of National Key Result Areas and National Key
Economic Areas D. Ravindran and The Star executive editor Datuk Wong Sai Wan.
Low said while some people shopped,
claiming it to be therapeutic, “the truth is, it is not necessarily based on
need”.
Ravindran agreed to suggestions that
the Education Ministry should take the lead in teaching financial management in
schools, but not as a formal subject.
See said handling personal finances
was something the young had to go through themselves to gain experience.
On ensuring income levels were competitive;
Wong urged the private sector to take the lead as most of the country's
manpower was from this sector.
“We should also re-examine our heavy
dependency on foreign labour and consider absorbing our senior citizens back
into the workforce,” he added.
Some 60% of young consumers were already
in debt, Fomca said at a separate function here yesterday.
“And, 72% of young adults have no
retirement plans.”
Angka-angka daripada artikel di atas:
·
41 orang
diisytihar bankrap setiap hari di
Malaysia.
· 40 tahun dan
ke bawah, umur kebanyakan individu yang diisytiharkan muflis.
·
1 dari 5
rakyat Malaysia mengunjungi pasaraya setiap minggu.
·
5 juta rakyat
Malaysia mengunjungi 320 pasaraya setiap minggu.
·
60% pengguna
muda sudah dibebani hutang.
·
72% eksekutif muda tiada plan kewangan
selepas umur pencen.
p/s: orang 'kaya' sebenar ialah orang yang paling sikit hutang.
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