Many even have zero savings to cushion their
fall in times of financial emergencies but still apply for loans with great
ease, banking on their job security and the easy availability of personal
financing offered by non-bank financial institutions (NBFIs). The NBFIs include, among others, Bank Rakyat Sdn Bhd and Malaysia Building Society Bhd (MBSB), and development financial institutions (DFIs) such as Agrobank, SME Bank and Lembaga Tabung Haji.
Encik Ahmad is among those who have
fallen into such a trap. Despite having a monthly salary of just RM1,700,
32-year-old Public Works Department general worker pays RM1,480 every month to
service his personal and car loans without worrying much about defaulting on his
debt.Like many in the civil service, he is confident of his guaranteed job security and banks generally share the same sentiment as they comfortably issue large personal loans to government employees. If you work in the government, it’s easier to get a loan. Repaying loan instalment must not exceed 60 per cent of your salary every month.
Ahmad supplements his income with RM2,000 a month on
average from shooting weddings part-time. He supports a stay-at-home wife and
two young sons aged five years and seven months respectively in a single-storey
house in Jitra, Kedah, that was provided for by his father-in-law.
He admitted that he finds it hard to save and
only has “just enough to eat”, but had decided to buy a thousand-ringgit
smartphone to keep up with the latest trend. “Smartphones are a necessity, everyone has a smartphone. Even makciks (aunts) are using smartphones.”
He added that a Honda Civic was preferable to a
cheaper local car because foreign cars have “better quality”, saying: “If you
want to buy a car, you want it to last long.” Ahmad stressed that he took out a personal
loan to buy “necessities, not luxuries”, pointing out that a RM90,000 loan was
“not much” as he knows others who have borrowed RM100,000 or RM200,000.
In recent months, economists stressed the need
for stricter supervision on NBFIs that issue personal loans primarily to civil
servants, voicing concern about the vulnerability of low-income households to
economic shocks.
Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) reported in March
that 80 per cent of personal loans from NBFIs, which are not supervised by the
central bank, goes to government employees with household incomes of less than
RM3,000 a month.
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