KUALA LUMPUR (Jan 22): Malaysia’s inflation is expected to reverse its current downtrend and gradually rise from mid-2025, driven by subsidy rationalisation, tax adjustments, and wage increases, according to economists.
Malaysia’s inflation trajectory, they said, depends heavily on the effective implementation of domestic reforms and the evolving global economic landscape.
As the nation braces for fiscal consolidation and external volatility, policymakers face the challenge of balancing cost pressures with sustainable growth, said the economists.
UOB Global Economics and Markets Research expects inflation to rise from an average of 1.8% in 2024 to 2.3% in 2025, reflecting a range of domestic and external factors.
“We see this current inflation downtrend short-lived, and expect it to revert upwards gradually by the middle of this year...this is in view of potential spillover effects from higher taxes and wages, base effects, as well as volatility in global commodity prices and foreign exchange (forex) markets,” UOB said in a note on Wednesday.
The research firm noted that its inflation forecast had yet to factor in the impact of fuel subsidy rationalisation. The government announced in Budget 2025 that this will be implemented in mid-2025.
The removal of blanket RON95 petrol subsidies is expected to exert upward pressure on prices, although Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim has assured that the subsidies will still benefit 85% of Malaysians, with mitigating measures in place to address cost pressures.
“In addition to fuel subsidy removal, the government is also planning to rationalise food-related subsidies, such as for eggs, local white rice, and cooking oil, without providing further details at this juncture,” UOB added.
Other domestic factors include a sugar tax hike in January, higher minimum wages starting in February, the implementation of a broader sales and service tax (SST) in May, and mandatory Employees Provident Fund (EPF) contributions for foreign workers.
On the global front, volatility in commodity prices and forex markets, along with base effects from 2024, are expected to compound inflationary pressures. UOB also highlighted broader geopolitical and economic uncertainties.
“Rising external uncertainty from Trump’s second presidency in the US, China’s growth prospects, and geopolitical tensions continue to suggest a cautious stance by BNM,” it said.
Despite this inflation outlook, UOB expects Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) to keep the overnight policy rate (OPR) steady at 3% throughout 2025, similar to 2024, citing stable economic fundamentals and the latest data.
Earlier on Wednesday, the Department of Statistics Malaysia said inflation in Malaysia eased slightly and was marginally slower than expected in December, as prices of non-food items and services rose at a more moderate pace.
The consumer price index (CPI) — Malaysia’s main gauge of inflation — rose 1.7% in December from a year earlier, bringing the average annual inflation rate to 1.8% in 2024, slowing for the second consecutive year.
Source: TheEdge - 23 Jan 2025
Created by edgeinvest | Jan 24, 2025
Created by edgeinvest | Jan 24, 2025
Created by edgeinvest | Jan 24, 2025
Created by edgeinvest | Jan 24, 2025
Created by edgeinvest | Jan 24, 2025