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Civil servants spend more than half of salaries on repaying debts

savemalaysia
Publish date: Sat, 08 Jun 2019, 08:14 PM

 

THE high debt levels of Malaysia’s civil servants are nothing surprising.

In the Central Bank’s Financial Stability Review released last September, findings showed that civil servants spent more than half of their monthly salaries on repaying debts.

In Bank Negara’s box article entitled “Civil Servants’ Debt: Risks and Policy Considera­tions”, it notes that these high debt levels are even more apparent for those earning less than RM5,000 monthly.

After considering their monthly expenditure on basic necessities and debt obligations, they are left with only 15% or RM360 to RM586 to spend on discretionary items.

 

Almost half of the borrowings or 47% is for consumption purposes such as personal financing, motor vehicles, credit cards and others. This is higher than the national average of 35%.

Bank Negara also stated that the debt repayment capacity of civil servants remained lower than the average borrowers at the national level and while this currently posed limited financial stability risks, it could have broader socio-economic implications.

As at end-February this year, the total outstanding civil servant debt stood at RM236bil, equivalent to 20% of total household debt or 17% of the gross domestic product (GDP). This is higher than levels observed in 2012 at 18% of total household debt or 15% of the GDP.

The study, which covered 1.26 million out of 1.6 million civil servants, comprising permanent federal government employees and the police, showed that 97% of them had some form of borrowings.

 

 

While the expansion in civil servants’ debt over the past six years has been marginally slower than total household debt (CAGR of 7.6% and 7.7%, respectively), notable differences can be observed in terms of the growth drivers.

Personal financing has been one of the major contributors to debt accumulation by the civil servants with a 2.3 percentage point (ppt) contribution to civil servants’ debt growth, about four times higher than its contribution to growth in overall household debt (0.6 ppt).

This has resulted in the larger share of personal financing to civil servants’ total debt (34%), compared to the national level (15%). Civil servants’ personal financing share to total debt has also been on an increasing trend since 2012, in contrast to the declining share observed at the national level.

 

Based on anecdotal evidence, personal financing is commonly used to sustain the standard of living and lifestyle choices of borrowers and for small business use.

Credit obtained from non-bank financial institutions (NBFI) amounted to 62%, significantly higher than the national average of 18%.

“By geographical location, close to half of those indebted live in four key urbanised states, where the cost of living is relatively higher. About two-thirds of civil servants earn less than RM5,000 per month,” it said.

It said policy priorities, including measures to improve financial literacy and strengthen NBFI lending practices and oversights, were vital to achieve a more sustainable level of civil servant debt accumulation and avert the build-up of risks in the future.


Read more at https://www.thestar.com.my/business/business-news/2019/06/08/civil-servants-spend-more-than-half-of-salaries-on-repaying-debts/

 

Discussions
Be the first to like this. Showing 8 of 8 comments

speakup

yes, after they buy expensive Camry, expensive iPhone, expensive designer handbags and clothes, of course lah in debt. even if u earn rm20k/month, if u living beyond your means, your rm20k salary still not enuf!

2019-06-08 22:41

qqq3

Malay culture may look bad.... but the performance of the banks do not support your theory

2019-06-09 00:47

qqq3

the banks have been rather fine.....

2019-06-09 00:48

chinaman

Post removed.Why?

2019-06-09 12:28

chinaman

This bad culture of living beyond your means must be eradicated. Debts fueled consumption growth is unsusbtainable. sure exploded one day. Then, MYR sure become banana tree currency. No wonder MYR forever won't become parity level as SGD. Gomen debts increase further to myr1.1trillion now....Gomen himself show bad example spending like no tomorrow. wakaka

2019-06-09 12:39

Heavenly PUNTER Lynas Boleh

i thought debts reduced a lot... how come increase by 100 billion ah? calculator got problem is it???

2019-06-09 12:48

chinaman

1 yr-100billion. 5 yrs- addmyr500billion. Pakatun increase it to myr1.5trillion after 5 yrs in gomen. wakaka

2019-06-09 12:57

qqq3

big data from Malaysian banks do not support your theories.

2019-06-09 13:08

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