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Tuesday, February 3, 2015

Malaysians should BOYCOTT UMNO-BN, not the Chinese

M'sians should BOYCOTT UMNO-BN, not the Chinese
Agriculture and Agro-based Industries Minister, Ismail Sabri Yaakob in his Facebook post called on Malay consumers to use their “majority power” to boycott Chinese traders to pressure the traders to reduce their prices. He even named Old Town White Coffee as one such business to boycott because of its dubious halal status and presumably owned by one Ngeh from DAP Perak.
I love it when Ministers talk about economics, even if it is mixed with race. Because in Malaysia, anything is really better than just racial rhetoric alone. Even if it is not so smart. At least when Ministers talk about economics, we can challenge their assumptions and data.
For example, our Economy Minister Abdul Wahid Omar last year said that Malaysian households now on average earn more than RM5,900 a month. Immediately we can challenge his assumptions and data, and I did. Facts against facts, knowledge against knowledge, not law against knowledge - to quote a recent speech in Kuala Lumpur by Dr. Tariq Ramadan, the prominent Islamic scholar from Oxford.
Open debate.
But let’s go back to Ismail Sabri.
Ismail Sabri
Rising cost of living: Are the butcher, brewer and baker at fault?
The Minister was probably referring to day-to-day goods and services when he made reference to Chinese traders. Because restaurants such as Starbucks, McDonald’s or for that matter, even Old Town White Coffee, are not essential goods and services. One can simply choose not patronise these outlets when times are bad.
But then can we really fault the butcher, the brewer and the baker for the rise in cost of living? Can we blame the sundry shop Ah Pek or the Mamak restaurant because they do not reduce their prices even when petrol price has dropped?
I am going to leave the economics of petrol price for some other discussions, perhaps.
What I want to do is to bring our attention to what kind of stuff do Malaysians really spend on and how much do we spend on these stuff. And then we shall see who’s fault is it that we are suffering from such high cost of living.
According to the Department of Statistics’ Report on Household Expenditure Survey 2009/2010, some of the major Malaysian household expenditure items are, as follows:
Items
2009/10 expenditure (%)
1998/99 expenditure (%)
Housing and utilities
22.6
22.3
Food and non-alcoholic beverages
20.3
22.6
Transportation
14.9
13.9
Restaurants and hotels
10.9
12.8
Miscellaneous goods and services
8.7
6.4
Communication
5.7
3.6
Cultural and recreational services
4.6
4.3
Clothing and footwear
3.4
3.4
Table 1: Average monthly household expenditure by main group of goods and services for 1998/99 and 2009/10 (Source: Report on Household Expenditure Survey, DoS, 2011)
Food, non-alcoholic beverages, clothings are adjustable spendings
It is interesting to note that while food and non-alcoholic beverages account for the second largest household expenditure, spending on these items have fallen significantly relative to the other major household expenditures in the ten-year period between 2009/10 and 1998/99.
This means, either food prices were adjusted lower during that period or households were more flexible to modify their spending on them. Food after all is what economists call “adjustable essentials”; consumers for example may change from the more expensive mutton to the relatively cheaper chicken when times are bad. Or they may simply eat lesser.
The same goes for clothing and footwear.
And we can easily assume similar reason for the reduction of household spending on restaurants and hotels. These items are non-essentials. Again, one may adjust how much to spend on them according to situations and because they are non-essentials, one can even opt not to spend on them at all. In bad times, we just do not go to stay in a hotel, or even eat at Old Town White Coffee.
Major expenditure items such as housing, transportation and telecommunication are controlled by government cronies
However, other big household expenditure items such as housing, transportation and communication have increased in the same period of time.
These are technically fixed spending, and therefore non-negotiable. Why?
Firstly, because these are essential items and they are mostly non-adjustable. One cannot simply choose to pay lesser rent or installment on one’s house or vehicle. I mean, yes of course you can move to a smaller house or drive lesser or change from driving a car to riding a motorbike, but the process is unlike choosing between mutton and chicken.
And in today’s connected world, telephones or even mobile phones are non-negotiable items whether for social or work purposes, but more crucially for the latter. Evidently, 95% of Malaysian households own at least one mobile phone.
Secondly, and more importantly, these items are controlled by monopolies; whether housing or transportation or telecommunication. Monopoly means anti-competition and consequently less competitive price for consumers.
Think about major housing developers, banks, vehicle AP holders, petrol companies, telco service providers and of course, good old Proton, a government-protected venture. Only a handful of companies are allowed to provide these goods and services in Malaysia making them highly uncompetitive. So that, for example, changing between the few options available of telco service providers will not drastically reduce one’s phone bill.
More often than not, these companies belonged to cronies of the ruling party.
The bulk of our household expenditure is due to government’s failure
Today, houses in Malaysia cost about 5.5 times our annual median income, which is higher than countries such as Singapore (5.1 times its annual median income), US (3.5 times), UK (4.7 times) or even Ireland (2.8 times). These numbers are taken from a November 2014 report entitled “The State of Households” by Khazanah Research Institute, a federal government-linked think tank. According to the same report, affordable housing is one which costs 3 times annual median income. We are definitely way beyond affordability.
The right to housing is guaranteed by our Federal Constitution. However, the government has utterly failed to deal with the exorbitant rising cost. Over the years, the government not only washed its hands on housing but also on social housing, delegating the role of providing them to private developers whose main aim is of course profitability.
No wonder today mortgages and housing loans contribute the most, about 45%, to our sky-high household debt.
And this is followed by vehicle loans at almost 20% of household debt in Malaysia. Such is only natural in a country where there is a total lack of public transport system and therefore, the people have to depend on private vehicles. The government is all out to sell more cars, sell more gas and build more highways and roads instead of improving public transportation. Who profits from such a policy and who will bear the cost?
And we have discussed how telco services are controlled by monopolies, more often than not cronies (whom the government can call for help such as to bail out failed government ventures).
Who then contributes the most to the rising cost of living in Malaysia? We have not even touched on employment, the low pay, middle income trap and the upcoming goods and services tax (GST).
Yes, we need to boycott the unpatriotic
Therefore, excuse me, maaf, I would like to voice out my opinion on this matter:
The bulk of our household expenditure is really because of an “unpatriotic government” who failed to lower our cost of living due to its crony capitalism. Malaysians of all races are the majority, Barisan Nasional politicians are the minority. Therefore we should use our majority power to pressure the Barisan Nasional government to do something about the cost of living. We must boycott them, do not give them any votes in the next general election to teach them a lesson about people’s power. As long as there is no Change, Barisan Nasional will continue to oppress all Malaysians regardless of race and religion.
Steven Sim is MP for Bukit Mertajam

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