Microeconomics

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The Rising Cost of Living in Malaysia: A 6low +RXVHhROG ,ncome *rowth or ,ncreasing 6tandard of Living

Mohd Aqmin Abdul Wahab · Hazrul Izuan Shahiri · Mustazar Mansur · Mohd Azlan Shah Zaidi ·Jurnal Ekonomi Malaysia ·2018

This paper looks at the causes of increasing cost of living by studying two (2) main factors; frstly, the slow growth in income as compared to infation, and secondly the unproportional increase in standard of living as compared to income. For the frst factor, a time series regression model was constructred using the data from Household Income Survey report (various years) to compare the fuctutation in income against the infation rate year-on-year. For the second factor, we studied the expenditure elasticity of income for the household. A log-log linear regression model was developed taking into consideration the three (3) main groups of goods that household buys: Food, Transportation and Housing. We have studied the elasticities across income strata (B40, M40, T20) and location (Rural vs Urban) to observe the changes in elasticity with respect to those variables. The result of this study points that income growth has indeed surpasses infation rate from year to year, however the standard of living is increasing at a comparatively fast rate, as evidenced by high expenditure elasticities for several types of goods for B40s and M40s. This suggests that the standard of living, or living styles are the dominant factor that contributes to the problems of increasing cost of living.

Income Inequality and Household Debt in Malaysia: Is There an Asymmetric Relationship?

Siew-Pong Cheah · Lin-Sea Lau · Chee-Keong Choong ·International Journal of Economics and Management ·2021 ·JEL: D3, D63, G51

Most past studies have assumed a symmetric relationship between income distribution and household indebtedness. Therefore, linear or symmetric modelling would miss possible asymmetric relationships between income distribution and household debt, resulting in misleading conclusions and policy suggestions. Thus, this study has explored the potential asymmetries between household debt and income inequality within long-run and short-run relationships. This study discovered that the association between income inequality and household debt was asymmetric in the long and short run using the nonlinear autoregressive distributed lag model. The results showed that only decreases in income inequality had a significant and positive effect on household debt, while increases in income inequality did not have a significant effect. The findings emphasised the need for policies to reduce income inequality to lessen debt among Malaysian households.

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