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The Stick and Carrot Approach to Moneylenders’ Self-Regulation in Klang Valley, Malaysia

Daljit Kaur Sandhu · Afida Mastura Muhammad Arif · Elistina Abu Bakar · Husniyah Abd. Rahim ·International Journal of Economics and Management ·2021 ·JEL: D18, K23

The vital role played by the moneylending industry in Malaysia resulted in 1,496 licensed moneylenders registered within the Klang Valley, in 2020. Even though the Moneylenders Act 1951 exist to protect the industry, law enforcement is a challenge to the regulator. This is evident as many borrowers’ complaints were made towards the moneylenders on poor self-regulation and questionable business practices. In understanding this gap, the main research objective is to gain insights on licensed moneylenders self-regulation in the moneylending process involving the borrowers. The Interpretative Phenomenology Analysis approach was used in extracting four themes from the twelve licensed moneylenders’ experiences. It was discovered that many of the moneylenders lacked the understanding of their rights and duties as stipulated in the Act. The apprehension of selfregulation amongst the licensed moneylenders was gravely misleading and require the regulator’s re-educational intervention. The first implication of the study is for the moneylenders and associations representing them. They must take remedial action to educate members on the value of practising business ethics in closing on the disparity found in their self-regulation throughout the moneylending process. The second implication is for the regulator to assess moneylenders practical adherence when introducing new business requirements.

Revisiting Money Demand in Malaysia: Simple-Sum versus Divisia Monetary Aggregates

Chin-Hong Puah · Choi-Meng Leong · Abu Mansor Shazali · Evan Lau ·Jurnal Ekonomi Malaysia ·2018

BNM has discarded the use of monetary targeting due to the speeding up of financial reforms as the relationship between money and important macroeconomic indicators in Malaysia has weakened. However, the implementation of the interest rate targeting requires the authorities to alter the policy rate recurrently. Alternatively, the authorities may consider monetary targeting, which provides the ease of control of monetary aggregates, provided that a stable demand for money function can be derived. Nevertheless, financial liberalization has greatly affected the stability of money demand. Thus, this study estimated the demand for money function in Malaysia by considering the effect of the financial development in which a Divisia monetary aggregate has been constructed as an alternative measure of money and a monetization variable has been included in the function. The Johansen and Juselius cointegration test and error correction model are utilized to estimate the demand for money function. The empirical findings indicate that a plausible demand for money function is derived using Divisia M2. Furthermore, monetization appears as an important variable that contributes to a stable money demand. The presence of a stable Divisia M2 money demand has reassured the usefulness of monetary aggregate as the indicator for monetary policy purposes. Monetary targeting provides alternative policy target choice for the conduct of monetary policy. Divisia monetary aggregates can also serve as the alternative money measurement apart from the conventional money supply

Evaluation of monetary policy: Evidence of the role of money from Malaysia

Abdelkader O.El Alaoui · Hashim Bin Jusoh · Sheila Ainon Yussof · Mohamed Hisham Hanifa ·Quarterly Review of Economics and Finance ·2019

This paper, for the best of our knowledge, is the first attempt to assess the role of money in the Malaysian economy using wavelet techniques. To do so, a macroeconomic model-based policy rules has been formulated. In relation with the recurring financial crises, we analyse the relationship between the quantity of money, interest rate, inflation, exchange rate, index of industrial production and equity indices, in the case of Malaysia. In this analysis, UK economy aggregates are taken as benchmark. Therefore, the relationships between monetary policy variables and macroeconomic variables are evolving with time and have non-homogeneous trends across different time scales. Some strong correlations have been found in regard to Malaysian Monetary Policy using, major monetary aggregates; the quantity of Money, the interest rate and the exchange rate inducing some lead-lag interactions between those key variables. In addition, we analyse the effect of LIBOR on Malaysian interest rate (KLIBOR). We found that the KLIBOR is lagging behind the LIBOR in most of the time. In the end, some lessons will be drawn for the monetary policy in Malaysia, in terms of the high impact of the role of money and the expected implications regarding an effective Islamic monetary policy.

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