Nexus between Islamic Microfinancing and Financial Wellbeing of Micro-Entrepreneurs during the Covid-19 Pandemic in Malaysia
Nik Hadiyan Nik Azman
· Mohd Zaidi Md Zabri
· Ema Izati Zull Kepili
·Jurnal Ekonomi Malaysia ·2021 ·JEL: A1, G0, G5, I3, O1, R2
Islamic microfinance is expanding and penetrating its potential market over the globe. Access to credit or financing, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic, is vital for micro-entrepreneurs in climbing the socio-economic ladder that will contemporaneously increase their household income. In Malaysia, most of the MEs can hardly access financing from formal financial institutions due to poor credit rating, having zero to little collateral, income instability, small loan amounts, and high transaction costs. Alternatively, MEs approach Islamic microfinance institutions for their financing solution. Therefore, this study intends to investigate how far the utilization of Islamic microfinancing by MEs could enhance their quality of life. One hundred seven (107) usable questionnaires were analysed via the Structural Equation Modelling (SEM) AMOS using IBM® SPSS and found that both investment and expansion factors played key roles in affecting the financial wellbeing of the micro-entrepreneurs. The results lend credence to the positive effect of Islamic microfinance products may have on MEs and indirectly support the long-term economic development for MEs. This study deliver implication to various angles. In practical part, it opens the eyes of micro-entrepreneurs to opt for the right path (expansion and investment) to achieve financial wellbeing. Government (regulators) can enhance the ability of Islamic microfinancing as a tool towards financial wellbeing and in theoretical part, this study deepens the scope of Schumpeter’s theory by inculcate this theory with Islamic finance scope of study.
Non-Performing Loans and Macroeconomic Variables in Malaysia: Recent Evidence
Syazwani Kepli
· Yasmin Bani
· Anitha Rosland
· Nisful Laila
·International Journal of Economics and Management ·2021 ·JEL: G21, E44
Financial institutions like commercial banks play important role in the financial system by helping countries to grow and provide capital and platform for investors. However, banks need to be able to generate income in their lending business and perform efficiently. Nonperforming loans (NPLs) is one of the tools to determine the efficiency of lending institutions in which reflect the quality of the credit portfolio as well as the health of the banking sector. High levels of NPLs in the banking system places the banks in risky situation which may lead to limited financial activities and consequently lower investment and growth. Motivated by this scenario, this study examines the determinants of NPLs in the Malaysian banking system. Using annual data from 1988 to 2018, the study estimates the short and long-run dynamics of several determinants using the Auto-Regressive Distribution Lag (ARDL) cointegration approach. The empirical results demonstrate mixed results. In the long-run, exchange rate is positive and significantly related to non-performing loans, while industrial production and money supply are negative and significant. However, inflation does not have significant effect on NPLs in Malaysia. The findings of this study is useful in assisting the banking institutions and policy makers to design macro and fiscal policies.
Performance of Islamic and Conventional Funds: Evidence from Saudi Arabia and Malaysia
Catherine S F Ho
· Nur Hazimah Amran
· Irfan Syarafuddin B Ab Aziz
· Wahida Ahmad
·International Journal of Economics and Management ·2021 ·JEL: G11, G12, G15, G23
Financial crises and the geopolitical issues around the world have caused much volatility in returns and market uncertainty. This trend of higher uncertainty in risk and return causes vast changes in stock and investment values, which caused investors scrabbling to maintain the value of their wealth. It is therefore vital that investors understand and compare investment alternatives in order to maximize return. The purpose of this research is to analyze the performance of Islamic and conventional mutual funds and provide a comparison of fund performances to enable investors to make informed decisions. Mutual fund data from 2013 to 2017 for Saudi Arabia and Malaysia, the two largest Islamic fund markets are compiled and risk-adjusted performance statistics applied to arrive at measurement of performances. Although fund performance comparison is a wellresearched area, this study contributes to the literature in terms of a comprehensive investigation of various types of Islamic funds with an in-depth evaluation of different investment time horizons. Empirical evidence on risk-adjusted performance comparison indicates that Malaysian conventional equity, mixed asset and money market funds for all 1, 3 and 5-year horizons outperform their Islamic counterparts. Similarly, Saudi Arabian equity and mixed asset funds also outperform their Islamic counterparts for all time horizons. On the contrary, the Saudi Islamic money market funds outperform their conventional partners. Cross country comparison confirms that Malaysian funds achieve superior performance except for money market funds which underperform their Saudi counterparts. In summary, current evidence concludes that, depending on the investment horizon and risk appetite, investors are better off investing in the appropriate fund.
Privatisation of Toll Roads to Promote Malay Entry into Business in Malaysia: A Critical Review of Distribution Stance, Returns, Risk and Governance
Ramasamy Thillainathan
·Malaysian Journal of Economic Studies ·2021 ·JEL: R42, O17
The focus of the paper is on toll road privatisation. An overview of the choice of privatisation and the form it took, in promoting the entry of Malays into business, is followed by a review of other studies on privatisation in Malaysia. Given the highly confidential nature of the privatised concessions, data on ownership and likely terms have been gleaned from rating of the bonds issued, as the bond market has been the key source of infrastructure financing. From such data, the dominance of the Malay managerial class over its business class is readily evident, especially after the Asian financial crisis (AFC). The likely impact of toll road privatisation on the stance of distribution is also examined. As concessions are still awarded on a negotiated basis, the issue of rent-seeking is also explored. Uncertainty and variability in the financial performance of the concessionaires can be seen from the spread and deterioration in credit of the issuers, attesting to the greenfield nature of the projects undertaken or due to differences in gearing or in the support and subsidy enjoyed from the government. The separation in ownership and control, either due to continued ownership by state-owned enterprises (SOEs) or widely held public listed companies (PLCs), has increased the risk of expropriation by those who exercise management control.
Tax Awareness Among Students From Higher Learning Institutions in Malaysia: Education Area as a Moderator
Soliha Sanusi
· Nik Herda Nik Abdullah
· Lim Tan Chin
· Fauziah Rastam
· Nabilah Rozzani
·International Journal of Economics and Management ·2021 ·JEL: M41
This study investigates the higher learning institution students' tax knowledge, tax attitude, tax morale, and the role of tax authorities with the moderation of the education area that influences tax awareness in Malaysia. Data from 224 respondents were collected physically and via online across Malaysia. The Structural Equation Model by using Smart PLS 3.2.4 was used to analyse the data, whereby five hypotheses were tested in the current study. The results showed that tax knowledge, tax attitude, and tax morale significantly influenced tax awareness. The result also indicated that the education area was able to moderate the relationship between the role of tax authorities and tax awareness. The findings of this study contributed to the research on tax area as only a few researches had been conducted on tax awareness, especially in Malaysia. It was suggested to compare the tax awareness amongst different countries as a comparative study to understand what tax authorities of other countries have contributed to their students in the higher learning institutions.
The Determinants of Carbon Dioxide Emissions in Malaysia and Singapore
Norimah Rambeli
· Dayang Affizzah Awang Marikan
· Emilda Hashim
· Siti Zubaidah Mohd. Ariffin
· Asmawi Hashim
· Jan M. Podivinsky
·Jurnal Ekonomi Malaysia ·2021 ·JEL: C32, O44, P48, Q56
The focal aim of this paper is to examine the relationship between total energy consumption, Gross Domestic Product, urbanization, trade openness and financial development on carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions. The study focuses on two selected ASEAN countries namely, Malaysia and Singapore, due to their major contribution in CO2 emissions among other ASEAN countries, after Brunei. This study adopts the quarterly time series data from Q1:2010 to Q1:2020. By utilizing the linear ARDL method, the presence of a positive and long-term relationship was confirmed between the variables for both countries. The findings also validate the Environment Kuznets hypothesis namely, that CO2 emissions will continue to rise until the national income reaches optimum point and beyond this environment quality will begin to improve. The results established that financial development helps to reduce CO2 emissions in both the short- and long-run. Further, trade openness tends to reduce CO2 in Malaysia. For Singapore however, it reduces CO2 in the short-run but not in the long-run. In general the study reveals that the relationship between emissions of CO2 and economic development is U-shaped, for both countries. For future sustainable environment the study implies that specific financial planning towards green technology is necessary to sustain a better environment. Economic growth of the country is therefore more meaningful if accompanied with a sustainable environment for future generations.
The Economic Impacts of Air Safety Rating Downgrade for Malaysia
Tamat Sarmidi
· Nurul Aishah Khairuddin
· Muhamad Rias K V Zainuddin
·Malaysian Journal of Economic Studies ·2021 ·JEL: D67, L93, R41
In 2019, the US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) downgraded the Civil Aviation Authority of Malaysia (CAAM) from tier one to tier two. Existing research has revealed that downgrading air safety ratings has a detrimental effect on the aviation sector. Although extensive research has been carried out on air safety downgrading, limited studies have delved into the backward and forward linkages and inter-industries framework. By employing a difference-in-differences (DID) panel data econometric and input-output (I-O) analysis to a modified sectoral aggregation of Malaysia’s I-O Table 2015, this study is able to simulate the impact of air safety downgrading. The findings show that, apart from being a “key” industry, air safety downgrades could result in a RM722.5 million loss to Malaysia’s GDP. A more in-depth inspection of the results indicates that the reduction in GDP mainly results from the air transport industry (RM252.0 million), other transportation services (RM107.0 million), and wholesale and retail trade (RM66.2 million). The findings complement earlier related studies that air safety rating downgrades could be a severe threat to sustainable economic growth.
The Impact of Exchange Rate Fluctuations on International Trade Between Malaysia and China
Ke-Chyn Ng
· Mui-Yin Chin
·International Journal of Economics and Management ·2021 ·JEL: F14, F31
This study examined the impact of exchange rate fluctuations on the level of international trade between Malaysia and China using 45 observations spanning from 2010 quarter 1 to 2021 quarter 1. The Generalized Autoregressive Conditional Heteroscedasticity (GARCH) model was adopted to compute the exchange rate fluctuations. International trade between Malaysia and China was selected in this study as, since 2009, China has consistently been Malaysia's top trading partner. Besides, to produce precise output, this study employed two models: the export and import models. The empirical results, derived from Autoregressive Distributed Lag (ARDL) modelling, suggested that exchange rate fluctuations had a negative but statistically insignificant impact on exports. In contrast, exchange rate fluctuations had a positive and statistically significant impact on imports. This result implied that importers from Malaysia were generally risk-takers, as they tended to trade significantly during periods of high exchange rate fluctuation. However, to avoid losses for both exporters and importers due to exchange rate fluctuations, policymakers from both countries should ensure that facilities for exchange rate hedging become more convenient and straightforward for traders so that international trade continues to bloom for both countries.
The Influence of Power and Trust on Tax Compliance Motivation in Malaysia
Siti Fatimah Abdul Rashid
· Rosiati Ramli
· Mohd Rizal Palil
· Amizawati Mohd Amir
·International Journal of Economics and Management ·2021 ·JEL: H24, H26, H31
Previous studies showed mixed findings regarding the relationship between the different types of power and tax compliance motivations. Besides, past studies that applied the slippery slope framework and the extended version had neglecting reward power. Empirical evidence on the relationships between different types of trust in tax administrators and tax compliance motivations is also limited. Therefore, this study examines the relationship between tax administrators’ power and trust in tax administrators with tax compliance motivations. This study applied a quantitative approach using a mailed survey questionnaire on 388 professional taxpayers in Malaysia. The data were analyzed using structural equation modeling (SEM) using AMOS Graphic. First, in line with the slippery slope and the extended version, coercive power, and legitimate foundation power have a significant positive relationship with enforced compliance. Second, this article also found that voluntary cooperation is influenced positively by reward power, persuasive power, and reason-based trust. Lastly, committed cooperation is influenced by coercive power negatively, and positively by legitimate foundation power, reward power, and implicit trust. Besides contributing to existing literature, the findings are useful for tax administrators in designing their regulatory strategies. This study suggests that tax administrators implement a targeted approach in which regulatory strategies depend on taxpayers’ characteristics and the tax environment. This targeted approach allows for the highest level of compliance to be achieved at the lowest cost.
The Macroeconomic Fundamentals of the Real Exchange Rate in Malaysia: Some Empirical
J. M. Shukri
· Muzafar Shah Habibullah
· Roseziahazni Abdul Ghani
· M. A. M. Suhaily
·Jurnal Ekonomi Malaysia ·2021 ·JEL: E43, E52, F31, F32, F33, F41
The aim of this paper is to estimate the equilibrium of exchange rates and identify the roles of macroeconomics fundamentals affecting exchange rates using Malaysian data spanning 1970 to 2019. This study adopts the Autoregressive Distributed Lag model to examine the long-run relationships or cointegration among variables and the dynamic effect within variables in the short-run over the sample period. The results suggest that inflation rate and national income growth rate play important roles in influencing exchange rate movement. The results also reveal that the misalignment of exchange rates is quite small and stable during 1988 to 2019, except for 2015 which was attributed to the weaker growth in China. Consecutively, this study suggests that the parity condition is only important in the long-run in explaining exchange rates behaviour for the sample country.
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.
A Quantile Regression Analysis of Absorptive Capacity in the Malaysian Manufacturing Industry
Norhanishah Mohamad Yunus
· Norehan Abdullah
·Malaysian Journal of Economic Studies ·2022 ·JEL: F20, F35, F61, J24, C21, L6
Using a set of absorptive capacity proxies, we present new empirical findings on the role of absorptive capacity in assimilating the technology effects from the presence of multinational corporations (MNCs) in the Malaysian manufacturing industry. We applied a quantile regression estimator to explicitly gauge the level of absorptive capacity among workers by their levels of education at different quantiles of the conditional FDI distribution during the period of 2000–2018. We conclude that the medium-high technology industries benefit more from FDI if the workers’ absorptive capacity level reaches at least the median quantile. Based on the findings of this study, we suggest that educational digitisation efforts in enhancing quality human capital should be intensified, by equipping them with the latest knowledge and skills, which in turn requires cooperation between universities, public technical and vocational education and training (TVET) institutions as well as MNCs.
Corporate Sustainability and Firms' Financial Performance: Evidence from Malaysian and Indonesian Public Listed Companies
Norashikin Ismail
· Nadia Anridho
· Mohamad Azwan Md Isa
· Nor Hadaliza Abd Rahman
· Noriah Ismail
·International Journal of Economics and Management ·2022 ·JEL: O16, L25
The aim of study is to examine the impact of corporate sustainability (ESG) on the financial performance for Malaysia and Indonesia. A sample was selected comprising of 36 companies listed in Bursa Malaysia and 24 companies listed in Indonesia Stock Exchange over the ten-year period 2010-2019. Using fixed effect (FE) and pooled OLS suggest that ESG practices are positively associated with financial performance. This result implies that companies engaged in environmental, social and governance aspects have a higher shareholder value. A good economy condition encouraged companies to integrate ESG aspects and rewarded investors with good financial return (ROE). Companies with lesser governance practice would increase shareholders value (ROE). Essentially, this empirical evidence confirms stakeholder’s theory and agency theory. The implication of this study is to strengthen the development of sustainability from ESG practice and in line with current agenda of sustainable finance for the policymakers. Indeed, this study encourages more potential investors to invest companies with ESG practices
Determinants of Using Ride-Hailing Service: Evidence from Malaysia
Ee Shiang Lim
· Jacqueline Liza Fernandez
·Malaysian Journal of Economic Studies ·2022 ·JEL: C13, D12
With the entrance of Uber into the land transportation industry, ride-hailing service has gained popularity and changed the way people travel in urban areas in Malaysia. Despite the growing popularity of this new mode of cab service, studies about factors influencing consumers’ choice to use ride-hailing service are limited in developing countries. This study used primary data collected via a survey in Penang, Malaysia. This study aims to examine the factors affecting consumers’ decision to utilise ride-hailing service. The novelty of this study is the adoption of a Heckman probit selection model to account for the possibility of sample selection bias and the introduction of an important explanatory variable - consumers’ comparative satisfaction with the attributes of ride-hailing and traditional taxi service that affect consumers’ choice of cab service. The results show age, gender, education, marital status, income, cost considerations and vehicle ownership significantly determine the probability of using cab service. Consumers’ choice between ride-hailing and traditional taxi service is affected by gender and their comparative rating of both services in terms of waiting time and the disposition of drivers. This suggests the necessity for cab service providers to improve their service in order to remain competitive in the industry.
Environmental, Social and Governance Performance: Continuous Improvement Matters
Woei Chyuan Wong
· Abd Halim Ahmad
· Shamsul Bahrain Mohamed-Arshad
· Sabariah Nordin
· Azira Abdul Adzis
·Malaysian Journal of Economic Studies ·2022 ·JEL: G32
This paper examines the determinants of Malaysian listed firms’ environmental, social and governance (ESG) performance during the period 2005–2018. We focus on individual firms’ continuous efforts to improve their ESG scores once they are ESG rated. Panel fixed effect results reveal that the number of years since a firm was first included in Bloomberg’s ESG score is positive and significantly related to its ESG performance. We interpret this as evidence of firms’ deliberate efforts to improve their ESG scores once they fall under the radar of a third-party ESG rating agency. This finding underscores the importance of third-party rating agency in fostering greater corporate sustainability. We contribute to the literature that posits that ESG third-party rating agency can lead to higher level of ESG practices of the rated firms.