logo
Government May Delay Subsidy Reforms: CGS

Government May Delay Subsidy Reforms: CGS

BusinessToday26-05-2025
Malaysia's headline inflation held steady at 1.4% year-on-year in April 2025, in line with CGS International and Bloomberg consensus estimates. The Consumer Price Index (CPI) remained unchanged from the previous month, supported by easing food prices but tempered by rising utility and personal care costs.
Core inflation, however, edged higher to 2.0% in April—its highest level since December 2023—indicating resilient underlying price pressures, particularly in non-volatile categories.
'The sustained low headline inflation was largely driven by slower food price growth, which moderated to +2.3% yoy, its lowest level since December last year,' CGS International said in its latest economic update.
Food Costs Dip, But Utilities Rebound
Food-at-home prices grew by just 0.5% yoy, while food-away-from-home eased to 4.3%. On a monthly basis, food costs dipped by 0.1%. However, the utilities segment rebounded in April, fuelled by rising service maintenance and repair costs for dwellings, averaging 5.7% yoy since the beginning of the year.
Other categories such as personal care and social protection also saw prices rise, contributing modestly to the upward pressure on the index.
Egg Subsidy Removal Seen Having Minimal CPI Impact
The Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security's (MAFS) announcement to phase out egg subsidies—starting with a reduction from RM0.10 to RM0.05 per egg from 1 May and full removal by 1 August—is expected to have minimal impact on inflation.
'With egg prices forming just 0.4% of the CPI basket and having shown a declining trend since July 2024, we believe the price liberalisation will not trigger significant inflationary pressure,' CGS noted.
The move is projected to save the government RM400 million in subsidies in 2025, aligning with broader fiscal reform objectives.
Policy Delays Prompt CPI Forecast Revision
In light of weakening domestic demand and global tariff concerns—particularly following U.S. President Donald Trump's renewed trade policy threats—the Malaysian government has opted for a more cautious approach to subsidy and tax reforms.
The implementation of the expanded Sales and Services Tax (SST), originally scheduled for early 2025, has been delayed to 1 June, with actual enforcement likely beginning in July. The SST expansion could add 10–20 basis points to CPI, with a second-round effect expected by August.
Additionally, the long-anticipated rationalisation of RON95 fuel subsidies, previously targeted for mid-2025, may be delayed. The reform could impact 15% of households and add a further 20 basis points to the annual inflation rate.
Revised CPI Forecast for 2025
Given the delay in price reforms, subdued global commodity prices, and modest inflation in the first four months of the year (1.5% yoy), CGS International has revised its full-year 2025 CPI forecast down to 2.0% from 2.3% previously.
'Despite short-term softness, we expect inflationary pressures to pick up in the second half of 2025 and into 2026 as reform measures gradually take hold,' CGS added.
The revised outlook reflects a more measured reform timeline and a shifting macroeconomic backdrop, positioning Malaysia for stable yet cautious inflationary trends in the year ahead. Related
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

US trade deal boosts Jakarta stocks, rupiah slips ahead of rate decision
US trade deal boosts Jakarta stocks, rupiah slips ahead of rate decision

New Straits Times

time16 minutes ago

  • New Straits Times

US trade deal boosts Jakarta stocks, rupiah slips ahead of rate decision

JAKARTA: Indonesian equities climbed to their highest in a month on Wednesday after Jakarta negotiated more favourable trade tariffs with Washington, while the local currency slipped ahead of an interest rate decision by the central bank. The rupiah slipped over 0.1 per cent, while the benchmark Jakarta Composite Index rose as much as 0.8 per cent to its highest lsince mid-June before paring some gains. Shares of Bank Mandiri, one of the country's largest lenders, climbed as much as 1.3 per cent. Washington on Tuesday confirmed it had reached a tariff deal with Indonesia, setting duties at 19 per cent on goods imported from Southeast Asia's biggest economy — well below the previously threatened 32 per cent. It is also lower than the steeper levies proposed for neighbouring countries, including 25 per cent on Malaysia and 36 per cent on Thailand. The news buoyed sentiment ahead of a policy meeting by Bank Indonesia later in the day, though the market remained split on the likely outcome. Bank Indonesia has eased monetary policy twice this year but stood pat at its meeting in June. "It's a close call," said Radhika Rao, senior economist at DBS, who expects the central bank to keep interest rates steady. "The overnight conclusion of the trade deal will be positive for IDR-denominated assets, increasing the possibility that BI (Bank Indonesia) might lean into its dovish bias today." Yet, caution prevails as traders remain all too aware of US President Donald Trump's ever-shifting stance on tariffs. He has often backtracked, altered tariffs rates and timelines, and threatened higher levies since first introducing higher reciprocal tariffs on April 2. Meanwhile, broader emerging Asian currencies were under pressure after the latest US inflation data suggested tariffs were feeding into consumer prices, pushing the dollar to a 15-week high, prompting investors to scale back their monetary easing bets. US Treasury yields climbed to multi-week peaks after the modest rise in June inflation, lifting the dollar index against a bunch of currencies. Eugene Leow, a senior rates strategist with DBS, said market participants were starting to get uncomfortable about the mix of events with US stock indexes and dollar taking note of the jump in yields. The Philippine peso and Thai baht were among the biggest losers, each falling around 0.3 per cent, while the Taiwan dollar also lost ground. In equity markets, Malaysia's Kuala Lumpur index fell 0.3 per cent, Seoul's benchmark declined 0.6 per cent, and Manila stocks dropped 1.6 per cent to its lowest level since late June. Bucking the regional trend, Singapore's Straits Times Index extended its rally, setting a record for the 11th consecutive day, while Taipei's benchmark climbed roughly 1 per cent to reach its highest level since late February.

ASML drags European stocks lower amid tariff worries
ASML drags European stocks lower amid tariff worries

New Straits Times

time16 minutes ago

  • New Straits Times

ASML drags European stocks lower amid tariff worries

LONDON: European shares slipped on Wednesday, with ASML leading losses after a weak business update, while broader investor sentiment remained cautious on concerns over tariff-driven inflation following stronger-than-expected US inflation data. The pan-European STOXX 600 index fell 0.3 per cent to 543.38 points, as of 0712 GMT. ASML fell 6.7 per cent after the world's biggest supplier of computer chip-making equipment warned that it may not achieve growth in 2026, even after its second quarter bookings beat market expectations. The latest earnings forecasts showed on Tuesday that the outlook for European corporate health has deteriorated as US President Donald Trump's most recent tariff statements created further uncertainty for businesses. Additionally, the US CPI reading weighed on market sentiment, renewing worries over tariff-induced inflationary effects. Across the Atlantic, focus now turns to producer price data later in the day for further clues on the impact of tariffs on the world's largest economy. In trade, investors awaited for clarity on US-EU trade talks as the bloc readied retaliatory measures if negotiations with Washington failed. In the market, European technology stocks declined 1.4 per cent, while auto stocks fell about 1 per cent. Data showed on Tuesday, Britain's annual rate of consumer price inflation unexpectedly rose to its highest in over a year at 3.6 per cent in June, up from 3.4 per cent in May.

- How Tariffs And Taxes Could Derail Malaysia's Climate Ambitions
- How Tariffs And Taxes Could Derail Malaysia's Climate Ambitions

Barnama

time32 minutes ago

  • Barnama

- How Tariffs And Taxes Could Derail Malaysia's Climate Ambitions

16/07/2025 03:45 PM Opinions on topical issues from thought leaders, columnists and editors. By : Mogesh Sababathy At a time when Malaysia must accelerate its climate transition, can we afford foreign and domestic policy shocks that destabilise our climate finance and green technology agenda? The recent announcement by U.S. President Donald Trump to impose a sweeping 25% tariff on 'any and all Malaysian products' starting Aug 1, 2025, has jolted Malaysia's economy and, potentially, its entire energy transition trajectory. This move not only threatens our US$80 billion annual trade relationship with the United States, but risks undercutting the financial and industrial scaffolding needed to meet our net-zero ambitions by 2050. For a country that has pledged a 45% reduction in carbon intensity by 2030, this is not just an economic setback but also a stress test of our climate governance, resilience and readiness. The potential impact is immense. Sectors like electrical and electronics (E&E), which comprise nearly 40% of our exports, stand particularly exposed. With the Green Technology Master Plan relying heavily on E&E to drive decarbonised manufacturing, this development places our climate-linked industrial strategy in jeopardy. At the same time, Malaysia's expanded Sales and Service Tax (SST) which came into effect July 1, 2025 adds pressure from within. Over 4,800 previously exempt items, including industrial equipment and low-emission machinery, are now taxed at 8%, up from the previous 6%. While the SST expansion is projected to yield RM3 billion in additional revenue, its timing couldn't be worse. FMM warning The Federation of Malaysian Manufacturers (FMM) warns that these cascading tax burdens will inflate costs, shrink margins, and deter future investment especially in capital-intensive green infrastructure. The National Energy Transition Roadmap (NETR), launched in 2023, sets ambitious targets: increasing renewable energy in the national mix to 70% by 2050, developing CCUS (Carbon Capture, Utilisation & Storage), and attracting RM435 billion in investment. But these goals rely on a strong private sector, foreign direct investment, and investor confidence. Reduced export earnings due to tariffs, paired with higher domestic operating costs from the SST, could stall clean energy adoption, battery storage scaling, and smart grid investments. Small and medium green-tech enterprises already navigating tight financing margins may pivot to survival mode, postponing R&D or abandoning green upgrades entirely. This fiscal constriction directly threatens the creation of 23,000 green jobs forecast under NETR, and it risks reducing Malaysia's contribution to global clean energy supply chains at a time when demand is rising. On the other hand, Malaysia's Voluntary Carbon Market (VCM), launched via the Bursa Carbon Exchange (BCX) in late 2022, was one of Southeast Asia's most promising climate finance innovations. With a projected market value of US$237 million by 2030, it was expected to fund reforestation, conservation, and industrial decarbonisation projects. However, the VCM and the upcoming carbon tax and Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS) under the National Climate Change Bill (RUUPIN) are all sensitive to macroeconomic conditions. Carbon governance mechanisms Historically, economic downturns or trade disruptions often lead governments to delay carbon pricing reforms in the name of economic recovery. Malaysia is no exception. Unless insulated, our carbon governance mechanisms may stall or regress under fiscal and political pressure just when they're needed to drive long-term decarbonisation and attract green capital. Climate change disproportionately affects the poorest and most vulnerable communities in Malaysia from coastal erosion in Sabah to urban flooding in KL. But so too will economic instability. Tariff-related export losses could result in job cuts in key industrial areas, while SST inflation will raise living costs. When people are forced to choose between short-term survival and long-term sustainability, the environment always loses. Without targeted support, our vision of a 'just transition' risks becoming rhetorical. The RUUPIN framework, which emphasises equity and protection for vulnerable populations, must be backed by resilient fiscal policy and progressive social safety nets not sacrificed in budget cuts driven by external shocks. In this regard, what can Malaysia do? Firstly, Malaysia must demand clarity on the tariff scope and seek exclusions for clean technology, solar components, and environmental goods, aligning with WTO environmental exceptions. Next, allocate funds from the new SST intake to fund VCM capacity-building, CCUS pilots, and green job retraining programmes. SST exemptions or rebates for low-emission equipment, energy-efficient machinery, and carbon audit services must also be provided to incentivise clean industrial investments. Also, as the Chair of ASEAN this year, we also have an upper hand in using this moment to lead within ASEAN, pushing for regional carbon border adjustments and green mutual recognition agreements that support decarbonised exports. Lastly, fast-track funding for climate policy education, especially in carbon markets, climate law, and environmental economics, to prepare the next generation of climate experts. In conclusion, economic shocks will come and go. But the climate crisis is permanent and intensifying. As floods grow more frequent, air pollution worsens, and biodiversity collapses, the cost of inaction grows steeper each year. Trade policy and tax policy must serve, not sabotage our climate goals. Malaysia must not retreat from climate ambition in the face of tariffs or taxes. We must instead use these shocks to recalibrate our economic tools, reaffirm our global leadership in climate governance, and build a greener, more resilient Malaysia that doesn't trade short-term relief for long-term collapse. -- BERNAMA Mogesh Sababathy is a Youth Climate Advocate and a National Consultative Panel Member to the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environmental Sustainability of Malaysia. He is also a PhD candidate at Universiti Putra Malaysia (UPM). (The views expressed in this article are those of the author(s) and do not reflect the official policy or position of BERNAMA)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store