Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Credit Cards and the Malaysian Budget 2010

Credit Cards



With effect from January 1, 2010 principal card holders and supplementary card holders of credit cards and charge cards will have to pay an annul service tax of RM50/- per card and RM25/= per card respectively. More and more people are using credit cards in Malaysia. The number of credit cards in circulation has increased from two million in 1997 to eleven million in August this year. This does not include 285,000 charge cards in use. Service tax of RM50/= was previously imposed with effect from January 1, 1997 and abolished in April 1, 2001. The latest service tax is to promote careful spending among Malaysian.

Credit card transactions growth dipped to 6 percent to RM38.9 billion in the first seven months of the year, compared with 18.2 per cent increase in the same period last year,

Individuals with credit card related debts seeking the services of the central bank’s Credit Counselling and Debt Management Agency increased by 38.6 percent to 7492 from a 75.9 per cent growth to 5406 in the same seven-month period last year. These accounted for 74 per cent of total cases under the Debt Management Programme.

For those people who are holding 5 or 6 cards, it means an extra expenses of RM250/= to RM300/=.just to keep the cards. It is time for them to reduce their cards to not more than two. Too many cards mean too much temptation to overspend and too many cheques to issue to settle debts from too many banks.

1 comments:

  1. Around 600 million pounds has been been paid off in personal debt which has helped to reduce the nations 1 trillion borrowing on credit cards and loans. Individuals may have turned to seeking debt management help and ways to get out of debt or it may be down to the fact that low interest rates have allowed homeowners to save on their mortgage which they have then ploughed back into reducing their debts.
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