Saturday, June 7, 2025

Why Most Malaysians Stay "Average" with Their Money (And How You Can Break Free)

 

Introduction: Escaping the Average Money Trap

Walk into any mamak at night, and you’ll hear the same stories:

  • “Gaji tak cukup…”

  • “Kereta baru beli, installment mahal...”

  • “Takde saving, susah nak kahwin…”

The truth?
Most Malaysians stay financially average not because of fate — but because of habits.

Today, we’ll break down why many people stay stuck, and more importantly, how you can break free and build real wealth.

The “Cashflow = Survival” Mentality

In Malaysia, many live paycheck to paycheck:

  • Salary comes in.

  • Expenses eat up 90%–100%.

  • Maybe RM50–100 left by month-end.

This cycle feels normal because everyone else is doing it.
But normal ≠ good.

Reality Check:
If you save nothing today, you're borrowing from your future self.

Key Reasons Most Stay Average

1. No Budgeting Habit

"Tak cukup duit" is often because there’s no plan, not because income is too low.

2. Lifestyle Inflation

Every time income goes up, spending goes up faster. New car, new iPhone, bigger house.

3. Zero Investing

Savings die slowly under 2–3% bank interest, while inflation eats away purchasing power.

4. Fear of Taking (Smart) Risks

Many avoid investing, side hustles, or entrepreneurship due to fear.

5. Following the Crowd

Investing because "kawan suruh" or spending because "semua orang buat" leads to disaster.

How You Can Break Free

1. Build Emergency Fund First

  • 6 months of expenses minimum.

  • Tabung Haji, Maybank MAE, Touch n' Go Go+ for short-term.

2. Invest Systematically

  • Start with unit trusts, robo-advisors like StashAway, REITs, EPF voluntary top-ups.

3. Increase Financial Literacy

  • Read one finance book a month (start with The Psychology of Money).

  • Follow reputable Malaysian finance blogs.

4. Mind Your Circle

  • Spend time with people who talk about investments, businesses, growth — not just gossip.

5. Set Financial Goals

  • RM100k savings by 30?

  • Passive RM2,000 income monthly by 40?

Write it down, break it into steps, and track monthly progress.

Malaysian Real-Life Example

Average Joe

  • RM5,000 salary

  • RM4,800 expenses

  • RM200 "savings"

  • Net worth growth: almost none

Smart Sam

  • RM5,000 salary

  • RM2,500 expenses

  • RM2,000 savings/investments monthly

  • Net worth at RM100,000+ by 30 years old

Small differences in daily habits = Big differences in life outcomes.

Conclusion: Dare to Be Different

It’s easy to stay average — blame the government, inflation, bad bosses.

It’s harder but far more rewarding to be different — to take ownership, save aggressively, invest wisely, and focus on your own growth.

Because in 10 years, you'll either be someone complaining at the mamak table — or someone financially free ordering the roti tisu without checking the price.

Which one will you choose?

No comments:

Post a Comment

Inflation-Proof Your Finances: Practical Tips for Malaysians in 2025

  Introduction: A Ringgit That Buys Less In 2025, Malaysians are feeling the pinch. Your RM50 grocery haul no longer gets you what it used...