M40 snubbed in Pemerkasa Plus? Not true and here’s why


SINCE Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin announced the Pemerkasa Plus stimulus package on the eve of the national lockdown, which started on June 1, cyberspace has been inundated with accusations that the M40 group has yet again been sidelined.

Among those who made the claim was MCA Youth chief Nicole Wong. While she is right that the M40 group will not be receiving direct cash aid such as the Bantuan Prihatin Rakyat given to the B40 segment, there are still a host of incentives the former will receive to tide them over during these economically trying times.

A sizable number from the M40 group are under the payroll of small and medium enterprises (SMEs), many of which have to cease operations during the lockdown.

Understandably, there are concerns about job security. But the prime minister has announced that under Pemerkasa Plus, the wage subsidy programme (PSU) will be extended for another month.

The current PSU is into its third phase, having first been announced in March last year as an incentive for employers to retain their staff. Cumulatively, the subsidy has been running for around 12 months, with the latest costing the government RM1.5 billion and expected to benefit 2.5 million workers and 200,000 employees.

How can we say that the M40 group has been sidelined when the government has injected billions to ensure that many of them are still retained as employees?

Besides the wage subsidy programme, the government has also set aside RM1.5 billion microcredit loans for SMEs to help tide them over at an interest rate of 3%. This is on top of the balance RM5 billion loan facility set aside earlier by Bank Negara Malaysia for SMEs to ease the latter’s cash flow.

Wong is right that the moratorium for bank loans is only automatic for those in the B40 group. But since the automatic moratorium expired last September, banks have allowed borrowers to restructure and reschedule their repayments on a case-by-case basis.

According to the Association of Banks in Malaysia, more than 90% of borrowers’ applications for repayment and extension of loan moratoriums have been approved. So, the question of the M40 being denied of aid again does not arise.

There are other areas that Pemerkasa Plus benefits the M40 group, such as the extension on the waiver on stamp duty under the Home Ownership Campaign and the exemption on sales and service tax for cars, both to Dec 31 this year. Most of the recipients of both the schemes are from the M40 category as the B40 group is unlikely to make big purchases during this time.

Lastly, there is also the e-Belia programme where e-wallet credit of RM150 is given to Malaysians aged 18 to 20 and full-time students. Not only will this boost the purchasing power of the recipients, it will also help online traders, many of whom are from the M40 group, increase their sales.

In closing, we need to realise that a responsible government will need to prioritise the use of its limited resources.

As it is, the situation among the B40 is more dire than that of the M40. Having said that, the government has also extended help to the M40, even if some of it is indirect, but no less insignificant. – June 3, 2021.

* R. Yaakob reads The Malaysian Insight.

* This is the opinion of the writer or publication and does not necessarily represent the views of The Malaysian Insight. Article may be edited for brevity and clarity.


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