{"id":31746,"date":"2017-10-27T11:47:06","date_gmt":"2017-10-27T03:47:06","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.imoney.my\/articles\/?p=31746"},"modified":"2024-02-02T15:24:04","modified_gmt":"2024-02-02T07:24:04","slug":"single-income-klang-valley","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.imoney.my\/articles\/single-income-klang-valley","title":{"rendered":"Breadwinner Blues: Life On A Single Salary In The Klang Valley"},"content":{"rendered":"
Despite the positive outlook<\/a> on Malaysia\u2019s economy, no one\u2019s feeling particularly positive about their current state of finances. Malaysians have been feeling the pinch as the cost of living continues to rise<\/a>, and despite growth in income, it is still not catching up fast enough to counter the effects of high living cost.<\/p>\n The findings on Malaysians’ household expenditures in 2016, which was released earlier this month by the Department of Statistics Malaysia (DOSM), show where Malaysian families are spending their money.<\/p>\n Report on Household Expenditure Survey 2016<\/u><\/strong><\/p>\n Source: Department of Statistics Malaysia<\/a><\/span><\/p><\/div>\n The top three expenses for an average household are housing and utilities (24%), food and beverages (18%) and transportation (13.7%). While this survey gives a good idea on how much Malaysians are spending in general,\u00a0but how much a family allocate for each of these spending categories depend on their income range.<\/p>\n The rising cost of living hits single income families the hardest, as they need to stretch their income for the entire household, with no backup income.<\/p>\n With Budget 2018 about to be announced, we share the stories of sole breadwinners from different income ranges and what they hope to see in the upcoming Budget.<\/p>\n Chan became the sole breadwinner of her family when her husband was unable to maintain his job as a car salesman. Realising there was no stable income to support her family, she took it into her hands to raise her three children on her own. She started working as a seamstress and also took on babysitting jobs on the side to provide for her family’s daily needs, especially her children’s education.<\/p>\n Today, her three children are grown up with two of them still living with her. She lives with her mother, who has already paid for the house they\u2019re living in, so Chan and her children can live rent-free. However, she pays for groceries, as well as the utility bills for the household.<\/p>\n She earns an average of RM800 a month, but her income can go up to RM3,000 on peak period such as months leading up to major festivals. However, she tries to maintain her expenses to below RM800, so she can spread her income on months that she earns less.<\/p>\n With the average income of RM800, she spends a whopping 75% on food and other household items for a household of four adults. This only leaves her RM200 on utility bills. Sometimes, she spends another RM200 on\u00a0materials for her work as a seamstress, but this is only during peak months.<\/p>\n Thankfully, she has some savings in terms of investment in the stock market and EPF savings, which she has withdrawn and put aside. But she hopes that nothing serious will happen that will require her to take it out. Even if she falls ill, she goes to the government hospital for treatment, so she can do without medical insurance. To further reduce her expenses, she walks to the grocery store, rather than taking a taxi or other transportation.<\/p>\n She considers herself one of the lucky few among the low income earners as she always manages to cope financially, somehow.<\/p>\n “I don\u2019t have a need to spend on entertainment or even on myself. My focus has always been on my children and I always did what I could to provide for them.”<\/p>\n She also attributed her financial survival to staying with her relatives to cut down on her expenses.<\/p>\n “If I had to pay rent, I definitely would not be able to afford a lot of basic things,” she explained. “Neither can I look into staying here in Subang Jaya either. The rent here is too high.<\/p>\n<\/a>
<\/span>The B40 struggle<\/strong><\/span><\/h2>\n
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