Research

Household Indebtedness: How global and Domestic Macro-economic Factors Influence Credit Card Debt Default in Malaysia

Household Indebtedness: How global and Domestic Macro-economic Factors Influence Credit Card Debt Default in Malaysia

Description

Malaysia has one of the highest household debts relative to gross domestic product in the Asia region.
Malaysia has one of the highest household debts relative to gross domestic product in the Asia region. High indebted households have negative net worth and prone to default even during mild shocks. In most economies including Malaysia, household loan default is dominated by mortgages. In Malaysia, however, credit card debt default rate has been growing faster than mortgage default rate. Thus, this paper analyses how combined global and domestic macroeconomic factors impact on credit card nonperforming loan (NPLs) in Malaysia. Estimates from the Autoregressive Distributed Lags (ARDL) model highlights that in the long run, credit card NPLs are procyclical as strong domestic real output reduces credit card default. The study shows positive global crude oil price shocks reduces the credit card NPLs while a stressed global financial market condition has a reverse effect on credit card NPLs. Further, consumer price index negatively relates to credit card NPLs while monetary policy affects NPLs whereby a cut back of the overnight policy rate reduces credit card debt default.

Author
1. May Jin Theong (University Of Malaya)
2. Ahmad Farid Osman (University Of Malaya)
3. Su Fei Yap (University Of Malaya)
Journal
Institutions and Economies
×

About

The Malaysian Research Repository, hosted by Monash University Malaysia and sponsored by the World Bank, is a nationally recognised and institutionally supported platform dedicated to the collection and preservation of high-quality research papers and related datasets.
Maintained By
Sponsored By