Malaysian spending patterns prior to Goods and Services Tax (GST) implementation

The study is to examine whether Malaysian consumers have the fair knowledge about GST, is there a strong association between gender and spending patterns, and do demographic factors strongly influence level of spending among Malaysian consumers were issues addressed in this study. 730 respondents we...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:International Journal of Supply Chain Management
Main Author: Kamaruddin R.; Mustapha N.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: ExcelingTech 2017
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85021713514&partnerID=40&md5=588eae4b84e54f81f0ad47100221e5e2
id 2-s2.0-85021713514
spelling 2-s2.0-85021713514
Kamaruddin R.; Mustapha N.
Malaysian spending patterns prior to Goods and Services Tax (GST) implementation
2017
International Journal of Supply Chain Management
6
2

https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85021713514&partnerID=40&md5=588eae4b84e54f81f0ad47100221e5e2
The study is to examine whether Malaysian consumers have the fair knowledge about GST, is there a strong association between gender and spending patterns, and do demographic factors strongly influence level of spending among Malaysian consumers were issues addressed in this study. 730 respondents were selected and interviewed using a structured questionnaire a week after the implementation of GST. Study findings showed that Malaysian consumers do have fair knowledge about GST and will still give priority to accommodation, followed by groceries, food, transportation, clothing, communications/internet and entertainment. There were no strong association between gender and spending patterns. However, age and work sectors appeared to significantly influence the pattern. Based on our Logistics Regression Analysis, we predict that people would not spend after GST is implemented, thus, the implementation of GST will not get its desired results. We proposed that the Ministry of Finance, among other measures, should consider adding more products/ services in zero-rated basket. © 2017 ExcelingTech Pub, UK.
ExcelingTech
20513771
English
Article

author Kamaruddin R.; Mustapha N.
spellingShingle Kamaruddin R.; Mustapha N.
Malaysian spending patterns prior to Goods and Services Tax (GST) implementation
author_facet Kamaruddin R.; Mustapha N.
author_sort Kamaruddin R.; Mustapha N.
title Malaysian spending patterns prior to Goods and Services Tax (GST) implementation
title_short Malaysian spending patterns prior to Goods and Services Tax (GST) implementation
title_full Malaysian spending patterns prior to Goods and Services Tax (GST) implementation
title_fullStr Malaysian spending patterns prior to Goods and Services Tax (GST) implementation
title_full_unstemmed Malaysian spending patterns prior to Goods and Services Tax (GST) implementation
title_sort Malaysian spending patterns prior to Goods and Services Tax (GST) implementation
publishDate 2017
container_title International Journal of Supply Chain Management
container_volume 6
container_issue 2
doi_str_mv
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85021713514&partnerID=40&md5=588eae4b84e54f81f0ad47100221e5e2
description The study is to examine whether Malaysian consumers have the fair knowledge about GST, is there a strong association between gender and spending patterns, and do demographic factors strongly influence level of spending among Malaysian consumers were issues addressed in this study. 730 respondents were selected and interviewed using a structured questionnaire a week after the implementation of GST. Study findings showed that Malaysian consumers do have fair knowledge about GST and will still give priority to accommodation, followed by groceries, food, transportation, clothing, communications/internet and entertainment. There were no strong association between gender and spending patterns. However, age and work sectors appeared to significantly influence the pattern. Based on our Logistics Regression Analysis, we predict that people would not spend after GST is implemented, thus, the implementation of GST will not get its desired results. We proposed that the Ministry of Finance, among other measures, should consider adding more products/ services in zero-rated basket. © 2017 ExcelingTech Pub, UK.
publisher ExcelingTech
issn 20513771
language English
format Article
accesstype
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
_version_ 1820775473172447232