Wednesday, July 16, 2008


Thursday, June 19, 2008

Oil Price Comparison


RM625 fuel subsidy a one-time payment only!

June 9, 2008 at 2:52 am · Filed under Cars, Local News, Malaysian Fuel Prices
When the Prime Minister's Office released the full announcement on the new petrol and diesel prices for Malaysia as well as the new subsidy structure last week, it was mentioned that the RM625 subsidy would be issued for cars (and RM125 for bikes) with road tax renewable between the 1st of April 2008 until the 31st of March 2009, with payments to be issued via postal orders from July onwards.
At that point we were unsure on what this meant as it seemed to indicate that the RM625 subsidy was a one-off thing only.
Second Finance Minister Nor Mohamed Yakcop has cleared up this uncertainty on the subsidy, clarifying that it is indeed a one-time payment only, and not a yearly thing as some had hoped. Anyone who is planning to cheat the system and try to profit from a yearly subsidy scheme by stocking up on old cars that are nearing scrap-metal condition can forget about it now.
It is still not clear at the moment whether cars and bikes with engine displacements above 2000cc and above 250cc respectively would have their road tax cut by RM200 and RM50 permanently, or just for one year as with the fuel subsidy.
Price controls are supposed to be lifted in August, which is when fuel price controls are to be lifted and allowed to be determined by market rates, free of government restrictions. The government will maintain an RM0.30 per liter subsidy on whatever the price is, which means if the market rate is RM7, we will pay RM6.70 per liter. With crude oil prices touching a record high of US$139.12 a few days ago, its anyone's guess what August's fuel prices will be like... and I shudder to think how much it'll cost to refuel next year.
I guess compared with our per capita income, cars are now officially a luxury and thanks to our pathetic public transport system, a necessity at the same time! We will have to find alternate ways to cut our fuel bill without relying on public transport, such as minimizing travel and car pooling.