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MADANI Microfinancing Initiatives Strengthen Economic Resilience During Uncertainties

By Danni Haizal Danial Donald

KUALA LUMPUR, May 16 (Bernama) -- The MADANI government’s microfinancing initiatives strengthen Malaysia’s economic resilience during periods of geopolitical uncertainty by preserving liquidity and supporting domestic economic activity, particularly among small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs).

IPPFA Sdn Bhd director of investment strategy and country economist Mohd Sedek Jantan said microfinancing acts as a targeted economic stabiliser to help soften the impact of economic pressures from spreading deeper into business operations, particularly among SMEs with limited financial buffers.

“As rising operating costs driven by higher global oil prices and trade policy uncertainty continue to pressure businesses, many SMEs are facing tighter margins and increasingly uneven cash flow conditions.

“Therefore, access to financing allows businesses (mainly SMEs) to maintain cash flow, sustain operations and avoid excessive disruptions to employment and investment activity,” he told Bernama.

Mohd Sedek said the impact of microfinancing is amplified through stronger local consumption and community-level economic circulation, which becomes increasingly important when external growth conditions remain uncertain.

“Microfinancing provides businesses with faster working capital flexibility, allowing SMEs to manage supplier payments, logistics costs, inventory replenishment, and payroll obligations without severely disrupting operations and improves business adaptability,” he said.

Meanwhile, Bank Muamalat Malaysia Bhd chief economist Dr Mohd Afzanizam Abdul Rashid said access to financing and credit is extremely critical in the event of any negative economic shock.

He said the government’s efforts to provide businesses with access to financing would be the right policy response, and that SMEs would have space to refinance their existing financial obligations by leveraging the government scheme’s competitive financing rates.

“With such financing programmes, it will allow some breathing space for the businesses as rising fuel cost could affect their margins. Businesses can invest in enterprise resource planning (ERP) to integrate finance, procurement, inventory, human resources, and operations into a single system.

“In addition, the additional capital from such borrowings would mean the businesses can also think to spend on digitalisation so that their business operation would become leaner and cost effective,” he added.

On Thursday, the MADANI government, through the Ministry of Finance (MOF), said it would provide more than RM5 billion in microfinance facilities in 2026, which is expected to benefit over 400,000 micro-entrepreneurs nationwide through loans of up to RM100,000. 

MOF said various financing schemes will be channelled through agencies and development financial institutions such as Amanah Ikhtiar Malaysia (AIM), Bank Simpanan Nasional (BSN), TEKUN Nasional, Majlis Amanah Rakyat (MARA), Agrobank and Bank Rakyat. 

The ministry added that the government has provided more than RM15 billion in financing support has been made available to MSMEs this year, including the RM5 billion SME Special Relief Facility under Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) and the RM5 billion facility under Syarikat Jaminan Pembiayaan Perniagaan (SJPP).

-- BERNAMA