Posts Tagged ‘Statistics’

Malaysian use 400 litres of petrol yearly

May 24th, 2010
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Do you wonder why we use so much petrol? Maybe the nature of our jobs and social life that requires travelling, plus possibly one of the worst transport systems around? Is it because we are working too hard, with out cities staying awake nearly 20 hours a day? Could it be the large number of sedans and MPVs? Since the report below says 71% of the subsidy is consumed by middle to high income level groups (meaning earning more than RM2500 per month), obviously this also means that it is being used by the group that also contribute considerably to the country.  Would slashing subsidies seen as punishing the “more” contributing groups?

I think there should be an effort to improve the public transportation radically. Just imagine, from Puchong, I can’t find a direct bus going to Klang, Subang, Shah Alam, USJ, Putrajaya, Cyberjaya, Kajang, Serdang, Sri Kembangan or Sunway. Need to take a litany of trips which extends the travel time tremendously. The RapidKL bus goes from Puchong Utama or Puchong Perdana to KL via Old Klang Road, while there’s a bus from Putrajaya to Kelana Jaya that traverses the LDP. What kind of unintelligent arrangement is this? Is it a wonder then that our highways are choked daily? I think we need more than 1000 buses to immediately connect adjacent towns and suburbs in Klang Valley.

For the record, I took bus from Puchong to Central Market, and then took another bus to Section 15 Shah Alam. That’s like traveling in a V shape. If I drove, would have taken me a 20 minutes 20km journey (one way). By taking bus, it took me 2 hours and distance of 50km (one way). Go figure.

Malaysians are one of the highest fuel consumers in the region where even price increases have not deterred motorists.

Since 2004, they have consumed more than 400 litres per capita annually, which is much more than Singapore, Thailand, Indonesia, China and India. Singapore, which was ranked second among the list of six countries, only consumed 250 litres per capita in 2007.

India and China consumed under 50 litres per capita in 2007, according to data collated from the Finance Ministry, Domestic Trade, Cooperatives and Consumerism Ministry, International Energy Agency and Global Insight.

Even with fuel prices at its highest in mid-2008, when petrol was at RM2.70 and diesel at RM2.58 per litre, consumption still grew by 8% annually and almost 20 billion litres are expected to be consumed by the end of 2010.

As Malaysia practises a blanket subsidy on fuel, data made available to the Performance Management and Delivery Unit (Pemandu) subsidy rationalisation lab showed that 71% of fuel subsidy was enjoyed by the middle to high-income level groups.

Some 28% of those enjoying fuel subsidy earn more than RM5,000 per month, while 43% earned between RM2,500 and RM5,000.

Crime rate drops 15 percent

May 18th, 2010
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The Home Ministry announced that crime rate index for the first four months of 2010 has reduced by 15.3% while street crimes dropped 38.7%, compared with same period last year. This is beyond the target for the whole year, so we must congratulate the police for doing their jobs well. I’ve seen more police presence around my housing and commercial/business center areas. Their presence alone helps to create a safe feeling for the residents and public. Just by walking about, being inquisitive, and checking on people they can achieve much.

My only lament is that it should have been done much earlier. One wonders what the police were doing for last few years until crime rate increased yearly.

The Home Ministry’s success in reducing the crime rate index for the first four months has surpassed the initial target set for the first four months, its Minister Datuk Seri Hishammuddin Tun Hussein said.

The crime index has been reduced by 15.3% and street crimes dropped by 38.7% over the first four months, compared with the same period last year, he said.

“It was not an easy task considering the upward trend registered from 2006 to 2009. However, we were able to reduce the crime rate beyond the set target,” said Hishammuddin after launching the 1Malaysia logo during the ministry’s monthly assembly here Tuesday.

He added that the success was due to the ministry’s initiative in identifying crime hot spots quickly and efficiently as well as identifying reasons for an increase in crime through the five main principles of the Key Performance Index (KPI) and 55 initiatives drafted through crime labs.

Meanwhile, Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Senator Datuk Seri Idris Jala said the results of National Key Results Area (NKRA) for crime were outstanding for the first quarter and what the police and the ministry had done in the first quarter was totally beyond expectations.

For the whole year, we are expecting the crime index, all crime put together, to drop by 5%, but in the first quarter, we have already seen the overall crime index drop by 15%.

“That is higher than the whole year’s target. For street crimes the target was a reduction of 20%, but in the first quarter we have already seen a reduction of 39%. This is a phenomenal reduction in crime rate,” said Idris Jala.

He said the deployment of 14,444 police, 3,160 Rela and Civil Defence Forces (JPAM) at 50 hotspots had enabled the radical reduction.

“We are now moving a step forward by, not only deploying more police and voluntary forces in the streets, we are also installing CCTVs at such spots,” he said.

He added that about 500 CCTVs would be installed by end of this year at all hotspots.

“I’m really pleased with what has been done by the Home Ministry. This is outstanding without a doubt. We must give credit where it’s due,” he said. – Bernama

2010 1st quarter economic growth more than 10 percent!

May 6th, 2010
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A very positive news indeed.  Can say economy is picking up, so expect increases in prices soon. BTW, our national imports also increased 45.3% in March,

The country’s economy is likely to register growth of more than 10% in the first three months of the year – an achievement not seen in the last 10 years.

The latest economic indicators show a positive trend. Exports in March grew by 36.4% beating the market forecast of 22.4%. Imports rose by 45.3% (forecasts were around 30%).

The London-based Financial Times says: “Given Malaysia’s high exposure to trade, the numbers bode well for first quarter gross domestic product growth”.

Analysts from major banks, local and international, put the first three months’ growth at between 9.8% and 12% and they expect the trend to continue for the second quarter making it a “very good first half of the year for Malaysia.”

As a result, the analysts are also revising upwards their estimates for Malaysia’s GDP growth forecast for the year. Banks are now forecasting the annual GDP to grow by between 8% and 11% as compared to Bank Negara’s earlier estimate of between 4.5% and 5%.

“Given the recent developments in both domestic and external conditions, we are confident our 2010 forecast of 8% should be achievable,” said Ambank group chief economist Manokaran Mottain in his Economic update released here yesterday.

He also noted that besides the surge in exports, there was a marked improvement in private sector spending, especially by households. Big ticket items such as cars have seen increased sales.

According to the Malaysian Automotive Association, auto sales surged 25% year-on-year in March to 56,139 units, up from 44,896 in the same month last year.

HSBC Global Research economist Robert Prior-Wandesforde in his report entitled “From bust to boom – double-digit GDP growth in Singapore and Malaysia?” noted that the recovery of the economy came three months faster than expected.

While the Financial Times said, “Malaysia is roaring out of recession even faster than expected”.

The country’s key economic indicators including the export figures were released on Tuesday.

Malaysia’s exports recorded a new high for the month of March, amounting to RM59.44bil, registering a significant growth of 36.4% year-on-year. This was also the highest post-crisis monthly exports recorded since September 2008. Imports rose 45.3% to RM45.09bil.

The increase in exports was largely contributed by increases in exports of electrical and electronic (E&E) products, which surged 31.8%; chemicals and chemical products, (+60.8%); palm oil, (+49.3%); transport equipment, (+188.4%); as well as crude petroleum (+55.8%).

lessons from smoking in japan and indonesia, and kelly clarkson

April 25th, 2010
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To be honest, I’ve never heard of Kelly Clarkson, not surprising because I’m not into music so much. However, the decision to cancel the sponsorship tie with a tobacco company for her concert in Indonesia (albeit after being condemned and plea by fans in her FB page) caught my attention. Although latest research indicates the behavior of artistes are not as influential as advertisement by tobacco companies in getting young people to smoke (I’m still trying to find the article), I still believe it will go a long way in setting a good example.

Artistes cannot plead ignorance (same as parents, tax payers and politicians!). Her excuse:

”I think the hardest part of situations like this is getting personally attacked for something I was completely unaware of and being used as some kind of political pawn,” she wrote.

Don’t just think of bottom line profit la!

The impact of unhindered tobacco advertisement in Indonesia (one of the last holdouts that has not signed the World Health Organization’s tobacco treaty):

As smoking has declined in many Western countries, it has risen in Indonesia – about 63 percent of all men light up and one-third of the overall population smokes, an increase of 26 percent since 1995.

Smoking-related illnesses kill at least 200,000 annually in a nation of 235 million.

… About a quarter of Indonesian boys aged 13 to 15 are already hooked on cigarettes that sell for about $1 a pack or as little as a few cents apiece, according to WHO. A video on YouTube last month prompted outrage when a 4-year-old Indonesian boy was shown blowing smoke rings and flicking a cigarette. His parents say he’s been smoking up to a pack a day since he was 2. [what were the parents doing???]

… According to a 2008 study on tobacco revenue in Indonesia, smokers spend more than 10 percent of their household income on cigarettes; that’s three times more than they spend on education-related expenses such as school fees and books.

Indonesia remains one of the last places in the world where cigarette TV commercials still run, featuring rugged men and beautiful women smoking. Billboards plastered above four-lane highways encourage motorists stuck in Jakarta’s notorious traffic jams to “Go Ahead” or “Become a Man” or let Marlboro Lights “Style Your Party.”

Leggy women in short skirts and strappy heels promote cigarettes at events, sometimes even giving out discounted or free samples to “taste.”

Indonesia’s tobacco industry employs millions in the world’s fifth-largest cigarette-producing market. About 6 percent of the government’s revenue comes from cigarette taxes, and a powerful tobacco lobby has blocked past regulation attempts, including a move to ban TV ads.

Indonesian cigarettes are cheap by regional standards, with taxes less than 40 percent.

Tobacco farmers have held massive street protests to denounce any push for higher taxes or tighter restrictions.

“Kretek cigarettes are Indonesia’s heritage just like cigars in Cuba,” ” said Nurtantio Wisnu Brata, chair of the Central Java chapter of the Indonesian Tobacco Farmers Association.

Any move to limit tobacco promotion and use in the country will require strong political will. But critics point out that even Indonesia’s smoke-happy neighbors China and Vietnam have signed the WHO’s tobacco treaty and imposed stronger controls.

“The level of advertising in Indonesia is unmatched anywhere else in Asia,” said Mary Assunta, senior policy adviser for the Southeast Asia Tobacco Control Alliance. “The Marlboro Man has ridden into the sunset in many countries, but not in Indonesia.”

But there is still hope:

In recent months, anti-tobacco forces have rallied. A new health law has declared smoking addictive and urged the government to hammer out tobacco regulations. An anti-smoking coalition is pushing for tighter restrictions on smoking in public places, advertising bans and bigger health warnings on cigarette packages.

Public debate also exploded last month after Indonesia’s second-largest Islamic organization, Muhammadiyah, issued a fatwa banning smoking. Though not legally binding, the religious ruling does put pressure on smokers in the world’s most populous Muslim nation.

Now, contrast that with situation in Japan:

Japan’s smoking rate has fallen to a record low amid rising health awareness and tighter regulations.

WOW! The huge billboard in front of Yokohama Park across the intersections must have cost a bomb. It depicts a picture of a little girl beside a smouldering cigarette held in a man’s hand. The caption reads: “For the health of others, do stop smoking while walking.”

When my son was a toddler, his hair was nearly singed and my hand almost burnt by the cigarettes of smokers jostling in crowded places. Inhaling the secondary smoke made us cough, too.

My husband had smoked for nearly three decades. When he started working after graduating from university, his mother had encouraged him to smoke for the sake of socialising, only to regret later because the house reeked of tobacco smoke and the wallpapers got stained.

My father was a chain-smoker until he quit at the age of 50. Much as I loathe smoking, I overlooked this flaw in Koji when I married him.

Soon-to-be smoke-free: Japan has now banned smoking in public areas while some areas have introduced an ordinance banning smoking in the streets.

After Ken was born, Koji was confined to his study room (which I nicknamed “nicotine room”) whenever he needed a smoke. When we went on outings, he sneaked off with his portable ashtray, for a puff.

When we shifted into our present apartment, he lost his “nicotine room”. So he puffed away on the balcony.

Even during winter, he would brave the cold outside to have his cigarette before breakfast. Frustrated, I told him that he should emulate my father’s determination to kick the habit.

“I’ll quit when I reach 50,” Koji replied casually.

A week before his 50th birthday, when we reminded him of his “promise,” he retorted: “I think you said your father quit at 55.”

During that week, Ken and I checked his pockets. Good. He didn’t bring back any cigarette or filter. For the first two weeks, he kept his craving at bay with chewing gums. As an incentive for him to persevere, I rewarded him with a dinner treat and an expensive pair of shoes.

Now Koji detests the smell of tobacco smoke. His brother, brother-in-law and niece had also quit smoking.

Japan has been dubbed a major smoking nation, but its smoking rate has been decreasing since a decade ago.

Last year, a 31-year-old man and his three-year-old daughter filed a lawsuit against Tokyo’s Kita Ward government for failing to take preventive measures against passive smoking in the park, and demanded ¥100,000 (RM3,463) as compensation for the sore eyes and sore throat that they suffered. Follow ing that, the authorities removed all public ashtrays in 20 children’s parks.

Since its nationwide launch on July 1, 2008, smokers need to show their “Taspo” (tobacco passport) card to purchase cigarettes from convenience stores or vending machines. This smart card is issued to those 20 and above, to prevent minors from smoking.

Yet, underaged smokers have been illegally using the card. Two years ago in Fukuoka, a woman (a non-smoker) became the first person to be prosecuted for obtaining a Tas po card for her underaged son to buy cigarettes from a vending machine. Her action was tantamount to giving cigarettes to a minor.

It was not an April Fool’s joke when Japan’s first anti-smoking ordinance took effect in Kanagawa Prefecture, banning smoking in schools, hospitals, government offices and other public places. A ¥2,000 (RM69) fine is imposed for smoking in prohibited public buildings, while managers of such facilities face a ¥20,000 (RM690) fine.

The penalty would also apply to restaurants and hotels from April next year.

Many people welcome this move, though smokers, business operators and the tobacco industry will be affected.

Restaurants, mahjong and pachinko parlours with a floor space of over 100sqm and hotels of over 700sqm must either become non-smoking or create designated smoking areas. Operators of smaller business facilities are required to ensure a smoke-free environment and are not subjected to the penalty yet.

Notwithstanding the smoking and non-smoking sections in major restaurant chains, non-smokers are still exposed to the harmful effects of second-hand smoke. Neverthe less, major restaurant chains like McDonald’s Co (Japan) Ltd and Yoshinoya Co had prohibited smoking at their Kanagawa outlets, even before the enforcement.

The ban on smoking at swimming beaches (except for designated areas) is expected to be implemented next month. No penalty has been set for offenders but hopefully, the ban would reduce littering and prevent health hazards caused by secondary smoking.

From October, the price of cigarettes is likely to increase by ¥100 (RM3.45) a pack, to offset the market’s falling sales.

With the smoke-free environment campaigns, Tobacco Inc will launch non-flammable, odourless cigarettes next month, initially in Tokyo. Costing ¥300 (RM10.40) and classified as sniffing tobacco, Zero Style Mint comes with a tobacco pipe, mouthpiece and two cartridges. A pack of four refill cartridges costs ¥400 (RM13.80). The 8cm cigarette-like device can last half a day or the whole day, and its nicotine content is one-twentieth that of a regular cigarette.

With such stringent actions, Japan’s smoking rate is expected to drop further.

Well, we can take a leaf or two out of Japan’s success story so far. Strict rules, better enforcement, coming out with products that are less harmful, and so on. We are also slowly moving away from tobacco planting to other crops.

I will also like to propose that all smokers must be forced to take up additional insurance policy to cater for their indulgence. I don’t want government money being wasted on some smoker who needs treatment due to his addiction.  Secondly, such smokers should also ensure their families are well protected (financially) in the event of the their untimely demise or incapacitation, the family won’t be having financial difficulties.

2010 Government Scholarship statistics

April 6th, 2010
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This is interesting.

RM1.24 billion for 1500 students for overseas study (average of RM826,667 per student).

The 1500 students were from a pool of 10,114 applicants (14.8% chance of getting selected). A total of 465,853 students sat the SPM examination last year and PSD received 18,844 applications for scholarships. Of this, 10,114 students met the minimum qualifications and criteria set by PSD.

The 1500 students are based on 4 categories: (i) academic excellence; (ii) racial ratio; (iii) Sabah and Sarawak bumiputra; (iv) socially disadvantaged group.

If you are selected under the (i) option: Academic excellence, it would be based on: academic performance (85%), co-curricular activities (10%) and Public Services Department interview (5%). No info on the other categories criteria is revealed.

Out of the 1500 students, 56% (840 students) will be given option to study critical courses such as medicine, dentistry, pharmacy and veterinary medicine. Balance 44% (660) will study engineering, architecture, accounting, law, biotechnology, agro-sciences, science, and information and communications technology.

Those offered scholarships in critical fields such as medicine, dentistry and pharmacy will go to Australia, New Zealand, India, the Czech Republic and Poland. Twinning programmes will be conducted with institutions such as the Penang Medical College, Melaka Manipal Medical College and International Medical University.

Students chosen for engineering degrees will go to institutions in France, Germany and the US.

Separately, there’s another 100 scholarship for top scorers who opt to study locally at Universiti Sains Malaysia, Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia, Universiti Putra Malaysia and Universiti Malaya.

AND, another 1900 students will be offered place to study in IPTA and local branches of selected IPTS (University of Nottingham, Monash University, Swinburne University of Technology and Curtin University of Technology). These are the students who did not get the overseas scholarships offered to 1500 students.

Then, there’s another statement saying scholarship worth RM1.2 billion is to be offered to 10,500 students (RM114,286 per student) undertaking degree programs. No details on selection criteria, which IPTA/IPTS etc.

So, all in all, about 14,000 students will get scholarship. I wonder if it includes those under MARA sponsorship or not.

The Star: Govt offering scholarships worth RM1.24b to 1,500 top SPM students
NST: PSD grants for 1,500