A mamak scammer by the name of Mydin
Mydin Mohamed Holdings Bhd managing director Ameer Ali Mydin clarified today that the RM40 million allocation allocated to Kedai Rakyat 1Malaysia (KR1M) under the Budget 2012 is only for the setting up of the outlets.
No product sold in KR1M is subsidised by the government except cooking oil, flour and sugar, which are a controlled items nationwide.
"The RM40 million is supposed to be used as capex (capital expenditure) for opening shops, which includes decorations, shelves and the like," Ameer (middle) told a press conference at the 1Malaysia shop in Kelana Jaya this afternoon.
However, the RM40 million allocation will not cover KR1M’s rental cost.
The thrift store chain - the brainchild of Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak - aims to have 31 outlets in Peninsula Malaysia by year end before venturing to East Malaysia next year.
Ameer said KR1M can sustain itself by offering generic products without a brand name, as it has a higher profit margin compared to branded products.
“Because when you buy a branded product, you will compare between one another. But for generic product you can’t compare,” he said.
12 petrol stations selling KR1M products
He assured that the quality of the products was assured as the it was benchmarked against branded products.
“Now 1Malaysia products is already a brand,” he said.
On the briefing for Petronas petrol kiosk operators at the Mydin headquarters this morning, Ameer clarified that the event was to discuss a proposal for petrol kiosk operators to sell KR1M products.
He said that KR1M had sought the help of the of the relevant ministries to arrange the meeting. He said Petronas and other petrol kiosk operators had expressed interest in selling the product.
Thus far, two Petronas and 10 Caltex petrol stations have already begun selling KR1M products.
“We are trying to convince them to make their stations a place to shop, and not just for filling petrol.
“They can smell the money already… and also want to help the people,” he said.
Ameer said there was absolutely no compulsion on the part of petrol kiosk operators to buy KR1M products.
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Malaysia support terrorists.
Malaysia support dictators.
Malaysia support human trafficking.
Malaysia support money laundering.
Malaysia support murderers.
Malaysia support corruption.
Malaysia support racists.
Malaysia support and welcome illegal migrates as Malaysians citizens.
Malaysia support and donate rakyat's money to cronies like the Mamak Mydin and Shahrizat's family.
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PETALING JAYA: Government subsidies are up by RM10 billion because of Kedai Rakyat 1Malaysia (KR1M) and the Menu Rakyat 1Malaysia concepts.
An independent research think-tank has calculated that both programmes have inflated an already massive government subsidy bill by RM10 billion. Total subsidies this year now stand at RM33 billion.
The Research for Social Advancement (Refsa) revealed this in a recent focus paper on Budget 2012 and further warned that the negative impact of KR1M would extend deeper into the country’s socio-economy.
These predictions won’t bode well for KR1M which came under attack by Pakatan Rakyat last week for stocking low-quality goods and failing to meet its promise of up to 50% discount in prices.
But the real irony is that KR1M was meant to soften the blow of Putrajaya’s cuts to a subsidy bill that would otherwise have doubled to RM21 billion this year.
Refsa’s executive director, Teh Chi-Chang bluntly labelled it a “bad policy” for unnecessarily distorting market forces and giving one retailer an unfair competitive advantage over the rest. KR1M is operated by retail giant, Mydin.
“The government shouldn’t even be involved in the retail business due to the conflict of interest among its triple roles of regulator, public goods provider and businessman,” he pointed out.
“If KR1M works as intended, and goods are indeed sold much cheaper than elsewhere, it will lead to other retailers going out of business, people being rendered jobless and the need for more KR1M outlets.”
In light of the recent exposure of KR1M’s prices however, Teh said that the most pressing question now is what became of the RM40 million allocated to KR1M.
Follow the Selangor model
He also noted that even if KR1M worked as planned only a slice of the population would benefit from the low prices and that too, for a brief period of time.
“It is not sustainable in the long run and then the rest of the citizens will lose out because government money spent on KR1M means less funds for other sectors like education, health care and security.”
Teh recommended that the KR1M outlets be closed down immediately and suggested that the government consider Selangor’s ‘Jom Shopping’ model if it truly wants to help the poor get cheap products.
“All that needs to be done is to identify the poor families and give them shopping vouchers to spend twice a month at hypermarkets.
“Right now the government is expanding its broad-based subsidies and 1Malaysia has become a convenient facade to continue keeping Malaysians addicted to those subsidies,” he said.
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