By The Malketeer
Malaysians are counting their ringgit more carefully than ever.
Not because they want to, but because they have to.
The latest study by Ampersand Advisory and InsightzClub is more than just another set of economic stats.
It is a window into the real, lived experiences of consumers in 2025.
It sends a clear message to brands: you can’t sell the same way anymore.
The Numbers Tell a Human Story
Only 19% of Malaysians feel better off than they did a year ago.
Nearly one-third are struggling to make ends meet.
Another third are “just managing.”
Almost half are dipping into savings or cutting how much they save.
People are taking on side hustles, switching to cheaper brands, delaying big purchases.
Even sustainability habits are being shaped by cost.
This isn’t just downtrading — it’s survival.
The Illusion of Comfort
Government inflation numbers say 1.2%.
But the public feels something very different.
Prices may not be climbing sharply on paper, but in wallets and shopping baskets, the pinch is real.
What’s interesting is where consumers place responsibility.
Most say the government should lead the way on price control and subsidies.
Yet one in four also believe brands should step up — not just with pricing, but with genuine empathy.
From Transactions to Trust
Sandeep Joseph, CEO of Ampersand Advisory, calls empathy “an underrated marketing tactic.”
He’s absolutely right.
Too often, brands think empathy is a feel-good ad or a one-off CSR campaign.
True empathy is recognising that your customer is making trade-offs every day and shaping your offerings accordingly.
It’s about smaller pack sizes that don’t feel like a rip-off.
Loyalty perks that actually save people money.
Flexible payments that ease stress, not trap them in debt.
Campaigns that speak plainly about value without talking down to anyone.
It’s marketing that feels less like selling and more like standing with.
Gen Z: Not the Free-Spending Stereotype
Gen Z’s reality is often lost in media hype.
Yes, they spend on experiences but selectively, and only when they feel the value is worth it
Starting salaries haven’t moved in a decade.
They’re health-conscious, pragmatic, and in no mood for gimmicks.
For brands, that means ditching lazy assumptions and engaging them with honesty.
Offer them joy, but price it with respect.
The Next Two Quarters Are Make-or-Break
Malaysia’s economy faces new turbulence ahead.
Trump’s tariffs are set to ripple through exports.
Job security may wobble.
Even if inflation slows, consumer caution will not vanish overnight.
This is the window for marketers to pivot.
Build loyalty not just through points or discounts, but by becoming part of people’s coping strategies.
The brands that will stand out are those that see empathy not as a campaign theme, but as a business strategy.
The Takeaway
Every ringgit spent is now a considered decision.
In this climate, the most powerful thing a brand can do is make people feel understood, respected, and valued.
Empathy won’t just make customers like you more.
It will make them stay — even when they’re buying less.
In 2025, that might be the difference between fading into the noise… or becoming the brand they fight to keep in their lives

Consumer Behaviour Shifts in 2025
| Behaviour Shift | % of Respondents |
| Delaying big-ticket purchases | 69 |
| Switching to cheaper brands | 38 |
| Cutting non-essential purchases | 35 |
| Reducing daily necessities spend | 33 |
| Conserving water/electricity/fuel | 34 |

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