I am officially under Malaysia’s AKPK debt management program. What a relief! No more haunting calls and notices from banks from now on. No more exorbitant late payment charges. Yes, I am under AKPK’s debt management program that helps me restructure my credit card debt.
Let me share with you my bumpy journey from getting to know AKPK from the television channel to being approved to be under the debt management program.
I first came to know about AKPK (Agensi Kaunseling Dan Pengurusan Kredit or Credit Counseling & Debt Management Agency) in April this year. The AKPK’s advertisement appeared very very often during that time.
The next day, I went to AKPK’s website to find out more information. The first thing I wanted to know about AKPK was whether it was legitimate or not.
AKPK is an agency set up by Bank Negara Malaysia in April 2006 to provide financial counselling and debt management to individuals as well as financial education to help individuals take control of their financial situation and gain peace of mind that comes from the wise use of credit.
After making sure that AKPK was set up by Bank Negara, I was relieved. I was even more relieved when I knew that it’s FREE. Yes, it’s FREE.
I didn’t visit the nearest agency at my place during that time because I thought I could still manage my credit card debt and I didn’t have to resort to any debt repayment plan.
When did I decide to apply for the debt management program? I made up my mind when Bank Negara changed the late payment penalty charge policy. The late payment penalty charge policy was revised to a minimum of RM10 or 1% of total outstanding balance.
I used to pay RM5 or RM10 for my late payment fees. But after the change of BNM policy, I had to pay RM30, RM40 or more for the late payment charges. Bear in mind that I had more than 6 credit card payments to pay every month and I was always late in payments.
I couldn’t take it anymore. I felt suffocated by the accumulating credit card debt caused by the finance charges and late payment fees.
So, in August, I made an appointment with one of the AKPK counselors at Ipoh branch.
All in all, I dropped by at least 3 times before I successfully submitted my debt management program application.
The first time I paid a visit, I didn’t bring my payslips or income statements to prove that I make certain amount of income every month. I don’t have any payslip because I am working online. I make money from the internet.
You Must Have Pay Slips Or Income Statements. If you have no payslip or income statement, the counselor will not give you the application form at all. He will not let you apply if he knows that your application will not be approved.
You have only ONE chance to apply for the debt management program. Everyone has only ONE chance for this debt management program. Because of this reason, the debt management counselor is very strict. He wants to make sure that you have all the necessary documents so that your debt management program application will be approved.
• You have a positive source of income after meeting your expenses
• Your total debt does not exceed RM2million
• You are not under advanced litigation process
• You are not a bankrupt
Read my AKPK Debt Management Program Part 2.

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Sunday July 26, 2009
Help is at Hand
If you find yourself mired in debt or have lost control of your finances, don’t turn to loan sharks! There is a legit and logical way out.
There is an alternative!
The Credit Counselling and Debt Management Agency – more familiarly known by its Malay acronym, AKPK, for Agensi Kaunseling dan Pengurusan Kredit – is a subsidiary of Bank Negara Malaysia that provides free financial education and counselling and debt management services to individuals who are in financial trouble because they spend more than they earn.
AKPK chief executive officer Mohamed Akwal Sultan says most of those who approach the agency for help have problems managing their credit cards and loans.
Taking control
The first step the agency takes when a person seeks help is to provide financial counselling.
Mohamed Akwal Sultan reckons Malaysians don’t save enough.
“We will help him manage his finances by looking at ways to trim expenses,” Mohamed Akwal explains. AKPK may also suggest ways to increase income, for example, by taking a part-time job.
If these measures don’t help, it then proceeds to debt management. To begin with, it simplifies re-payments: “Most people who are in debt have at least five financial institutions to pay. But under AKPK, they only need to pay into our account, and the money will be apportioned to the institutions to which they owe money.”
He stresses that the AKPK does not take over the loan; instead, it acts as an intermediary between the debtor and the financial institutions seeking repayments.
The moment someone comes under AKPK, there will be a stay of legal action against him; this means that any and all legal action pertaining to his fiances will be stopped, Mohamed Akwal explains.
The debtor explains his financial situation to the agency’s counsellors – and he is expected to bare all and be completely honest in this. Once the counsellors have determined the extent of his debts, they will work out monthly re-payment amounts.
However, this does not mean that the person will be left with nothing to live on, of course. They will deduct all his vital expenses first (food, rent, children’s needs), then calculate the payments based on what’s left. If he needs an extra job to supplement his income, they will suggest it, Mohamed Akwal says.
Each case is unique, but always, the AKPK’s priority is ensuring debtors don’t suffer in paying off their bills – neither the debtor nor his family will have to starve in the course of paying off the debt, he assures.
However, they will have to undergo a complete lifestyle change, which may mean no luxuries until every sen has been paid off. There is no rigid repayment period, as that depends entirely on the amount owed (the cap is RM2mil). He has had people coming to ask how to pay off a RM1,000 debt!
To qualify for the debt management service, various factors must be in place. First, the loan needs to come from financial institutions regulated by Bank Negara. There should be positive net disposable income after meeting expenses but before paying the banks; the total debt cannot exceed RM2mil; the debtor is not under advanced litigation and have not been declared a bankrupt.
Part of that lifestyle change mentioned before is surrendering credit cards. No, the AKPK will not do anything as dramatic as cutting up the cards in front of the debtor! But it will ask that all credit cards are given up. Anyway, people who have had to turn to the AKPK for help would probably have had their cards cancelled already.
“Once you’re under the scheme, the respective financial institutions will be notified, and your information will be placed into the CCRIS (Central Credit Reference Information System, Bank Negara’s database of borrowers from which financial institutions can obtain credit reports).
“When you come to us, we can stretch the repayment to 10 years, though that doesn’t mean everyone gets 10 years.
“The interest rates we recommend to the financial instituitions under the debt management program are 6% to 9% and they will comply.”
Of course, one has to bear in mind that AKPK does not possess legal powers and cannot force the banks to accept any of its proposals. So, how difficult is it to get that acceptance?
Mohamed Akwal says, “More than 90% of the recommendations we make under our debt management programmes have been approved by the financial institutions involved,” since the AKPK was set up in 2006.
What happens when those under the AKPK scheme don’t pay the agency on time?
Well, you’d better have a good reason – like you were sick or have been laid off.
Should you be late or lapse on a payment, agents will contact you to find out why. Reminders will also be mailed out. If all these fail, you will be terminated from the programme.
No, there are no threats of harm or paint-splashing! But once you are taken off the programme, the banks you owe money to will be informed, and you’ll find yourself back on square one. So, as Mohamed Akwal says, it makes sense to pay as scheduled.
Read the full article at thestar.com.my/lifestyle/story.asp?file=/2009/7/26/lifefocus/4226779&sec=lifefocus.
For more information on the Credit Counselling and Debt Management Agency, or AKPK, and its services, go to akpk.org.my or call its toll free number 1-800-88 2575.
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