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The difference between financial distress, resilience
Published on: Sunday, June 28, 2026
Published on: Sun, Jun 28, 2026
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The difference between financial distress, resilience
Economic uncertainty is no longer an occasional event. Rising living costs, technological disruption, global economic shocks and changing employment patterns mean that financial challenges can emerge unexpectedly.
HOW much do you earn? This simple question is often treated as a shortcut for measuring achievement. A higher income is frequently associated with intelligence, competence, status and even personal worth.

In reality, financial success is rarely determined solely by how much a person earns. It is often shaped by how they respond to periods of uncertainty, scarcity and financial pressure.

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History is filled with examples of highly paid professionals who struggled financially despite earning impressive incomes. 

At the same time, there are countless individuals with modest earnings who manage to build stable, comfortable lives.

The difference often lies not in the income they earn but in their behaviour.

When money is abundant, almost everyone appears financially competent. Bills are paid, savings accounts grow and spending decisions seem harmless. 

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The true test begins when income falls, unexpected expenses arise or economic conditions become challenging.

How people react during those moments reveals their financial character.

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Some individuals respond by cutting unnecessary expenses, reviewing priorities and adapting their lifestyle. 

Others continue spending as though nothing has changed, relying on debt, credit cards or loans to keep up appearances.

One approach strengthens long-term resilience; the other often creates deeper financial problems.

Behaviour under financial stress reflects important personal qualities such as discipline, emotional control, adaptability and delayed gratification. 

These traits are often stronger predictors of financial well-being than salary figures alone.

Consider two employees who both receive a monthly salary of RM10,000. 

The first spends nearly everything each month, financing luxury purchases and maintaining a lifestyle designed to impress others. 

The second lives below their means, saves consistently and avoids unnecessary debt.

If both suddenly lose their jobs, one may face immediate financial distress while the other may have sufficient reserves to navigate several months of uncertainty.

The difference is not income; it is behaviour.

Unfortunately, modern society often celebrates visible wealth while overlooking financial discipline. Social media amplifies this problem. 

Expensive holidays, luxury cars, designer products and fine dining experiences are displayed as symbols of success.

Rarely do we see the hidden realities behind those images: personal loans, huge credit card balances, financial anxiety or insufficient savings.

The irony is that genuine financial resilience is often invisible. Nobody posts photographs of their emergency fund. Few people celebrate paying off debt.

Building financial security can appear boring compared to displaying luxury consumption. But it is precisely these humdrum behaviours that provide stability during difficult times.

Economic uncertainty is no longer an occasional event. Rising living costs, technological disruption, global economic shocks and changing employment patterns mean that financial challenges can emerge unexpectedly.

In such an environment, resilience matters more than ever. The ability to adapt spending habits, postpone gratification and make rational decisions under pressure is becoming a critical life skill.

This is particularly important for younger generations. Many graduates enter the workforce believing that financial success will automatically follow income growth.

While higher earnings certainly help, they do not guarantee financial well-being.

Without sound financial habits, higher income often leads to increased spending rather than increased security.

Financial literacy should therefore extend beyond budgeting and investing. It should include understanding human behaviour. 

People need to recognise how emotions influence spending decisions, how social pressure affects lifestyle choices and how short-term desires can undermine long-term goals.

Ultimately, money is not merely a resource; it is a mirror that reflects habits, priorities, values and decision-making patterns. 

Income may determine the size of financial opportunities available to us, but behaviour determines what we do with those opportunities.

Lecturer

The views expressed here are the views of the writer and do not necessarily reflect those of the Daily Express. If you have something to share, write to us at: [email protected]
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