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Indonesia Economy Forum

Well, better than a capital of a state named after a German city (or actually from a German, take your pick......)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bismarck,_North_Dakota

Actually when I said "Berlin"...there are other Berlins in the US still today....but here in Canada what is now called Kitchener-Waterloo was originally named Berlin....and they changed the name during WW1 for obvious reasons.
 
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Actually when I said "Berlin"...there are other Berlins in the US still today....but here in Canada what is now called Kitchener-Waterloo was originally named Berlin....and they changed the name during WW1 for obvious reasons.
Well you guys did steal our city lol

Sydney, Nova Scotia....
 
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ITDC receives AIIB funding for Mandalika development

Reporter: Antara 22nd January 2019

Capaian-Pemerintah-Dalam-Pembangunan-Kek-271018-AS-3_4.jpg

An aerial photo of road infrastructure in the Special Economic Zone of Mandalika in West Nusa Tenggara. ANTARA FOTO/Ahmad Subaidi/wsj.

Jakarta, (ANTARA News) - State-owned tourism management enterprise Indonesia Tourism Development Corporation (ITDC) has received funding from the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) to develop infrastructure in the Special Economic Zone (KEK) in Mandalika, West Nusa Tenggara.

"After it was approved by the AIIB board of directors on December 7, 2018, we signed an agreement on funding facility for the Mandalika Urban & Tourism Infrastructure Project (MUTIP) worth US$248.4 million, or equal to Rp3.6 trillion on Dec 31. This shows the trust in the prospects of the tourism industry in Indonesia," ITDC President Director Abdulbar M. Mansoer stated here on Tuesday.

It is the first standalone financing, with the largest value made by AIIB in Indonesia, and the first AIIB financing for tourism infrastructure development in the world.

AIIB is a multilateral development bank, with member countries from around the world, including Indonesia. AIIB is aimed at supporting the building of infrastructure in member countries in Asia and the Pacific region.

Meanwhile, ITDC Director of Finance Nusantara Suyono said, the MUTIP funding has a tenor period of 35 years and grace period of 10 years. The interest rate is set in accordance with the London Interbank Offered Rate, or LIBOR, of six percent and 1.4 percent additional rate per year.

MUTIP funding will be focused on the development of infrastructure and basic facilities in Mandalika, including road, clean water, sanitary and drainage, waste treatment, power distribution, disaster risk management, and several other public facilities.

The company has targeted to build star-rated hotels, with more than 10 thousand rooms, convention center, 27-hole golf course, retail mall, theme park, hospital, and street race circuit for world-class races, such as MotoGP.

"The MUTIP funding will also cover the surrounding area to ensure that the project would benefit the local people and to mitigate the negative impact with regard to increased tourist visits," Mansoer noted.

ITDC has successfully managed the tourism destination area in Nusa Dua, Bali, since some 45 years, with the World Bank funding in its early years. ITDC has developed Nusa Dua into a world-class integrated resort.

According to Mansoer, development of tourism in Mandalika will have a multiplier effect on the local, social, and economic areas, as it will create jobs for more than 50 thousand workers within the next 25 years.

Data of the Central Bureau of Statistic (BPS) showed that the number of foreign tourists to Indonesia had increased to 14 million in 2017, from 11.5 million in 2016.

In 2018, the number of foreign tourists has reached more than 13 million as of November.

The world tourism industry has grown significantly and contributed more than 10 percent to the global gross domestic product.

Reporting by Ganet Dirgantara, Sri Haryati
Editor: Sri Haryati
 
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Indonesia’s trade doomed without adaptations
  • Rachmadea Aisyah
    The Jakarta Post
Jakarta / Mon, January 21, 2019 / 01:11 pm
2017_04_23_25656_1492935206._large.jpg
French shipping line CMA CGM Otello docks at Tanjung Priok Port in North Jakarta on Apr. 23, 2017. (The Jakarta Post/Stefani Ribka)
Stakeholders are worried the United States-China trade war will continue to take its toll on Indonesia after inflicting a huge blow to the country’s trade balance in 2018.

The US and China, two of Indonesia’s major trade partners, are still embroiled in a trade feud, despite the leaders of the two countries having agreed to a 90-day truce in early December.

Indonesian policymakers have flaunted their ability to weather uncertainty as a result of the trade war and monetary tightening in developed markets. However, they were shocked to realize the startling US$8.57 billion trade deficit in 2018, the highest since 1975.

As the trade war goes on and weakens the economy of China, which remains Indonesia’s largest trade partner, it led to a $20.85 billion deficit on Indonesia’s side as imports jumped 28.5 percent year-on-year (yoy), whereas exports only grew 15 percent yoy, Statistics Indonesia (BPS) data shows.

The fourth quarter of 2018 recorded a $6.68 billion deficit for Indonesia, more than 30 percent of the yearly figure.

“Indonesian exports to China will be hugely affected [by the trade war],” Centre for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) economic department head Yose Rizal Damuri said recently.

Quoting trade statistics from the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), he pointed out that 10 percent of Indonesia’s exports to China had served as material for products that China would export to the US.

“This means that a 10 percent drop in China’s exports to the US [...] would significantly disrupt Indonesia,” said Yose.

China’s exports to the US declined by 3.5 percent in December, while its imports from the US were down 35.8 percent for the month, Reuters reported.

In line with the decline, its December exports had unexpectedly fallen by 4.4 percent, the worst in two years, compared to 2017, with demand in most of its major markets weakening.

While Yose attributed oil imports as the actual major cause of Indonesia’s deficit, he said Indonesia had been too fixated on its traditional trade partners, which evidently included the Asian behemoth.

Indonesia’s exports to China had also been too focused on raw materials, he said, doubling the impact of the slowdown.

Yose urged Indonesia to attract more investment to develop its upstream manufacturing, taking an example of Vietnam, the textile and garment industry of which had grown by a whopping 600 percent in a decade, even though it had used capital from multinational companies to grow instead of domestic funds.

BPS head Suhariyanto noted that most commodities had seen a slowdown in exports to China at the end of last year, such as rubber, vegetable oils and jewelry.

“All surpluses Indonesia had with India, the United States and the Netherlands are dwindling compared to the year before, whereas Indonesia’s deficit with China had increased exponentially,” Suhariyanto said in a separate press briefing.

National Development Planning Agency (Bappenas) director for trade, investment and international economic cooperation, Yahya Rachmana Hidayat, said while it was unhealthy for Indonesia to be too dependent on China and the US, the problem Indonesia should address first was its lack of value-added exports.

Even though the government had been rigorously attempting to access new, non-traditional trade destinations, it would not divert Indonesia’s exports out of China and the US , Yahya said.

“Manufactured goods have indeed started to take over our raw materials in terms of exports, but the goods were still produced with minimal technology,” Yahya told The Jakarta Postrecently. “That leaves our exports below their potential, even to traditional countries and even without the trade war.”

He did not mention how far off Indonesia was from its export potential, but said the agency had started to compile data from various provinces to identify the main export commodities from each region as well as their destinations to intensify value-added exports. (waw)


https://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2019/01/21/ri-trade-doomed-without-adaptations.html
 
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in 1941, economy is looking good at the time , just a year before Japan Empire Invading Netherland Indies and bring destruction to many infrastructure and killing millions people.

Was that a copy-paste from WW2 Allied propaganda pamphlet or something..?! :mad:

War is hell, don't ever think otherwise. But rarely do casualty figures ever go above 5% in a single battle. Whenever it's higher than that, it's largely due to unique circumstances that curbed the probability of a successful retreat.
In fact if you do more thorough research any famous battle that resulted in the so-called "bloodbath" and you'll see it's always when the retreating side was unable to retreat effectively and got cut down while fleeing. You'll also find that “bloodbath” probably only had about 10% killed for the losing side as well.

Btw, Batavia is looking modern and got European feels most building shown here still intact till now except for de Harmonie and Amsterdam gate

Batavia was originally planned as a redoubt for VOC headquarter elements instead of a habitable city, and as such it need proper sanitary system along with other amenities to sustain livable environment in the event of extended siege.

I have heard the name Batavia frequently and also Djakarta in various history books, stories, journals, newsreels etc.

Most likely it's because back in the 17th — 19th century all trade in area that was stretching from Suratte (Surat) to Molukken (Maluku) were control from Batavia by VOC. Which is why there is always a reference of it in Oost-Indisch (East India) history literature.

BTW this is excellent game if you wish to learn Oost-Indisch / East India history from European perspective in a fun and yet educating nature.

 
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Was that a copy-paste from WW2 Allied propaganda pamphlet or something..?! :mad:

War is hell, don't ever think otherwise. But rarely do casualty figures ever go above 5% in a single battle. Whenever it's higher than that, it's largely due to unique circumstances that curbed the probability of a successful retreat.
In fact if you do more thorough research any famous battle that resulted in the so-called "bloodbath" and you'll see it's always when the retreating side was unable to retreat effectively and got cut down while fleeing. You'll also find that “bloodbath” probably only had about 10% killed for the losing side as well.



Batavia was originally planned as a redoubt for VOC headquarter elements instead of a habitable city, and as such it need proper sanitary system along with other amenities to sustain livable environment in the event of extended siege.



Most likely it's because back in the 17th — 19th century all trade in area that was stretching from Suratte (Surat) to Molukken (Maluku) were control from Batavia by VOC. Which is why there is always a reference of it in Oost-Indisch (East India) history literature.

BTW this is excellent game if you wish to learn Oost-Indisch / East India history from European perspective in a fun and yet educating nature.


War is not touched Netherland Indies in 1941, if you look at history, Dutch profiting much by selling lot of commodities to Imperial Japan at the times US embargoed them in 1939. Only after the Pearl attack late 1941 (December) war is engulfed the entire Pacific.
 
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Singapore Has a Shipping Rival Less Than 30 Kilometers Away

Indonesia wants to re-position its Batam island as an alternative shipping and manufacturing hub to Singapore with a potential to draw $60 billion in new investment.

Batam and nearby islands -- located at less than 30 kilometers south of Singapore -- have attracted about $20 billion dollars of investment and they were declared a free-trade zone in 2007. It’s home to thousands of local and foreign firms producing goods from computers to oil rigs.

Now authorities want to expand benefits to businesses by reclaiming about 8,000 hectares of idle or confiscated land to offer to exporters or producers of import substitutes.

“We aim to develop enclaves of special economic zones in Batam” with dedicated clusters for tourism and logistics among others, Edy Putra Irawady, the acting head of Batam Indonesia Free Trade Zone Authority, said in an interview. “Based on a rough calculation, the potential investments including those in the pipeline are worth around $60 billion.”

The Batam free-trade zone consists of eight islands measuring 71,500 hectares. It’s grown in importance as an investment destination for foreign companies, especially Singaporean firms, given its location in one of the busiest shipping channels, cheap labor and tax breaks. Companies operating in the free-trade area are exempt from value-added and luxury taxes, as well as import duties.



President Joko Widodo’s administration is seeking to boost exports to help curb a widening current-account deficit, a key risk for the economy and one of the reasons why investors sold off the currency amid an emerging-market sell-off last year.

The islands suit companies looking to relocate their factories as the U.S.-China trade war disrupts global supply chains, according to Indonesia’s Industry Minister Airlangga Hartarto. Taiwan’s Pegatron Corp. has already announced an investment partnership with local electronics manufacturer PT Sat Nusapersada, while Apple Inc. plans to open a new developer academy in Batam, according to the ministry.

Asean Deal
Companies are also keen to invest in tourism, electronic goods and shipyard industries, Irawady said. Under the special economic clusters, companies will enjoy tax incentives and benefits stipulated under free-trade agreements of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, or Asean, he said.

The extension of the Asean free trade benefits may spur companies in Batam to directly supply goods to other regions in Indonesia rather than routing it through Singapore, Irawady said.

Batam’s strategic location -- along the Malacca Strait connecting the international shipping routes between the Indian and Pacific Oceans -- is a key advantage the authority wants to promote further, Irawady said.

“Singapore has already been too crowded. Talking about crude trans-shipment service, for instance, some vessels have moved out from Singapore to Batam,” he said. “Shippers from regions such as Jakarta and Semarang also rely on direct call services in Singapore to deliver their goods overseas. We want to shift them all to Batam later.”

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...-billion-investment-in-its-singapore-backyard
 
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Inflation drops to 0.32 percent in January
  • Winny Tang and Riska Rahman
    The Jakarta Post
Jakarta / Fri, February 1, 2019 / 11:33 am
2018_08_01_50293_1533104300._large.jpg
Statistics Indonesia head Suhariyanto (JP/Rachmadea Aisyah)
Inflation was recorded at 0.32 percent in January, far lower than the rate in the same month in the previous two years, which stood at 0.67 percent and 0.97 percent, respectively, Statistics Indonesia (BPS) announced on Friday.

Annual inflation stood at 2.82 percent in January, compared to 3.25 percent in January 2018 and 3.49 percent in January, 2017, thanks to the stable price of goods in the beginning of this year, BPS head Suhariyanto said in Jakarta on Friday.

“Inflation was low, while consumer purchasing power remains good,” he said during a press conference at BPS headquarters.

Suhariyanto, however, suggested that the government focus more on the price movement of volatile foods, which had contributed to the rise in inflation this month.

From the 82 cities surveyed, 73 cities posted inflation, while 9 cities saw deflation. The highest inflation was recorded in Tanjung Pandan at 1.23 percent, due to the price increase of eggs and chicken. Meanwhile, the highest deflation was recorded in Tual.

Yunita Rusanti, BPS deputy for statistics distribution and services, said the relatively benign inflation in January was also caused by the decline in prices of non-subsidized fuels last month. (bbn)


https://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2019/02/01/inflation-drops-to-0-32-percent-in-january.html
 
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Not sure where to post this, but gonna do it here then the defence forum.
A good comparison to the Caspian Report, but this video focuses more on the intricacies of internal security and how that effects our Geopolitical thinking.

(FYI the english subtitles are on point)
 
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Indonesia`s growth reaches five-year high of 5.17 percent in 2018

Reporter: Antara 4 hours ago

20190206_121905.jpg

Chief of the Central Statistics Agency (BPS) Suhariyanto . (Indra Arief Pribadi)

Jakarta (ANTARA News) - Indonesia`s economic growth reached a five-year high of 5.17 percent in 2018, mostly fueled by household consumption, investment, and government spending, according to the Central Statistics Agency (BPS).

The 5.17 percent growth was a good achievement in view of pressure from global economic uncertainty, BPS Chief Suhariyanto stated here on Wednesday.

"In the midst of global economic pressure, including the Fed rate hike, and the start of a trade war, the Indonesian economy could grow 5.17 percent. Indeed, we are not the best, but our achievement remains good," he remarked.

Just in the fourth quarter of 2018, the national economy expanded 5.18 percent.

On a yearly basis, the Indonesian economy grew 5.01 percent in 2014 and slowed down to 4.88 percent in 2015.

The national economy recovered to 5.03 percent in 2016 and further moved to 5.07 percent in 2017.

"We must consider the arising and unpredictable pressures, including external ones. Admittedly, this year`s growth falls short of the target set in the medium-term national development plan (RPJMN)," he stated.

In the 2018 state budget, the government had set the target of economic growth for last year at 5.4 percent.

Despite growing 6.48 percent as compared to 2017, exports` contributions to the 2018 economic growth contracted 0.99 percent. The export performance was also lower than the import growth that surged to 12.04 percent.

"The negative export performance reduces the economic growth," he remarked.

Contributors to the 2018 economic growth were household consumption, at 2.74 percent; investment, 2.17 percent; and government spending, 0.38 percent. Household consumption grew 5.05 percent, investment rose 6.67 percent, and government spending increased 4.3 percent.

Reporting by Indra Arief Pribadi, Suharto

Editor: Fardah Assegaf

Mayora to export 2,000 food, beverage products` containers to Russia

Reporter: Antara 7 hours ago

WhatsApp-Image-2019-02-06-at-16.17.21.jpeg

(Right to left) - Mayora Group President Director Andre Atmadja, Director General for America and Europe of the Foreign Affairs Ministry Muhammad Anshor, Trade Minister Enggartiasto Lukita, Russian Ambassador to Indonesia Lyudmila Vorobieva at the export dispatch event in Jakarta on Wednesday, Feb 6, 2019. (ANTARA News/ Sella Panduarsa Gareta)

Jakarta (ANTARA News) - Food and beverage company Mayora Group has set a target of exporting two thousand containers of food and beverage products to Russia this year.

"Our target is to export two thousand containers (of food and beverage products) worth US$40 million, as we will also export biscuits in addition to coffee," Mayora Group President Director Andre Atmadja stated here, Wednesday.

The company exported one thousand containers of coffee products to Russia last year, he remarked while speaking at an export dispatch event attended by Trade Minister Enggartiasto Lukita, Russian Ambassador to Indonesia Lyudmila Vorobieva, and Director General for America and Europe of the Foreign Affairs Ministry Muhammad Anshor.

Russia is a potential market for Mayora owing to its high population and economic growth rate.

Minister Lukita lauded Mayora for being able to penetrate Russian markets and expressed hope that the company would export more products in addition to coffee.

On the occasion, Russian Ambassador Vorobieva noted that the two countries shared sound diplomatic and economic ties.

"I believe the bilateral relations will continue to strengthen, and I hope the bilateral trade ties will also become better," the ambassador noted.


Reporting by Sella Panduarsa Gareta, Fardah Assegaf
 
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