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Is Jakarta the business hub of Indonesia?
Correct bro
Business District
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Is Jakarta the business hub of Indonesia?
Islands country like Indonesia is nightmare for logistics
Is Jakarta the business hub of Indonesia?
Water transport has its shortcoming. Too slow. Especial for short distance and human transport. Unless Indonesia locates all industries and most population in one island. But which means unbalanced development and land and resources waste.I think it's a plus as long as they can build enough ports. They have direct access to the sea and trade with the rest of the world without expensive logistics.
Most islands are not inhabited anyway. The majority of the population is concentrated in Java Island and Sumatra Island.
Water transport has its shortcoming. Too slow. Especial for short distance and human transport. Unless Indonesia locates all industries and most population in one island. But which means unbalanced development and land and resources waste.
UK and France built undersea tunnel for good reasons.Not necessarily true. Water Transport has it's perk compared to land base transport via train / container truck. As they can bring more cargo than any land base transport can do. The challenge lies to the availability of port and the cargo ships themselves.
Water transport has its shortcoming. Too slow. Especial for short distance and human transport. Unless Indonesia locates all industries and most population in one island. But which means unbalanced development and land and resources waste.
If you are investor, you have to consider both money cost and time cost. Time cost in most cases is more important than money cost.It's slower but much more cost-efficient.
Land transport of goods is nowhere near energy-efficient as water transport. And in the first place you have to spend billions to build roads and railways to connect markets. Even so, you connect only domestic markets which are small for developing countries. What about the depreciation and maintenance of infrastructure every year?
OTOH you can think the sea as a free natural highway infrastructure with direct access to further markets such the US, China, EU, ASEAN etc.
It's much cheaper to transport goods from Indonesia to Vietnam than from Sichuan to Beijing for example.
What I mean here is that, we agree ID has better infrastructure than VN, no need to say it again and again.The concentration of Indonesian industry is in West Java, particularly in Jakarta satellites cities where the minimum wage is much higher than Batang region. One of the reason they still invest there is better infrastructure and better skill labors. Many Jakartan can apply to work there as well since the location is not too far from Jakarta and I believe many Jakartan become supervisors there.
When I was still fresh graduates I actually got called to work in LG office and factory in Tangerang, West Java. I can attend the test and come back to Jakarta at the same day, no problemo. So the closeness to Jakarta is one of the reason. My cousin who previously live in Jakarta also work in Toyota Indonesia Manufacturing in cost control division, he entered cost control division right after graduating from university in Depok, West Java.
Samsung R&D office in Jakarta, Indonesia
https://research.samsung.com/srin
If you are investor, you have to consider both money cost and time cost. Time cost in most cases is more important money cost.
https://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-...un-Suez-Canal-In-Search-of-Cheaper-Route.htmlAt a time when Egypt has just raised $8 billion to expand the Suez Canal project, reports are surfacing that global cargoes are increasingly bypassing the canal due to low oil prices, as shippers prefer to take a longer route that is cheaper.
Numerous cargo ships are now opting to take the longer route south of Africa, bypassing both the Suez Canal and the Panama Canal. All told, since last October, 115 vessels running goods from Asia to North Europe and the U.S. east coast have sailed around South Africa instead of going through the Suez Canal, according to a report by Danish SeaIntel Maritime Analysis.
The report notes that while carriers could continue to reroute some Asia-Europe cargoes, they may keep the Suez Canal route for some services in cases where shippers require a faster transit time.Related: The U.S. Still Dominates World Oil Prices
It’s all about fuel. Falling fuel prices mean that vessels can afford to take a route south of Africa that would normally take up to a week longer, depending on the origins. Now they can foot the bill to burn the extra fuel it takes to go faster, closing the time gap and making the Suez Canal—which charges a lot more for passage--less attractive.
Vessels sailing from Asia to the East Coast via the Suez Canal have to pay on average US$465,000 for passage, according to SeaIntel, which calculated that the South Africa route would save an average of US$235,000 per voyage. It also noted that some services could save as much as US$19 million a year at the high, and as much as US$7.3 million per year in the worst-case scenario.
https://www.channelnewsasia.com/new...hrinks-as-pandemic-pummels-retailers-12807502LONDON/LOS ANGELES/MADRID: The US$1 trillion container shipping industry is in a slowdown. Literally.
Some shipping lines, whose retail customers are being hammered by the coronavirus pandemic, are reducing sailing speeds and taking longer routes around Africa, avoiding Suez canal passage fees, according to the companies and ship-tracking specialists.
https://thearabweekly.com/suez-canal-suffers-double-blow-pandemic-collapse-oil-pricesCAIRO--The Suez Canal has been hit by a double blow. After absorbing the shock of stagnating global trade due to the COVID-19 pandemic, it was hit by the steepest drop in oil prices in 18 years. Consequently, the canal is no longer as competitive as a corridor for global trade.
Three global shipping lines have already announced plans to reduce their operating costs by rerouting some of their cargo ships to take the route around the Cape of Good Hope. The concerned ships belong to the 2M alliance, which includes the Maersk Line of Containers, the MSC Line and the CMMA-CGM Line.
Maybe, but it has the mighty Comodo Dragon.
Analysts say red tape, labour unrest, unproductive workers, lack of infrastructure and systemic corruption are among the obstacles Indonesia must overcome to make itself more attractive to such companies.
UK and France built undersea tunnel for good reasons.