Still you must apply for working permit and temporary resident permit. Well got a lot of Indonesian owned companies in Singapore open their companies or their branch offices, the likes of Wilmar international, Salim group, Djarum group, Astra internasional had a lot presence and portfolio in Singapore, and they tend to bring their family and best talent worker from Indonesia to Singapore
Don't spread fake news again.
Wilmar is a Singaporean company, period.
Astra International is owned by Jardine Matheson. HK/British.
Singapore has consistently been one of Indonesia's biggest investors.
The other groups you listed are owned by ethnic Chinese too.
Temasek is one of the biggest "companies" operating in Indonesia. Says it all, really.
https://www.globeasia.com/cover-story/globeasia-100-top-groups-2017/
9
Temasek Group
Foreign/Singapore
Banking, telecommunication
Government of Singapore
$3.5 billion
Singapore is a major foreign investor in Indonesia, with interests in a wide range of businesses through its investment arms, of which the most prominent is Temasek Group. It controls more than 67% of shares in Bank Danamon, which in turn controls finance operation Adira, and through its subsidiary SingTel has a significant holding in Indonesia’s leading telco, Telkomsel. Early this year, Temasek Holding’s CEO Ho Ching visited Indonesia to discuss pumping more investment to develop tourism sites close to Singapore, including popular Batam and Bintang islands, as well as the less developed Nipa and Tolop islands.
Wilmar, Sembcorp, CEI and loads of other SG companies have invested tens of billions in Indonesia. It is in our interest that ASEAN member states develop further.
LOL it is Singapore which is insignificant
ASEAN headquarter is in Jakarta, dont be fooled with this kid
Are you a member of TNI-AL? Why do you converse like an immature teenager? What's with the "LOL" and calling me a "kid"? I don't think I called you a kid.
Singapore is
the pivotal state in ASEAN.
No Singapore = No ASEAN.
No offence intended. You know that ASEAN is just a bunch of third world countries, right? Without Singapore leading the charge in framing ASEAN charter, dedicating the most resources to studying ASEAN issues and formulating policies for the welfare of the region, ASEAN would not have survived in all likelihoods.
AEC, despite repeated delays, exists largely due to Singapore.
Where was the Bangkok declaration made? Oh yeah, not in Jakarta.
And who gets to pay the most for ASEAN expenses? Oh yeah, everyone pays the same.
And who gets to have the most say in ASEAN affairs? Theoretically, all countries are equal but of course, some countries are more advanced than others.
Let's not sidetrack this thread. Indonesia is a good source of maids and that's not a terrible thing, in a way.
Flip flop army?
Sorry sis, Vietnam military has a long tradition going back two thousands years, with glorious victories against world military powers as many as you can name. Indonesia military is weak. You can’t win a war against a ragtag militia.
No offense, in a theoretical war, Vietnam army with modern weapon systems would turn Indonesia army into ashes in a month.
Summary
1. Indonesia lost the Konfrontasi
2. Indonesia lost East Timor
3. Indonesia lost troops against Papuan rebels
4. Indonesians were colonized by a handful of Dutch from thousands of miles away. A country not even 10% of its population colonized it for centuries.
I agree that Indonesians will have no chance against a warrior nation like Vietnam.
Think they can beat a rag-tag militia but would have difficulty against a smaller but well-equipped and well-led army.
Wrong.
They lost East Timor.
They lost troops against Papuan rebels.
They also lost the Konfrontasi.
They were also colonized by the Dutch, numbering less than 10% of their population, for centuries.
They are expected to lose any battle against regional neighbours.
Sis your nation never fight a war, least against a superpower, hence you make such silly comments.
Winning a war requires more than having industrial might. It requires strategy, superior tactic, good knowledge of enemy behavior, in short: high IQ. The military balance between the US military and Vietnam army was 200 times. Lesser in military balance between France vs Vietnam, China vs Vietnam. If just who has more industrial might, we have zero chance and lose the war in the first month. The US lost 11,000 military aircraft of all sorts during the Vietnam war in case you haven’t noticed. Indonesia with some aircraft here and some Apc there can impress Vietnam military?
Vietnam doesn’t have manufacturing base? Our foreign trades will probably reach $600 billion this year, we are heading to $1 trillion in five years.
We are off topic though.
Don't bother yourself with teaching them.
IQ scores are well known. These are not fabricated numbers. There is a reason they indulge in delusions and have an inflated sense of self worth. Yet in real life, they send maids.
Their "manufacturing base'' is just sweatshop for foreign companies stitching together clothing or assembling some metal contraption, as in a car or a bus.
They have little nonself citation per capita in STEM discipline (refer to IQ scores discussed earlier), little high tech exports, no high tech output, no technology, no invention, no breakthrough.
I'll give you one interesting fact to ponder over.
Singapore's Manufacturing Value Added
per capita (at
over US$13,000) is higher than the entire GDP
per capita of their country.
They are a big sweatshop.
With an inflated sense of self worth despite achieving nothing.
I mean look at India or North Korea.
They have space programmes as covers for their ICBM programmes.
They have developed nuclear bombs and deployed satellites.
Submarine launched ballistic missiles for deterrence in the form of second strike options.
What did Indonesia achieve? No scientific, technological, intellectual output worth mentioning.
If there is one country that exemplifies why GDP does not reflect
national power, it has to be Indonesia.
Think about it.
112 Sqn RSAF refuelling RTAF F-16 during Exercise Cope Tiger 2019.
The training phase involved a total of 69 aircraft, 29 Ground-Based Air Defence systems, and about 2,000 personnel. And that's just one of the tens of exercises that the SAF conducts and participates in annually.