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Multiple other reasons.
  1. Several failed ops in the recent past, causing pressure to have a success
  2. Papua economic downturn due to transition time of the Freeport mine from open pit to shaft. I do not know how much percent of total Papua economy

Well, some sources indicated KKB got funding from dana desa in which had been missappropriated from several "oknum" and symphatyzers in local tribes chieff and so on. Since Joko Widodo dana desa launching in Papua in recent years, there is indication of increasing activities and attack from KKB. Its more like we are shooting our own foots!!!

I am into for stopping Dana Desa once for all, we just dont know how much funds being missappropriated from "oknums" to funding terror activity not only in Papua but in other area. There is very much loose control over the funds
 
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Well, some sources indicated KKB got funding from dana desa in which had been missappropriated from several "oknum" and symphatyzers in local tribes chieff and so on. Since Joko Widodo dana desa launching in Papua in recent years, there is indication of increasing activities and attack from KKB. Its more like we are shooting our own foots!!!

I am into for stopping Dana Desa once for all, we just dont know how much funds being missappropriated from "oknums" to funding terror activity not only in Papua but in other area. There is very much loose control over the funds

While dana desa has veen misused by some oknums, its been put to good use in many other areas and contributed clearly to development.

Cutting it wholescale will only piss off those who have not used it to fund kkb.

Areas without kkb activity should not be cut. That includes all of west papua province, islands (biak, dll), and coastal areas.

As it stand even those who pay kkb might not be bacause they are sympathisers but because of threat of violence. Examples nduga area. Even with high security presence their safety is not guaranteed.
 
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Economy situation in 2020 is quite bleak, stock market is in crash, Rupiah gain had been reversed, investment is in waiting mode, no one willingly to travel to do sightseeing trips anymore. All thanks to Corona pandemic affecting the whole world. A good news? Oil prices is in crash, thanks to price war between Saudi and Russia along with USA trying to preserve their cracking industry.
 
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COVID-19: Almost 700 hotels in Indonesia shut down

News Desk
The Jakarta Post

Jakarta / Thu, April 2, 2020 / 03:21 pm

The Indonesian Employers Association (Apindo) says the COVID-19 pandemic has greatly affected tourism and the hotel industry.

Apindo chairman Hariyadi Sukamdani told tempo.co that the industry has been hit hard by the virus, with 698 hotels announcing they have shut down.

Hariyadi added that he believed the focus for now should be on how to recover from the pandemic. “If the virus cannot be controlled, we can’t do anything either,” he said.

He predicted that in the second quarter of 2020, the industry would experience its peak pressure. He also expressed regret about how the government seemed to be in discord over the pandemic.

Read also: List of Greater Jakarta malls, restaurants affected by COVID-19 outbreak

On Monday, the Indonesian Hotel and Restaurant Association (PHRI) said the country’s overall hotel occupancy rates had fallen to 30 to 40 percent since the outbreak started in January.

PHRI regional head in Batam Muhammad Mansur told The Jakarta Post that nine hotels in Batam had shut down between March 23 and 26, as their occupancy rates had plunged to below 5 percent.

Amid the crisis, a number of hotels in the country are providing a delivery service of dishes from their restaurants. They include Hotel Mulia Senayan, the Westin Jakarta, the Dharmawangsa Jakarta, the Ritz-Carlton Jakarta at Pacific Place, Hotel Tugu Malang in East Java, Horison Samarinda in East Kalimantan and Pesonna Hotel in Pekanbaru, Riau. (wng)
 
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Medco Power kicks off drilling for 110MW geothermal plant
  • Norman Harsono
    The Jakarta Post
Jakarta / Thu, April 2, 2020 / 03:35 pm

2020_04_02_91578_1585807866._large.jpg

Power producer PT Medco Power Indonesia (MPI) has started drilling geothermal wells for its plant in the Blawan Ijen volcano complex in East Java.

Medco Power said on Wednesday that it would drill a total of four wells, two of which would be finished this year. The wells will power a 110 megawatt (MW) geothermal power plant – a mid-sized facility compared to other geothermal plants in Indonesia. Medco Power expects the plant to start operations between 2022 and 2023.

The power producer, a subsidiary of Indonesia’s eighth-most productive oil company, publicly listed PT Medco Energi Internasional (MEDC), has already secured a 30-year power purchase agreement for the geothermal plant with state-owned electricity company PLN.

Read also: Medco cuts capex and production over oil price crash

Medco Power president director Eka Satria said the company was committed to developing geothermal plants “following the previous project for the 330MW Sarulla geothermal plant in North Tapanuli.”

The Sarulla plant is Indonesia’s second-largest geothermal power plant, after the 376MW Salak plant in West Java.

Medco controls a 51 percent stake in the Blawan Ijen project while the remaining 49 percent are held by PT Ormat Geothermal Power, which acquired the stake late last year.

https://www.thejakartapost.com/news...-off-drilling-for-110mw-geothermal-plant.html
 
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State revenue to contract 10% as businesses suffer, tax incentives take effect: Sri Mulyani
  • Adrian Wail Akhlas
    The Jakarta Post
Jakarta / Mon, April 6, 2020 / 07:47 pm

2020_03_18_89774_1584513346._large.jpg

Tax officers assist taxpayers filing annual tax returns (SPT) at a tax office in Jakarta on March 11. (JP/Dhoni Setiawan)

State revenue is expected to nosedive this year as the government rolls out tax incentives, including corporate income tax cuts, amid the COVID-19 outbreak that has triggered declines in commodity prices and business output.

Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati said on Monday that the state revenue would amount to Rp 1.76 quadrillion (US$65 billion) this year, a decline of 10 percent year-on-year (yoy) compared with 2019. The figure is also lower than the 2020 state budget target of Rp 2.23 quadrillion.

Tax income will fall 5.4 percent yoy, while customs and excise revenue will decline 2.2 percent due to deferred import taxes in 19 manufacturing industries. Meanwhile, nontax income will contract 26.5 percent due to lower oil and coal prices.

“We expect negative growth in state revenue as the economy declines, commodity prices fall as a result of the oil price war and the government’s tax incentives for suffering businesses,” Sri Mulyani told House Commission XI overseeing financial affairs in a livestreamed meeting.

President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo has signed a government regulation in lieu of law (Perppu) that activates crisis protocols, such as widening the state budget deficit beyond the legal limit of 3 percent of gross domestic product (GDP), as the administration steps up efforts to cushion the economy in the face of a global recession caused by the pandemic.

Read also: 'File your tax returns': Tax office intensifies efforts to collect taxes as budget burdens multiply

The Perppu slashes corporate income tax from 25 percent to 22 percent for the years 2020 and 2021 and will be further reduced to 20 percent starting 2022. The government will provide additional rate cuts of 3 percent for public companies with at least 40 percent of their stock traded on the stock market.

It also exempts workers whose annual salary is below Rp 200 million from paying income tax for six months, as well as deferring import tax payments for six months for 19 manufacturing industries. It will also speed up the repayment of overpaid taxes.

The government now expects state spending to reach Rp 2.61 quadrillion this year, resulting in a budget deficit of Rp 853 trillion, 5.07 percent of GDP, after the government unveiled Rp 405 trillion of additional spending to cushion the adverse impacts of the virus outbreak and to strengthen the country’s healthcare system. The deficit figure is much higher than 1.76 percent set out in the state budget.

“This is an ongoing scenario because the situation is going to be rapidly developing, particularly in April and May during which the peak period is expected to occur, according to various projections,” Sri Mulyani said. “The scenario may change according to the virus development.”

Jokowi has declared a public health emergency and ordered large-scale social restrictions as the pneumonia-like illness spreads rapidly. As of Monday afternoon, at least 2,400 people were infected with more than 200 fatalities, according to official data.

The government now expects Indonesia’s economy to grow 2.3 percent in 2020, according to the baseline scenario, and even contract 0.4 percent in the worst-case scenario as the virus disrupts business activity.

https://www.thejakartapost.com/news...r-tax-incentives-take-effect-sri-mulyani.html
 
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This Jakarta on Monday. Streets in rush hour dont experience traffic jam as usual but there are still many cars, motorcyle, and buses on the street. It is Jakarta, Indonesia Covid 19 epicenter.



Electronic center like Glodok (Jakarta) is also still full of buyer.

 
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Malls in Jakarta are relatively empty though and experience plunge of sales, the reason of why Glodok still has lot of buyer IMO because Glodok supply many online business that sell electronics products. Online stores are relatively able to withstand this corona Outbreak.


Pondok Indah Mall 2 (South Jakarta). South Jakarta and West Jakarta are epicenter of Jakarta corona infection

 
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Very important help from USA :usflag: @KAL-EL @Nilgiri @Logam42


Bank Indonesia strikes $60b repo facility deal with US Fed as forex reserves drop
  • Adrian Wail Akhlas
    The Jakarta Post
Jakarta / Wed, April 8, 2020 / 08:56 am

2020_03_09_88633_1583741718._large.jpg

Bank Indonesia Governor Perry Warjiyo (right) talks to the press in Jakarta on March 9. (JP/Eisya A. Eloksari)

Bank Indonesia (BI) has reached a repurchase agreement (repo) worth US$60 billion with the United States Federal Reserve to boost dollar liquidity supply following a fall in Indonesia’s foreign exchange reserves in March amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

Forex reserves dropped $9.4 billion last month to $121 billion as the central bank stepped up market intervention to stabilize the rupiah exchange rate amid heavy capital outflows, it announced on Tuesday.

“This will be the second line of defense other than bilateral currency swaps in case we need dollar liquidity,” BI Governor Perry Warjiyo said in a teleconferenced meeting later on Tuesday, adding that the current forex reserves level was “adequate” for further market interventions and the central bank would use the second line of defense if necessary.

Read also: Indonesia sells Asia's first 50-year dollar bond to fight pandemic

“The Fed only works with a few emerging countries including Indonesia on such deals,” he added. “This shows a vote of confidence in Indonesia’s economic prospects.”

The rupiah dropped around 15 percent against the US dollar in March, as investors pulled money out of emerging markets and fled to the safe-haven assets, triggering dollar liquidity shortages.

On Tuesday, the currency appreciated 1.3 percent to Rp 16,200 per US dollar, while the yield on 10-year government bonds fell 4 basis points to 8.16 percent, the first decline in seven days, according to Bloomberg data.

BI has a $30 billion bilateral swap agreement with China, $22.7 billion with Japan, around $7 billion with Singapore and an undisclosed amount with Australia and other central banks to buffer the nation’s economy in the COVID-19 battle.

Furthermore, the central bank has also sealed a $2.5 billion repo line agreement with the Bank of International Settlements and another $3 billion with the Monetary Authority of Singapore.

Read also: BI to dominate ownership of 'pandemic bonds' as debt burden grows

“Going forward, we see a higher risk of foreign reserve outflows mainly related to the COVID-19 pandemic,” Bank Mandiri chief economist Andry Asmoro wrote in a research note.

The ongoing pandemic, he went on to say, caused uncertainty in the financial markets, which made investors dump Indonesian assets and delayed the inflow of foreign direct investment into the country as the global value chain has been seriously damaged.

“It is also causing a global recession that weakens major commodity prices, disrupting Indonesia’s export performance,” Andry said, adding that the health crisis had heavily impacted Indonesia’s tourism.

“We expect the current account deficit to widen to 2.88 percent of GDP and the financial account balance to notably decline,” he said. “If the pandemic keeps getting worse, we see the balance of payments in 2020 booking a huge deficit.”

A group of economic researchers at the University of Indonesia's Institute for Economic and Social Research (LPEM UI) said that massive capital outflows during the COVID-19 crisis had an impact on slowing money supply growth in the economy as liquidity dried up.

Read also: Indonesia’s COVID-19 stimulus worth 2.5% of GDP, lower than Singapore, Malaysia

“Considering banks’ liquidity is a central factor in the money circulation cycle, particularly in terms of loan creation, the threat of liquidity shortages needs to be addressed immediately,” the researchers wrote.

"Looking at the trend of capital outflows, which suppressed forex liquidity during the pandemic, the rupiah will still be under pressure until the COVID-19 pandemic tapers off," the LPEM researchers said, projecting that the rupiah would hover at around Rp 16,500 to Rp 17,500 against the greenback this year.

https://www.thejakartapost.com/news...-deal-with-us-fed-as-forex-reserves-drop.html
 
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Very important help from USA :usflag: @KAL-EL @Nilgiri @Logam42


Bank Indonesia strikes $60b repo facility deal with US Fed as forex reserves drop
  • Adrian Wail Akhlas
    The Jakarta Post
Jakarta / Wed, April 8, 2020 / 08:56 am

2020_03_09_88633_1583741718._large.jpg

Bank Indonesia Governor Perry Warjiyo (right) talks to the press in Jakarta on March 9. (JP/Eisya A. Eloksari)

Bank Indonesia (BI) has reached a repurchase agreement (repo) worth US$60 billion with the United States Federal Reserve to boost dollar liquidity supply following a fall in Indonesia’s foreign exchange reserves in March amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

Forex reserves dropped $9.4 billion last month to $121 billion as the central bank stepped up market intervention to stabilize the rupiah exchange rate amid heavy capital outflows, it announced on Tuesday.

“This will be the second line of defense other than bilateral currency swaps in case we need dollar liquidity,” BI Governor Perry Warjiyo said in a teleconferenced meeting later on Tuesday, adding that the current forex reserves level was “adequate” for further market interventions and the central bank would use the second line of defense if necessary.

Read also: Indonesia sells Asia's first 50-year dollar bond to fight pandemic

“The Fed only works with a few emerging countries including Indonesia on such deals,” he added. “This shows a vote of confidence in Indonesia’s economic prospects.”

The rupiah dropped around 15 percent against the US dollar in March, as investors pulled money out of emerging markets and fled to the safe-haven assets, triggering dollar liquidity shortages.

On Tuesday, the currency appreciated 1.3 percent to Rp 16,200 per US dollar, while the yield on 10-year government bonds fell 4 basis points to 8.16 percent, the first decline in seven days, according to Bloomberg data.

BI has a $30 billion bilateral swap agreement with China, $22.7 billion with Japan, around $7 billion with Singapore and an undisclosed amount with Australia and other central banks to buffer the nation’s economy in the COVID-19 battle.

Furthermore, the central bank has also sealed a $2.5 billion repo line agreement with the Bank of International Settlements and another $3 billion with the Monetary Authority of Singapore.

Read also: BI to dominate ownership of 'pandemic bonds' as debt burden grows

“Going forward, we see a higher risk of foreign reserve outflows mainly related to the COVID-19 pandemic,” Bank Mandiri chief economist Andry Asmoro wrote in a research note.

The ongoing pandemic, he went on to say, caused uncertainty in the financial markets, which made investors dump Indonesian assets and delayed the inflow of foreign direct investment into the country as the global value chain has been seriously damaged.

“It is also causing a global recession that weakens major commodity prices, disrupting Indonesia’s export performance,” Andry said, adding that the health crisis had heavily impacted Indonesia’s tourism.

“We expect the current account deficit to widen to 2.88 percent of GDP and the financial account balance to notably decline,” he said. “If the pandemic keeps getting worse, we see the balance of payments in 2020 booking a huge deficit.”

A group of economic researchers at the University of Indonesia's Institute for Economic and Social Research (LPEM UI) said that massive capital outflows during the COVID-19 crisis had an impact on slowing money supply growth in the economy as liquidity dried up.

Read also: Indonesia’s COVID-19 stimulus worth 2.5% of GDP, lower than Singapore, Malaysia

“Considering banks’ liquidity is a central factor in the money circulation cycle, particularly in terms of loan creation, the threat of liquidity shortages needs to be addressed immediately,” the researchers wrote.

"Looking at the trend of capital outflows, which suppressed forex liquidity during the pandemic, the rupiah will still be under pressure until the COVID-19 pandemic tapers off," the LPEM researchers said, projecting that the rupiah would hover at around Rp 16,500 to Rp 17,500 against the greenback this year.

https://www.thejakartapost.com/news...-deal-with-us-fed-as-forex-reserves-drop.html

Yup every country got this facility from US recently...both repo and currency swap...just the amounts factored by trade/economy size etc.

It make sense too because US Fed just leveraged 6 trillion (2 trillion deployed/commited already for covid relief inside their country) that they will need to somehow sell to back it up more etc.
 
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Four upstream oil and gas projects worth $45m set to kick off in first quarter
  • Norman Harsono
    The Jakarta Post
PREMIUM
Jakarta / Mon, April 13, 2020 / 04:24 pm
2020_04_13_92615_1586759979._large.jpg

Workers install a gas pressure-lowering device at a facility owned by Ophir Indonesia (Sampang) Pty. Ltd. in East Java in this undated photo. (Courtesy of/SKK Migas)
Four upstream oil and gas projects worth US$45.39 million are scheduled to start operations in the first quarter this year, as other projects face mounting problems, a government task force has said.

The Upstream Oil and Gas Special Regulatory Taskforce (SKK Migas), which often speaks on behalf of related companies, said in Jakarta on April 9 that the projects comprised three gas projects, including one by PT Pertamina Hulu Energi (PHE), that have a collective output of 80 million cubic feet per day (mmscfd).

The fourth project is a 4-megawatt (MW) power plant that supports Jakarta-based PT Pertamina EP in producing 1,000 barrels of oil per day (bopd) from an oilfield in North Kalimantan.

“These achievements are part of our effort to maintain oil and production levels as per targets,” said SKK Migas deputy of operations Julius Wiratno in a statement issued on Wednesday.

He was referring to SKK Migas’s target of increasing domestic oil and gas production by 7.7 percent to 1.95 million barrels of oil equivalent per day (mboepd) this year.

The taskforce expects to achieve the target through the operation of 11 projects, including the four completed last quarter, yet many of the involved companies are struggling to make progress amid falling global crude prices and the COVID-19 pandemic.

As a result of these problems, Julius said SKK Migas would talk with the companies concerned to revise project targets. He said many companies experienced spending cutbacks amid the oil price crash and supply chain setbacks caused by the pandemic.

“Almost all upstream oil and gas companies have contacted us, asking for special access for their workers and materials,” he said, adding that SKK Migas had been asking regional administrations to cut red tape for oil and gas companies.

According to SKK Migas records, the completion of PHE’s project was sped up by one quarter. The company’s Randu Gunting project in Central Java began operations in February, instead of May as initially scheduled.

“The initial plan was to hold the inauguration ceremony on April 10 with local stakeholders but we rushed it to avoid the covid-19 pandemic,” PHE’s vice president for relations, Ifki Sukarya, told The Jakarta Post on Thursday.

Source: SKK Migas Get the data Created with Datawrapper

Meanwhile, Petronas Carigali Ketapang II Ltd missed its project deadline. The Malaysia-based company was slated to begin operating its Buntal Phase 3 gas project in this year’s first quarter. The project was already delayed from last year’s fourth quarter.

Petronas representatives were not immediately available for comment.

Global crude prices have fallen around 48.4 percent year-to-date to US$34.24 per barrel on Thursday, based on the Brent international price benchmark, as shown by Bloomberg data.

The price crash has prompted many companies, including Texas-based ExxonMobil, London-based British Petroleum (BP) and Jakarta-based PT Medco Energi Internasional, all of whom have operations in Indonesia, to slash upstream investments by around 30 percent.



Energy consultancy Wood Mackenzie estimates that, globally, up to $210 billion worth of upstream oil and gas project investments might be scrapped this year.



“Corporate balance sheet strength and strategic drivers are much more important than project economics,” wrote Wood Mackenzie upstream researcher Rob Morris in a press note dated April 2.

https://www.thejakartapost.com/news...rth-45m-set-to-kick-off-in-first-quarter.html
 
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Yup every country got this facility from US recently...both repo and currency swap...just the amounts factored by trade/economy size etc.

It make sense too because US Fed just leveraged 6 trillion (2 trillion deployed/commited already for covid relief inside their country) that they will need to somehow sell to back it up more etc.

That Repo facility has made Rupiah the most strongest Asian currency last Week and Rupiah is still in strengthening mode until this Tuesday market closing. Meanwhile recent IMF estimates with such gloming tone of 3 % global economy contraction this year still put Indonesia economy on positive territory.


IMF projects 0.5% growth for Indonesia as global economy faces deep recession
  • Adrian Wail Akhlas
    The Jakarta Post
Jakarta / Tue, April 14, 2020 / 07:47 pm

Indonesia’s economic growth is expected to remain in positive territory this year, albeit ever so slightly, as the coronavirus pandemic puts the global economy at risk of its worst recession since the Great Depression of 1930, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

In its April update to the World Economic Outlook titled “The Great Lockdown”, the IMF lowered Indonesia’s GDP growth projection to 0.5 percent from 5.1 percent in its October projection.

“The significant downward revision to the 2020 growth projection reflects large anticipated domestic disruptions to economic activity from COVID-19,” the report says. The IMF expects the virus to hit Indonesia’s economy as the country relies heavily on the export of commodities rather than finished goods.

“Among developing economies, all countries face a health crisis, severe external demand shock, dramatic tightening in global financial conditions, and a plunge in commodity prices,” the report says. “They will have a severe impact on economic activity in commodity exporters.”

However, the IMF expects a recovery in 2021 as the country’s economy may expand by 8.2 percent, which would be the highest rate seen since 1995, during former President Soeharto's regime.

The IMF also projects that the country’s unemployment rate will rise to 7.5 percent this year from last year’s 5.3 percent as the pandemic is upending supply chains, forcing companies to lay off employees and crushing demand for goods as consumers stay at home.

The global economy, according to the IMF, will contract by 3 percent this year, far worse than during the 2009 global financial crisis, as the pandemic put the global economy at risk of worst recession since the 1930 Great Depression.

The global economy is expected to grow by 5.8 percent in 2021, signaling a sharp rebound from this year's recession.

Developed economies will contract by an expected 6.1 percent on average, with countries like the United States and Italy hit the most, contracting by 5.9 percent and 9.1 percent, respectively.

Meanwhile, emerging markets and developing economies like China, Russia and ASEAN-5 will contract by 1 percent on average. China, the first country to report the coronavirus outbreak and the center of global supply chains, will grow by 1.2 percent.

“It is very likely that, this year, the global economy will experience its worst recession since the Great Depression, surpassing that seen during the global financial crisis a decade ago,” IMF chief economist Gita Gopinath said. “Worse growth outcomes are possible and even likely.”

“This would follow if the pandemic and containment measures lasted longer, emerging and developing economies are even more severely hit […] or if widespread scarring effects emerge due to firm closures and extended unemployment,” she added.


Indonesia’s economic growth is expected to remain in positive territory this year, albeit ever so slightly, as the coronavirus pandemic puts the global economy at risk of its worst recession since the Great Depression of 1930, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

In its April update to the World Economic Outlook titled “The Great Lockdown”, the IMF lowered Indonesia’s GDP growth projection to 0.5 percent from 5.1 percent in its October projection.

“The significant downward revision to the 2020 growth projection reflects large anticipated domestic disruptions to economic activity from COVID-19,” the report says. The IMF expects the virus to hit Indonesia’s economy as the country relies heavily on the export of commodities rather than finished goods.

“Among developing economies, all countries face a health crisis, severe external demand shock, dramatic tightening in global financial conditions, and a plunge in commodity prices,” the report says. “They will have a severe impact on economic activity in commodity exporters.”

However, the IMF expects a recovery in 2021 as the country’s economy may expand by 8.2 percent, which would be the highest rate seen since 1995, during former President Soeharto's regime.

The IMF also projects that the country’s unemployment rate will rise to 7.5 percent this year from last year’s 5.3 percent as the pandemic is upending supply chains, forcing companies to lay off employees and crushing demand for goods as consumers stay at home.

The global economy, according to the IMF, will contract by 3 percent this year, far worse than during the 2009 global financial crisis, as the pandemic put the global economy at risk of worst recession since the 1930 Great Depression.

The global economy is expected to grow by 5.8 percent in 2021, signaling a sharp rebound from this year's recession.

Developed economies will contract by an expected 6.1 percent on average, with countries like the United States and Italy hit the most, contracting by 5.9 percent and 9.1 percent, respectively.

Meanwhile, emerging markets and developing economies like China, Russia and ASEAN-5 will contract by 1 percent on average. China, the first country to report the coronavirus outbreak and the center of global supply chains, will grow by 1.2 percent.

“It is very likely that, this year, the global economy will experience its worst recession since the Great Depression, surpassing that seen during the global financial crisis a decade ago,” IMF chief economist Gita Gopinath said. “Worse growth outcomes are possible and even likely.”

“This would follow if the pandemic and containment measures lasted longer, emerging and developing economies are even more severely hit […] or if widespread scarring effects emerge due to firm closures and extended unemployment,” she added.

https://www.thejakartapost.com/news...a-as-global-economy-faces-deep-recession.html
 
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That Repo facility has made Rupiah the most strongest Asian currency last Week and Rupiah is still in strengthening mode until this Tuesday market closing. Meanwhile recent IMF estimates with such gloming tone of 3 % global economy contraction this year still put Indonesia economy on positive territory.


IMF projects 0.5% growth for Indonesia as global economy faces deep recession
  • Adrian Wail Akhlas
    The Jakarta Post
Jakarta / Tue, April 14, 2020 / 07:47 pm

Indonesia’s economic growth is expected to remain in positive territory this year, albeit ever so slightly, as the coronavirus pandemic puts the global economy at risk of its worst recession since the Great Depression of 1930, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

In its April update to the World Economic Outlook titled “The Great Lockdown”, the IMF lowered Indonesia’s GDP growth projection to 0.5 percent from 5.1 percent in its October projection.

“The significant downward revision to the 2020 growth projection reflects large anticipated domestic disruptions to economic activity from COVID-19,” the report says. The IMF expects the virus to hit Indonesia’s economy as the country relies heavily on the export of commodities rather than finished goods.

“Among developing economies, all countries face a health crisis, severe external demand shock, dramatic tightening in global financial conditions, and a plunge in commodity prices,” the report says. “They will have a severe impact on economic activity in commodity exporters.”

However, the IMF expects a recovery in 2021 as the country’s economy may expand by 8.2 percent, which would be the highest rate seen since 1995, during former President Soeharto's regime.

The IMF also projects that the country’s unemployment rate will rise to 7.5 percent this year from last year’s 5.3 percent as the pandemic is upending supply chains, forcing companies to lay off employees and crushing demand for goods as consumers stay at home.

The global economy, according to the IMF, will contract by 3 percent this year, far worse than during the 2009 global financial crisis, as the pandemic put the global economy at risk of worst recession since the 1930 Great Depression.

The global economy is expected to grow by 5.8 percent in 2021, signaling a sharp rebound from this year's recession.

Developed economies will contract by an expected 6.1 percent on average, with countries like the United States and Italy hit the most, contracting by 5.9 percent and 9.1 percent, respectively.

Meanwhile, emerging markets and developing economies like China, Russia and ASEAN-5 will contract by 1 percent on average. China, the first country to report the coronavirus outbreak and the center of global supply chains, will grow by 1.2 percent.

“It is very likely that, this year, the global economy will experience its worst recession since the Great Depression, surpassing that seen during the global financial crisis a decade ago,” IMF chief economist Gita Gopinath said. “Worse growth outcomes are possible and even likely.”

“This would follow if the pandemic and containment measures lasted longer, emerging and developing economies are even more severely hit […] or if widespread scarring effects emerge due to firm closures and extended unemployment,” she added.


Indonesia’s economic growth is expected to remain in positive territory this year, albeit ever so slightly, as the coronavirus pandemic puts the global economy at risk of its worst recession since the Great Depression of 1930, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

In its April update to the World Economic Outlook titled “The Great Lockdown”, the IMF lowered Indonesia’s GDP growth projection to 0.5 percent from 5.1 percent in its October projection.

“The significant downward revision to the 2020 growth projection reflects large anticipated domestic disruptions to economic activity from COVID-19,” the report says. The IMF expects the virus to hit Indonesia’s economy as the country relies heavily on the export of commodities rather than finished goods.

“Among developing economies, all countries face a health crisis, severe external demand shock, dramatic tightening in global financial conditions, and a plunge in commodity prices,” the report says. “They will have a severe impact on economic activity in commodity exporters.”

However, the IMF expects a recovery in 2021 as the country’s economy may expand by 8.2 percent, which would be the highest rate seen since 1995, during former President Soeharto's regime.

The IMF also projects that the country’s unemployment rate will rise to 7.5 percent this year from last year’s 5.3 percent as the pandemic is upending supply chains, forcing companies to lay off employees and crushing demand for goods as consumers stay at home.

The global economy, according to the IMF, will contract by 3 percent this year, far worse than during the 2009 global financial crisis, as the pandemic put the global economy at risk of worst recession since the 1930 Great Depression.

The global economy is expected to grow by 5.8 percent in 2021, signaling a sharp rebound from this year's recession.

Developed economies will contract by an expected 6.1 percent on average, with countries like the United States and Italy hit the most, contracting by 5.9 percent and 9.1 percent, respectively.

Meanwhile, emerging markets and developing economies like China, Russia and ASEAN-5 will contract by 1 percent on average. China, the first country to report the coronavirus outbreak and the center of global supply chains, will grow by 1.2 percent.

“It is very likely that, this year, the global economy will experience its worst recession since the Great Depression, surpassing that seen during the global financial crisis a decade ago,” IMF chief economist Gita Gopinath said. “Worse growth outcomes are possible and even likely.”

“This would follow if the pandemic and containment measures lasted longer, emerging and developing economies are even more severely hit […] or if widespread scarring effects emerge due to firm closures and extended unemployment,” she added.

https://www.thejakartapost.com/news...a-as-global-economy-faces-deep-recession.html

Almost all of our current workforce and higher ups in industry and government all had living through 1998 economy crisis, all this within our acceptable conscience. There is mental preparation for almost all Indonesian to see the worst possible case fate will be inflicted upon us
 
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Almost all of our current workforce and higher ups in industry and government all had living through 1998 economy crisis, all this within our acceptable conscience. There is mental preparation for almost all Indonesian to see the worst possible case fate will be inflicted upon us

Luckily we have changed many reckless policy in our banking system, including its lending policy after Asian Financial Crisis 97-98. Getting loan in USD for corporation is also now limited and controlled. But it has a negative effect as well. Some analyst said that prudent policy in our financial system has caused our economic growth cannot get higher then 6 percent since Asian Financial Crisis 97/98. Regardless of that, we are much stronger now and not as fragile as during 1990's.

Beside getting stronger, Rupiah still can get weaken so hard in the time of crisis due to the nature of our financial market that rely on foreign investment. It is why that 60 billion Repo line facility that we get from The Fed is very crucial to prevent our currency to possibly reach Rp 20.000 per USD at this outbreak.

Getting financial crisis due to currency big fall in the time real sector post very slow growth due to lock down effect can be very damaging to our economy. AlhamduliLLAH Rupiah is strengthening since last week and according to Central Bank statement, it is due to supply and demand mechanism, not a market intervention from central bank.

This partial lock down policy in Jakarta and West Java should be continued until the end of May if we want this outbreak to end soon so we can let real sector to run again in full speed.
 
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That Repo facility has made Rupiah the most strongest Asian currency last Week and Rupiah is still in strengthening mode until this Tuesday market closing. Meanwhile recent IMF estimates with such gloming tone of 3 % global economy contraction this year still put Indonesia economy on positive territory.


IMF projects 0.5% growth for Indonesia as global economy faces deep recession
  • Adrian Wail Akhlas
    The Jakarta Post
Jakarta / Tue, April 14, 2020 / 07:47 pm

Indonesia’s economic growth is expected to remain in positive territory this year, albeit ever so slightly, as the coronavirus pandemic puts the global economy at risk of its worst recession since the Great Depression of 1930, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

In its April update to the World Economic Outlook titled “The Great Lockdown”, the IMF lowered Indonesia’s GDP growth projection to 0.5 percent from 5.1 percent in its October projection.

“The significant downward revision to the 2020 growth projection reflects large anticipated domestic disruptions to economic activity from COVID-19,” the report says. The IMF expects the virus to hit Indonesia’s economy as the country relies heavily on the export of commodities rather than finished goods.

“Among developing economies, all countries face a health crisis, severe external demand shock, dramatic tightening in global financial conditions, and a plunge in commodity prices,” the report says. “They will have a severe impact on economic activity in commodity exporters.”

However, the IMF expects a recovery in 2021 as the country’s economy may expand by 8.2 percent, which would be the highest rate seen since 1995, during former President Soeharto's regime.

The IMF also projects that the country’s unemployment rate will rise to 7.5 percent this year from last year’s 5.3 percent as the pandemic is upending supply chains, forcing companies to lay off employees and crushing demand for goods as consumers stay at home.

The global economy, according to the IMF, will contract by 3 percent this year, far worse than during the 2009 global financial crisis, as the pandemic put the global economy at risk of worst recession since the 1930 Great Depression.

The global economy is expected to grow by 5.8 percent in 2021, signaling a sharp rebound from this year's recession.

Developed economies will contract by an expected 6.1 percent on average, with countries like the United States and Italy hit the most, contracting by 5.9 percent and 9.1 percent, respectively.

Meanwhile, emerging markets and developing economies like China, Russia and ASEAN-5 will contract by 1 percent on average. China, the first country to report the coronavirus outbreak and the center of global supply chains, will grow by 1.2 percent.

“It is very likely that, this year, the global economy will experience its worst recession since the Great Depression, surpassing that seen during the global financial crisis a decade ago,” IMF chief economist Gita Gopinath said. “Worse growth outcomes are possible and even likely.”

“This would follow if the pandemic and containment measures lasted longer, emerging and developing economies are even more severely hit […] or if widespread scarring effects emerge due to firm closures and extended unemployment,” she added.


Indonesia’s economic growth is expected to remain in positive territory this year, albeit ever so slightly, as the coronavirus pandemic puts the global economy at risk of its worst recession since the Great Depression of 1930, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

In its April update to the World Economic Outlook titled “The Great Lockdown”, the IMF lowered Indonesia’s GDP growth projection to 0.5 percent from 5.1 percent in its October projection.

“The significant downward revision to the 2020 growth projection reflects large anticipated domestic disruptions to economic activity from COVID-19,” the report says. The IMF expects the virus to hit Indonesia’s economy as the country relies heavily on the export of commodities rather than finished goods.

“Among developing economies, all countries face a health crisis, severe external demand shock, dramatic tightening in global financial conditions, and a plunge in commodity prices,” the report says. “They will have a severe impact on economic activity in commodity exporters.”

However, the IMF expects a recovery in 2021 as the country’s economy may expand by 8.2 percent, which would be the highest rate seen since 1995, during former President Soeharto's regime.

The IMF also projects that the country’s unemployment rate will rise to 7.5 percent this year from last year’s 5.3 percent as the pandemic is upending supply chains, forcing companies to lay off employees and crushing demand for goods as consumers stay at home.

The global economy, according to the IMF, will contract by 3 percent this year, far worse than during the 2009 global financial crisis, as the pandemic put the global economy at risk of worst recession since the 1930 Great Depression.

The global economy is expected to grow by 5.8 percent in 2021, signaling a sharp rebound from this year's recession.

Developed economies will contract by an expected 6.1 percent on average, with countries like the United States and Italy hit the most, contracting by 5.9 percent and 9.1 percent, respectively.

Meanwhile, emerging markets and developing economies like China, Russia and ASEAN-5 will contract by 1 percent on average. China, the first country to report the coronavirus outbreak and the center of global supply chains, will grow by 1.2 percent.

“It is very likely that, this year, the global economy will experience its worst recession since the Great Depression, surpassing that seen during the global financial crisis a decade ago,” IMF chief economist Gita Gopinath said. “Worse growth outcomes are possible and even likely.”

“This would follow if the pandemic and containment measures lasted longer, emerging and developing economies are even more severely hit […] or if widespread scarring effects emerge due to firm closures and extended unemployment,” she added.

https://www.thejakartapost.com/news...a-as-global-economy-faces-deep-recession.html

Yup lets wait and see bro. Keep me updated/tagged here when you can. Thanks!
 
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