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Indonesia Economy Forum

Semen Indonesia secures $220m investment from Japan



Divya Karyza (The Jakarta Post)
PREMIUM
Jakarta ● Thu, August 5, 2021

State-owned PT Semen Indonesia, the country’s biggest cement producer, has reached a multimillion dollar deal to establish a strategic partnership in expanding its market reach worldwide. Under the deal, Japanese cement producer Taiheiyo Cement Corporation is to invest US$220 million for a 15.04 percent stake in Semen Indonesia subsidiary, publicly listed PT Solusi Bangun Indonesia (SBI), through a rights issue.

Semen Indonesia business strategy and business development director Fadjar Judisiawan said the investment and partnership would help the company develop its products and expand its market reach to Africa, Australia and China. “We are exploring opportunities in other countries,” he said at a press briefing on Wednesday as reported by Kontan.co.id.

 
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AlhamduliLLAH very historic.....

Pertamina officially takes over Rokan oil, gas block from Chevron


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Chevron workers inspect an oil and gas facility at the Rokan Block in Riau at an unspecified date.(SKK Migas/SKK Migas)

Divya Karyza and Norman Harsono (The Jakarta Post)
PREMIUM
Jakarta ● Mon, August 9, 2021



After a two-year transition period, state-owned energy giant Pertamina has officially taken over the Rokan oil and gas block from United States-based supermajor Chevron in a historical nationalization of one of Indonesia’s most lucrative oil blocks.

Pertamina upstream subsidiary PT Pertamina Hulu Rokan (PHR) took over the block from Chevron’s local arm, PT Chevron Pacific Indonesia (CPI), on Sunday night, marking the end of the US company’s 97-year reign over the Rokan Block located in Riau.

The Rokan Block is currently Indonesia’s second-most productive oil block after the Cepu Block but was, in its heyday, the country’s most productive oil site and the backbone of the country’s membership in the powerful Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC).


Cepu block is 51:49 percent joint project where Exxon has 51 % and Pertamina has 49 % stake. Cepu is in Java island.
 
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SKKMigas bets on Rokan Block to meet 2030 oil output goal

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Chevron workers inspect an oil and gas facility at the Rokan Block in Riau at an unspecified date.(SKK Migas/SKK Migas)



Divya Karyza (The Jakarta Post)

PREMIUM
Jakarta ● Fri, August 13, 2021

The Upstream Oil and Gas Special Regulatory Task Force (SKK Migas) expects the oil output of the recently nationalized Rokan Block to increase two and a half-fold over this decade in meeting the agency’s long-term energy goal.

The Rokan Block currently produces 160,000 barrels of oil per day (bopd), but SKK Migas secretary Taslim Yunus said on Thursday that the block was expected to produce 400,000 bopd by the end of 2030. “That means 40 percent of the 1 million bopd [by 2030] target,” Taslim said in a webinar by CNBC Indonesia on Thursday, referring to the long-term goal.

State-owned upstream oil and gas firm Pertamina Hulu Rokan (PHR), which took over the block on Monday, will implement enhanced oil recovery (EOR) techniques in the lucrative Minas Field and develop other fields within the block over the medium- to long-term to boost production

 
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AlhamduliLLAH

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Gov’t Eases Restrictions as Covid Figures Decline
BY :HERU ANDRIYANTO
AUGUST 16, 2021

Jakarta. The Indonesian government on Monday decided to relax a bit the community restrictions amid a steady decline in newly Covid-19 cases, allowing a greater capacity for malls, restaurants and worship places across Java and Bali.

The partial lockdown, locally abbreviated as PPKM, has been in place since July 3 when the Delta variant began to rage in the country’s two most populated islands. It has since been extended multiple times, including by another week in Monday’s announcement.

But some flexibility is coming into effect from Tuesday, with malls and worship places allowed to receive visitors at 50 percent of their capacity from previously 25 percent, according to chief investment minister Luhut Binsar Panjaitan.

Luhut, who is responsible for Covid-19 response in Java and Bali, said the decision was taken on encouraging figures, including a 76 percent drop in daily cases and a 53 percent decline in the total number of active cases from their peak.

“The number of recoveries is increasing while at the same time we see a steady decline in the positivity rate, hospital admissions, new infections and daily death toll in nearly all provinces across Java and Bali,” Luhut told a news conference.

“But data on the ground leave plenty of room for improvement in certain regions. We have taken intervening actions by mobilizing self-isolating patients to government-appointed isolation centers and making sure the adequate supply of medication and oxygen concentrators in a hope that by next week we will see significant improvement especially in Bali and Greater Malang [in East Java],” Luhut added.
He said in Bali alone around 1,400 Covid-19 patients have been transferred to centralized isolation facilities in the resort island for better treatment and control.

Luhut said public mobility has returned to the level when the Delta variant has not become a dominant strain in new cases and deaths.

“On one hand, it indicates a rapid economic recovery but on the other hand it brings a serious risk of another surge in newly cases in the next two or three weeks,” he said.

Accordingly, restrictions will continue until August 23 with some flexibility.

Mall visitors still have to show their vaccination status in government app “Peduli Lindungi” (to care and protect) which tells if the user is vaccinated or not.

Mall reopening trial has run smoothly in the past week with more than 1 million visitors checking into the app for entry, Luhut said.

Indoor on-site dining is restricted to 25 percent of restaurant capacity “or two persons per table”, he added. Previously, restaurants could only serve takeaway or delivery orders while sit-down meals and drinks were limited to outdoor seating only.

Face covering is mandatory in all indoor settings where social distancing measures are difficult to maintain like malls and worship places.

“I need to underline that as long as the Covid-19 pandemic exists, the PPKM will continue to become government’s main tool to control public mobility and activity,” Luhut said.

Earlier in the day, the country reported 17,384 cases in the past 24 hours, the lowest daily tally since June 23, to take its total to 3.87 million.

A further 1,245 Covid patients have died in the one-day period, bringing the total death toll to 118,833 countrywide.

The daily death toll is trending down to the lowest figure since July 18, but it has been topping 1,000 since exactly a month ago.

 
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Belt-tightening key theme of 2022 budget
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Finance Minister Sri Mulyani briefs members of the press on the planned 2022 state budget at the ministry on Aug. 18, 2021.`

Vincent Fabian Thomas (The Jakarta Post)
PREMIUM
Jakarta ● Tue, August 17, 2021



The government’s budget plan foresees a much narrower deficit next year as the country embarks on a path of fiscal consolidation with an aim to push the deficit back below 3 percent of GDP in 2023.

Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati told reporters on Monday that the deficit would be no more than 4.85 percent in 2022, much lower than in both 2021 and 2020, when the deficit was respectively 5.82 percent and 6.14 percent. The 2022 deficit plan equals a gap of Rp 868 trillion (US$51 billion) between state revenue and state expenditure.

Acknowledging that the planned reduction in the state deficit was ambitious, Sri Mulyani explained that the government would steady its spending while betting on a higher income on expectations that the economy would improve significantly next year.

 
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Indonesia's economic recovery goals pushed back to 2022


Dzulfiqar Fathur Rahman (The Jakarta Post)
PREMIUM
Jakarta ● Wed, August 18, 2021
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Finance Minister Sri Mulyani discusses the 2022 state budget at a press conference at the ministry’s building in Jakarta on Monday.(Finance Ministry/Public relation team)


The macroeconomic assumptions of a recently released 2022 state budget draft reflect the expectation that Indonesia’s economy will largely return to pre-pandemic conditions by 2022, a postponement of predictions outlined in the 2021 budget.

The 2022 draft presumes that some key macroeconomic indicators such as gross domestic product (GDP) growth, the inflation rate and the poverty rate will return to levels seen in 2019 or earlier by next year, but economists warn that downside risks loom.

The government expects GDP to grow up to 5.5 percent next year on the back of reforms set in motion, in part, by the Job Creation Law. The forecast matches the approximately 5 percent growth seen in the years before the pandemic.

 
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Govt, BI approves $30b burden-sharing scheme

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Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati speaks at a webinar. (Finance Ministry/Faiz)

Vincent Fabian Thomas (The Jakarta Post)
PREMIUM
Jakarta ● Wed, August 25, 2021

The government and Bank Indonesia (BI) have agreed on a third burden-sharing scheme to help finance the nation’s COVID-19 healthcare and social assistance relief programs. Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati told reporters on Tuesday that the central bank would buy Rp 439 trillion (US$30.48 billion) in government bonds between 2021 and 2022.

BI would charge a coupon rate corresponding to its seven-day reverse repo rate (7DRRR), which averaged 3.39 percent this year, much lower than the benchmark 10-year bond yield average of 6.79 percent this year. “This is a cooperation between the Finance Ministry and BI to face the disaster that is the COVID-19 pandemic,” Sri Mulyani said.

 
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President Joko "Jokowi" Widodo, left, and First Lady Iriana Joko Widodo arrive in the Merdeka Palace in Jakarta on Tuesday for the Independence Day celebration. (Photo courtesy of Presidential Secretariat)


Jokowi Introduces Expansive 2022 Budget Bill, Promises Reform to Overcome Prolonged Pandemic, Uneven Global Recovery

BY :JAKARTA GLOBE
AUGUST 17, 2021

Jakarta. President Joko "Jokowi" Widodo has introduced an expansive 2022 budget bill that contains a total of $188 billion in spending to funds reforms in healthcare, social protection, and infrastructure programs in an attempt to overcome a prolonged pandemic and uneven global economic recovery next year.

The president said that the government would need to spend a total of Rp 2,708 trillion ($188 billion) next year, up 0.4 percent from Rp 2,697 trillion this year's outlook. The revenue from taxes, dividends, royalties, or grants would reach Rp 1,841 trillion next year, increasing 6 percent from this year's outlook of Rp 1.736 trillion.

That resulted in Rp 868 trillion in deficits, of 4.85 percent of Indonesia's gross domestic product (GDP), narrowing from this year's Rp 962 trillion deficit or 5.8 percent of GDP, Jokowi told the House of Representatives, in a speech after the state address on Monday.

"In 2022, we will still be faced with high uncertainties," Jokowi said.

"We also have to be prepared to face other global challenges, such as threats climate change, increased geopolitical volatilities, and uneven global economic recovery. Therefore, the 2022 state budget must be anticipatory, responsive, and flexible to respond to the uncertainties, but still reflects optimism and prudence," he said.

Next year, the government targeted GDP growth between 5 and 5.5 percent, up from an estimated 3.7 to 4.5 percent this year. Inflation would remain low at 3 percent, compared to this year's 1.8 to 2.5 percent projection.

That would allow the 10-year government bond's yield to remain at around 6.82 percent, compared to this year's expected range of 6.34 to 7.24 percent.

Indonesia could also expect a stable currency with the rupiah's exchange rate to hover around 14,350 against the US dollar, compared to the expected range of 14,200 to 14,600 this year.
The government saw oil prices in 2022 to increase to stay at $63 per barrel, from this year's $55-$65 price range, due to recovery in global demand, increase in oil production, geopolitical instability, and development of alternative energy sources.

Due to depleted wells, Indonesia's oil and gas production would struggle to maintain oil productivity at 703,000 barrels per day and gas at 1.04 million barrels of oil equivalent per day.
Jokowi said the government would focus on structural reforms to get more outcomes from efficient state spending.

"The 2022 fiscal consolidation will be more focused to support the implementation of structural reforms, especially the acceleration of human resource development, through
reform in the fields of health, social protection, and education.

"Structural reforms are also directed at improving the economic foundation, through regulatory reform and bureaucracy and sectoral support that encourages growth," Jokowi said.

Next year, the government seeks to spend Rp 255 trillion, or 9.4 percent of the total budget for healthcare. Apart from improving the pandemic handling efforts, Jokowi wanted to use the budget to overhaul the country's healthcare system, particularly the primary care units, or Puskesmas.

The government would also allocate Rp 427.5 trillion social protection budget to help more than 161 million poor and vulnerable populations to meet their basic needs like food, housing, energy, and education.

To improve the country's human resources, the government would set aside an education budget of Rp 541.7 trillion, Jokowi said. For infrastructure development, on the other hand, the government only allocates Rp 384.8 trillion, focusing on affordable, reliable energy and food infrastructure, as well as information technology and communication infrastructure.

Flexible Pandemic Spending
Next year, the government would allocate Rp 321 trillion for Covid-19 Handling and National Economic Recovery (PC-PEN) programs, down from Rp 744 trillion this year.

Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati said the government prepared a special clause in the 2020 budget bill that allows the government to shift budget allocation without the House's approval, taking into account the possibility of the Covid-19 pandemic that could still turn worse next year.

"Of course, we know that Covid is an influencing factor and is highly considered in designing the 2022 state budget," Sri Mulyani said during a press conference on Monday.

"So, we will also create a 2022 scheme where refocusing or reallocation will be carried out automatically, so it is hoped that it will not cause any disruption if there is a Covid-19 spike again as happened in the delta variant. We hope that doesn't happen, but the state budget must prepare for things that are not wanted to happen in 2022," she said.

Targets
Presiden Jokowi said he hoped the next year's spending would help the government achieve its development targets, including a reduction of open unemployment to 5.5 to 6.3 percent, compared to 6.3 percent in February this year.

He said the government also sought to reduce the poverty rate to between 8.5 and 9.0 percent, from 10.1 percent this year, according to the latest statistics in March. The social protection budget would also help the country narrowing inequality, as measured by the Gini ratio, to the range of 0.376 to 0.378 next year from 0.384 this year.

Lastly, Jokowi said he would like to see Indonesia's development index improving to between 73.41 and 73.46 next year, from 71.8 currently.

Said Abdullah, the chairman of the House's budgetary body, said the government budget and targets were "realistic" given the constraints in the economy next year. Still, the Indonesia Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P) politician said the government should keep an eye on the deficit.

Next year would be the last year the government can run a deficit exceeding 3 percent of the GDP threshold — which temporarily lifted last year to fight the pandemic — Said said. He hoped the government would be able to finance development programs from other sources than debts.
"More creative steps must be taken to optimize contribution from state-owned enterprises and investment," Said said.

 
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2030s to mark turning point for Indonesian coal exports: Experts

Dzulfiqar Fathur Rahman (The Jakarta Post)
PREMIUM
Jakarta
● Mon, August 30, 2021

An energy researcher and a coal association chair have predicted that the country’s coal exports will start to decline in the 2030s, largely because the commodity’s biggest buyers, China and India, plan to undergo major transitions to cleaner energy.

Fabby Tumiwa, executive director at energy research nonprofit Institute for Essential Services Reform (IESR), said during an online discussion on Aug. 26 that the two countries’ recently announced energy transition plans would “clearly reduce coal imports from Indonesia”.

Over 80 percent of Indonesia’s 625 million tons of planned coal production is to be sold to overseas markets, mainly China and India, according to Fabby. He pointed out that Japan and South Korea, other major buyers of Indonesian coal, were on similar paths toward renewable energy.

 
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Coal Downstreaming Will Add Economic Value of US$2.1 M

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CNN Indonesia | Wednesday, 01/09/2021 21:00 WIB

Jakarta, CNN Indonesia -- Executive Director of the Coal Mining Association (APBI-ICMA) Hendra Sinadia said downstream coal could provide added value to the Indonesian economy up to US$2.1 billion or equivalent to Rp29.9 trillion (assuming an exchange rate of Rp14,271 per US dollar).

The reason is, by downstreaming coal into dimethyl ether (DME) as a substitute for liquefied petroleum gas (LPG), the state can save the trade balance of Rp. 5.5 trillion per year. Until now, Indonesia has recorded imports of LPG at 1 million tons per year.

In addition, tens of thousands of workers can be absorbed by empowering the national industry to downstream this coal.

"The absorption of the workforce is around 10,570 people at the construction stage and 7,976 people at the operation stage," said Hendra in the Webinar on Utilization of Coal Downstream for Economic Recovery, Wednesday (1/9).

Then Hendra added that the government could save the country's foreign exchange reserves of up to Rp9.71 trillion per year. As well as increasing national energy security and reducing dependence on LPG imports.

Director of Coal Business Development at the Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources (ESDM) Sujatmiko targets DME production in 2045 to reach 6.15 million tons in stages. Methanol as a derivative product of coal downstreaming is targeted to produce 14.13 million tons by 2045.

Sujatmiko explained various derivative products of coal downstreaming using the liquefaction method, namely diesel, jet fuel, to naphthol. However, with the gasification method, coal can be used as gasoline, ammonia, urea fertilizer, and diesel.

To note, Indonesia's coal resources are ranked sixth in the world with a total of 143.7 billion tons. This value is estimated to be able to be used for the next 65 years, assuming a production of 600 million tons per year.

 
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IUAE-CEPA Negotiations Begin, Indonesia-Arabs Become More Intimate
Michelle Natalia
Thursday, 02 September 2021 - 17:21 WIB

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Minister of Trade (Mendag) Muhammad Lutfi. Photo/Ist

JAKARTA - Indonesia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) have started negotiations within the framework of a comprehensive economic partnership agreement, called the Indonesia-UAE Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (IUAE-CEPA) to strengthen bilateral relations between the two countries.

"We are proud to launch the IUAE-CEPA negotiations which also mark a new chapter of trade relations between the two countries," said Trade Minister Muhammad Lutfi at the virtual launch ceremony of The Negotiations For Indonesia-UAE CEPA, Thursday (2/9/2021). Also read: Gems! Trade Minister Lutfi Calls Imported Hijabs Cheaper Than 2 Hours Parking Fee

In signing the joint statement from the launch of the IUAE-CEPA negotiations, Indonesia was represented by the Minister of Trade Lutfi and the UAE was represented by the UAE Minister of Foreign Trade Thani bin Ahmed Al Zeyoudi.

"This cooperation is an important effort made by Indonesia and the UAE to increase bilateral trade that can provide benefits for the economies of both countries and the welfare of the people," he explained.

The launch also marks the start of the first round of IUAE-CEPA negotiations which will be held on September 2-4, 2021. The two countries are committed that the comprehensive economic agreement will be completed within one year of its launch or in 2022.

Lutfi is also confident that the IUAE-CEPA can be completed in time. one year because pre-negotiations have been carried out. In addition, the UAE is also committed that the cooperation agreement can be signed immediately.

"We see now with the UAE it seems that they want to finish quickly. So, there is trade in goods, trade in services, investment, those are important things to discuss in negotiations. So, I think this can be completed in a year or even sooner. ," he said.

 
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SKKMigas approves BP’s carbon capture plan for Tangguh LNG

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Megaproject – A worker carries out activities in the natural gas liquefaction facility at the Tangguh liquefied natural gas (LNG) plant in Bintuni Bay, West Papua, on Sept. 21, 2015.(Tempo/-)


Divya Karyza (The Jakarta Post)
PREMIUM
Jakarta ● Thu, September 2, 2021

A carbon capture utilization and storage (CCUS) project at the Tangguh liquefied natural gas (LNG) plant in West Papua has been approved in what developers claim will rank Tangguh among the LNG plants with the lowest greenhouse gas (GHG) emission intensities worldwide.

British Petroleum (BP) as the operator of the plant announced on Monday that the Upstream Oil and Gas Special Regulatory Taskforce (SKKMigas) had approved a plan by BP and its partners to develop the Ubadari natural gas field and increase output at the Vorwata gas field using CCUS.

The new developments are expected to unlock additional recovery of 1.3 trillion cubic feet of gas from the new Ubadari Field and the enhanced Vorwata Field. “The project is [expected] to play a major part in meeting [Indonesia’s] gas production aspirations while significantly reducing emissions,&rdquo...

 
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State owned companies and Multinational Company (MNC) partnership

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Petrokimia Gresik, Unilever Asia, PT Garam team up to build business ecosystem of soda ash

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Inforial (The Jakarta Post) -
● Fri, September 3, 2021

Petrokimia Gresik, an agroindustry solution company and a member of state-owned enterprise (SOE) Pupuk Indonesia, collaborates with PT Garam (Persero) and multinational company Unilever Asia Pte. Ltd. to build business ecosystem of soda ash or sodium carbonate (Na2CO3) factory.

The signing of their memorandum of understanding (MoU) was held virtually on Thursday at two locations with Petrokimia Gresik operation and production director Digna Jatiningsih and PT Garam (Persero) president director Achmad Ardianto in Gresik, East Java, as well as Unilever Asia Pte. Ltd. inorganics procurement director Pratistha Garg in Pasir Panjang, Singapore.

Separately, Petrokimia Gresik president director Dwi Satriyo Annurogo explained that the MoU would ensure the business ecosystem of the soda ash factory’s establishment plan, in which Petrokimia Gresik will purchase industrial salt as the raw material for soda ash and collaborate with Unilever Asia as the off-taker that will absorb the soda ash products.

“The project with PT Garam is a form of teamwork between SOEs with the aim of boosting the national economy, in line with the government’s directives,” Dwi said. Achmad echoed his statement, adding that the agreement was a huge step for PT Garam to realize a long-term plan to provide quality industrial salt. “On top of that, it shows the trust of Unilever to get high-quality products supplied by high-quality domestic raw materials.” .

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( Courtesy of Petrokimia Gresik/.)


The capacity of the soda ash factory will be around 300,000 metric tons per year, said Dwi. According to the plan, the factory will start operating at the end of 2024, and it will be the first one in Indonesia. Therefore, the presence of this factory is essential and has become a transformative breakthrough in supporting the advancement of the national chemical industry. Soda ash is a raw material for a variety of products we use in our everyday lives, such as soap, detergent, paper, textiles, ceramics and glassworks.

The demand for soda ash in Indonesia is high, but the supply is 100 percent met by imports. “This is a huge opportunity. The soda ash of Petrokimia Gresik will meet the needs of the domestic market and perhaps even the needs of the global market,” said Dwi.

The establishment of Petrokimia Gresik’s soda ash factory is part of the company’s commitment to strengthening the national chemical industry through related diversified industry strategies. That includes by optimizing the utilization of by-products into new products that have added value to support other industries. This factory will utilize downstream products from an ammonia-urea factory in the form of carbon-dioxide (CO2), which is processed into soda ash.

“Therefore, soda ash produced by Petrokimia Gresik is more environmentally friendly, because we use CO2 as a raw material that comes from the chemical reaction process in urea fertilizer production, not from the combustion of fossils fuels. This is aligned with the greenhouse gas emission principle,” Dwi said. The by-product of soda ash, in the form of ammonium chloride (NH4CL), can be utilized as a raw material of NPK fertilizer, which can reduce the need to import ammonium sulfate for NPK raw materials.

“This downstream program is expected to make Petrokimia Gresik more capable of carrying out the main task of supporting national food security, as well as strengthen the chemical industry as a national economy driver,” said Dwi Satriyo. For Unilever Asia, the factory will be an important addition to the industrial structure in Indonesia because it will utilize local sources for soda ash. The MoU signing also supports the government’s plan to achieve its 35 percent import substitution target by 2022, reducing import dependence on capital goods and raw materials.

 
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FITCH WIRE
Indonesia’s Deficit Financing Reflects Difficult Policy Choices
Mon 06 Sep, 2021 - 1:18 AM ET

Fitch Ratings-Hong Kong-06 September 2021: Indonesia’s new burden-sharing arrangement in response to a strong Covid-19 wave will help to finance a larger fiscal deficit, but raises the risk of weakening macroeconomic stability over time as it extends direct monetary financing of the fiscal deficit through 2022, says Fitch Ratings. Increasing likelihood of the risk materialising could negatively affect our assessment of the sovereign’s rating, as we stated when we affirmed it at ‘BBB’ with a Stable Outlook in March 2021.

The authorities’ latest arrangement includes a private placement with the central bank that amounts to 1.3% of GDP in 2021 and 1.2% in 2022. This implies that monetary financing of the deficit will be part of Indonesia’s policy tool kit for longer - and will be larger - than we previously expected, although it may partially replace Bank Indonesia’s (BI) purchases in the primary market as a stand-by buyer. BI purchased IDR136 trillion (0.8% of GDP) of government debt through mid-August this year. It financed around half of the deficit of 6.1% of GDP in 2020, of which 2.6pp was under a burden-sharing arrangement.

The arrangement will keep government interest costs down, freeing up resources for pandemic relief measures, but runs the risk of government interference in monetary policymaking. The Indonesian authorities have emphasised that the independence of the central bank is not in doubt and the policy has been instituted at BI’s initiative, while market reaction has been broadly neutral so far. Nonetheless, prolonged monetary financing could eventually undermine investor confidence, especially when emerging markets come under pressure as global liquidity conditions tighten.

The risk that BI deprioritises financial stability and control of inflation to keep down interest costs on public debt is low in the near term, in our view. We forecast inflationary pressure will remain weak over the next 12 months due to a still sizeable output gap. However, the inflation outlook will become more uncertain once economic recovery takes hold.

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The extension of the burden-sharing arrangement comes as Indonesia’s public finances face stress amid continuing disruption associated with the Covid-19 pandemic, including a major outbreak in June-August 2021. We now expect the general government deficit in 2021 to remain at a similar level to that in 2020, while the authorities’ new targets point to a deficit equivalent to 4.9% of GDP in 2022, compared with our forecasts of 5.6% for 2021 and 4.1% for 2022 in March.

Policymakers will continue to face difficult choices in balancing between economic and public finance risks. A slow recovery may force them to delay new revenue-enhancing measures, which could otherwise play an important role in reducing the fiscal deficit, due to the risk that these could damage the economic rebound.

We believe the government intends to pursue fiscal consolidation over the medium term, in line with its prudent pre-pandemic fiscal record. However, the task will be complicated by pandemic-related economic scarring. We recently lowered our estimate of Indonesia’s potential GDP growth over the next five years to 4.7%, from 5.3% before the pandemic.

Recent developments mean that Indonesia’s general government debt/GDP ratio in 2021 and 2022 will likely be higher than our current forecasts of 43% and 44%, respectively, but we expect it to remain significantly lower than the median for ‘BBB’ sovereigns (53% in 2021). Indonesia’s external metrics, which have long been a source of credit weakness compared with rating peers, have also improved during the pandemic, although part of this improvement will likely be reversed once activity levels normalise.

 
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