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Indonesia Economy Forum

Not sure if we're on the same page but there was a criminal code update that passed parliament 2 months ago. The update... is honestly a mess. Didn't touch foreign investment rights at all. The law was choke-full of political interests that honestly made the law worse. It's since been bought up to the constitutional court to be either repealed or edited. Either way, the law concerned itself with lawmaker rights, sexuality, and moralism for the most part, it'll probably never be bought up in this forum.

I am talking about this.

http://www.scmp.com/lifestyle/artic...exual-and-extramarital-sex-under-proposed-law

Apparently, Indonesian parliament was thinking about revamping the old, colonial era criminal code of the country. This revamp included criminalizing premarital sex, homosexual sex among other things. I don't think there has been a vote on this overhaul of the criminal code yet. No? That's what I was wondering.
 
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I am talking about this.

Apparently, Indonesian parliament was thinking about revamping the old, colonial era criminal code of the country. This revamp included criminalizing premarital sex, homosexual sex among other things. I don't think there has been a vote on this overhaul of the criminal code yet. No? That's what I was wondering.

You realise it doesn't have anything to do with the economy? Please set up a seperate thread in the future if you have social-cultural inquiries. This thread is specifically for Indonesia's economy.

The issue has gone quite again. Apparently there were disagreements on parts of the law, so the parliament had to reconfigure it. As it is, it's a legacy issue that's been on the table for half a century, so its unknown whether it'll be just be delayed into perpetuity or not.
 
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Personally, I like how Japan use socio-cultural transnational approach when doing business. They are so different than the rest of the world, yet the rest of the world feels they can connect to them.
 
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Fitch Ratings interviews Sri Mulyani

Keypoints:
  1. Indonesia shall soon host the IMF Annual Meeting
  2. Indonesia is the 3rd fastest growing economy in the G-20
  3. Very Prudent macro-economic policy, especially in fiscal deficits (among lowest in G-20)
  4. Indonesia has made inroads in diversifying its economy
  5. Indonesia is currently one of the top destination of investment
  1. Indonesia sovereign rating's upgraded to BBB by Fitch Rating, which is what Indonesia deserves as it has credible fundamental improvements
  2. This includes narrowing the fiscal deficit
  3. Gov is supporting growth, but is not too heavily reliant on government deficit spending to do so, resulting in a better fundamentals
  4. Indonesia is a huge nation with 18k islands and 270 Mil population, it still has a long way to go, and there are many issues still need to be addressed
  5. This includes rising automation which will result in a downturn of demand for labour
  1. Indonesia's growth in the past was supported by high consumption, high investment, and commodities boom (leading to high exports)
  2. Currently consumption confidence is not as high
  3. Inflation in Indonesia has been under control now, but that has impacted export attractiveness compared to when annual inflation is 6-12%
  4. Investment wise, Indonesia is too reliant on bank credit and lacks a diversified capital market
  1. Addressing low tax ratio by meritocratic culture-building tax office
  2. Inviting international investment banks to inspect and identify tax policy & structure weaknesses
  3. Indonesia is aiming to provide a sustainable tax scheme, not to viciously strangle the economy with taxes
  4. One prong of the reforms includes upgrading the tax office IT apparatus and database. A better database means better service
  5. Indonesia has a complicated exemption scheme, this complication results in high administrative & collection costs and frustration for both tax officials and tax-payers.
  6. A tax-paying culture must be built in Indonesia
  1. Medium-to long term: Tax to GDP up to (20%)
  2. Short term: Increase Tax to GDP from 11.4% to 13% in 2020
  1. Database greatly improved
  2. Underlined need to improve tax compliance (Currently at 65%), such as when assets worth 40% of GDP declared
  1. Indonesia assiduously complies and follows with rule of no more than 3% budget deficit
  2. As such direct debt is not feasible
  3. Government also is transparent on contingent debt (debt from SOE's and indirect debt)
  4. Must tackle legacy issues which results in trust issues with private corps
  5. Skill-building in Public Private Partnership (PPP) building must be done
  6. Bond financing must be globally diversified from just domestic now (ex: Komodo Bonds)
  1. Indonesia has had regional and national elections since the 2000s, we are more politically mature
  2. Unlike most countries, Indonesia's public is debt-sensitive, populist demand is to decrease spending not increase debt!
  3. Very small appetite for increased debt. Public debt is actually 28% compared to median of 42% of other BBB rated countries.
  4. Reform Commitment: Ease of doing business increase rank by 30+ and the president is formulating further reforms
  1. As emerging country, we must always be vigilant, there is no shortcut
  2. At least, increasing fed rate means that US economy is improving, which means no global economic shock so long as protectionism doesn't happen
 
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List of ASEAN countries GDP - data are according to International Monetary Fund's April 2018estimates

GDP Per Capita (nominal) in USD

1 Singapore 61,766 High-income
2 Brunei 33,233 High-income

3 Malaysia 11,237 Upper-middle-income
4 Thailand 6,992 Upper-middle-income
5 Indonesia 4,051 Upper-middle-income

6 Philippines 3,095 Lower-middle-income
7 Laos 2,705 Lower-middle-income
8 Vietnam 2,545 Lower-middle-income
9 Cambodia 1,498 Lower-middle-income
10 Myanmar 1,338 Lower-middle-income

GDP (nominal) in millions of USD

1 Indonesia 1,074,966
2 Thailand 483,739
3 Malaysia 364,919
4 Singapore 349,659
5 Philippines 332,449
6 Vietnam 240,779
7 Myanmar 70,715
8 Cambodia 24,360
9 Laos 18,337
10 Brunei 14,438

Population:

1 Indonesia 265,316,000
2 Philippines 107,411,000
3 Vietnam 94,575,000
4 Thailand 69,182,000
5 Myanmar 52,832,000
6 Malaysia 32,474,000
7 Cambodia 16,253,000
8 Laos 6,777,000
9 Singapore 5,661,000
10 Brunei 434,000

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_o...untries_by_GDP
 
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I don't know anything about it but make a little search on his background, I say.

he is an owner of Samco Group. or simply say he's a businessman. honestly, i don't know anyhing about him before i found the video just about some hours ago. hell, i doubt anyone knows him outside jakarta. he has no chance of winning as there are overwheling favor for jokowi to win another period. the only thing that i can associate him with is money, lots of it.

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Sam Aliano doesnt sound Turkish.

FYI Mehmed isn't originated from turkey too.
 
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New International Port in West Kalimantan

State-owned port operator Pelabuhan Indonesia II, or Pelindo II, announced on Wednesday (11/04) the construction of the Pantai Kijing Port in West Kalimantan. The port, which is needed to support the region's largest harbor in Pontianak, is expected to begin operations in the third quarter of 2019.
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An information board on Kijing Beach provides information about the new development. (JG Photo/Yudhi Sukma Wijaya)
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INDONESIA’S HEALTH SCHEME DWARFS OBAMACARE. BUT THERE IS A PROBLEM
Jakarta has gained much political capital by rolling out the world’s biggest universal health insurance programme. There’s just one snag: paying for it

BY JEFFRY HUTTON

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Indonesia's President Joko Widodo and family. With key electoral tests looming, Widodo has little incentive to meddle with what is proving to be a popular healthcare scheme. Photo: AFP

When Dr Selvy Anggeraini took over as the head of one of Jakarta’s busier government health clinics, she had a budget of 1 billion rupiah (US$72,500) to treat the 350 or so patients that came daily to seek care from one of her 14 doctors. Four years later, after the introduction of a generous universal health insurance programme, her caseload has doubled, even though her budget has barely moved.

“The care is mostly free so now more people come,” says Anggeraini, whose district – home to 350,000 – spans some of the wealthier suburbs in the south to the working class districts in the north. And while Anggeraini is adamant the clinic cuts no corners to make ends meet, she allows that the clinic is stretched thin. “We have to make the same budget go further. It’s not enough.”

Indonesia is one year away from completing a five-year roll out of what is already the world’s biggest universal health insurance programme – one that makes Obamacare look practically third world in its ambitions. So far 185 million – about three quarters of the population – have signed up, availing themselves of generous benefits that until recently were unthinkable for most here.

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A patient awaits a free cataract surgery at Putri Hijau military hospital in Medan, North Sumatra, Indonesia. Photo: AP

Now Indonesians have access to services that are generous even by rich world standards: Free dental care, medicine, physiotherapy, as well as the full menu of emergency and chronic care up to and including organ transplants.

It’s a far cry from what was available before the insurance. The poor then either stayed sick or went into debt to pay for treatment, Anggeraini says. Most of her patients then would refuse referrals to specialists because they couldn’t pay.


“It was heart breaking,” Anggeraini recalls. “We didn’t feel like we were making people better.”

Trouble is, the government is having a hard time paying for its new benefit. Analysts say the government doesn’t cover nearly enough of what it costs to treat the poor, while the wealthy are not paying their fair share. Deficits are soaring, hospitals are having trouble getting paid and waiting times are lengthening. Unless the government raises premiums, or its subsidies or both the health care programme risks imploding.

“This insurance programme is unsustainable,” says Dr Ascobat Gani, a health economist at the University of Indonesia, who until last year was the scheme’s cost control manager. “We already have large enrolment but you have to secure the availability of services.”

Gani says hospital waits of a day or more for non life-threatening emergency cases are not uncommon. Patients complain of needing to make multiple visits over a period of days to see specialists.

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A Papuan woman waits for her child to be treated for measles. Photo: AFP

Given rock-bottom premiums, there is little chance those bottlenecks will ease soon. The government covers the 25,000 rupiah (US$2) a month charged to the 100 million or so considered poor. Salaried workers and civil servants pay 5 per cent of their salary up to a maximum of 8 million rupiah. Few pay that amount though, says Dr Hasbullah Thabrany, chairman of health economics and policy studies at the University of Indonesia, who helped draft the 2005 law that forms the basis of the universal benefit.

The subsidy paid for the poor ought to be hiked by at least a third. Meanwhile salaried workers often don’t declare their full pay to cushion their levies or contribute only sporadically. Thabrany reckons contributions from salaried workers average little more than 68,000 rupiah per person per month.

With President Joko Widodo facing elections next year, and regional votes slated for June, there is little incentive for policymakers to hike premiums or catch fraudsters. “The problem is politics,” Thabrany says. “Cheap health care is popular.”

Just how much the Indonesian government pays into the programme isn’t immediately clear. The insurance provider Badan Penyelenggara Janinan Sosial – or BPJS as it’s better known, doesn’t detail the full extent of government support.

According to its annual statements, income from premiums, payments made by customers to BPJS, and what it pays out in claims was roughly balanced at 67 trillion rupiah in 2016, the most recent year for which data is available.

But even though a big chunk of the insurance body’s income is in the form of that government subsidy for the poor – about two-fifths by Gani’s measure – the scheme is still in deficit. Last year the shortfall was 6.8 trillion rupiah. This year Gani reckons it will be 9 trillion rupiah – an amount by law the government must cover.

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A nurse vaccinates an Indonesian schoolboy against diphtheria at his school in Banda Aceh. Photo: AFP

To be sure, an injection of funds into health spending was needed as Indonesia had lagged its peers. In the decade before the insurance was introduced a little over 60 per cent of the population had access to family planning, more than 40 per cent smoked, and nearly a fifth of women gave birth without a doctor or a midwife. There are 0.5 doctors per 1,000 people and most of those are in cities on Java. In Malaysia there are just over 1.5.


In remote areas the programme has done little to improve a wretched situation. In February, more than 70 people died in Papua from measles and malnutrition.

Laksono Trisnatoro, a professor of health policy and administration at Gadja Mada University in Yogyakarta, says universal health care benefits wealthy urbanites more than their rural countrymen. Doctors gravitate to cities, and without doctors providers can’t file claims.

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A military helicopter arrives in West Papua amid an outbreak of measles and malnutrition. Photo: AFP

“Universal health insurance is a good idea but it’s the big cities that benefit,” says Trisnatoro. “How can you bill if you don’t have doctors or hospitals in the first place?”


But for one woman at Anggeraini’s health clinic those worries are a world away. Warsini, 42, has come to treat the fever of her five-year-old grandson. Other than a small registration fee that costs the equivalent of a small bottle of water, her visit will be free. And while she has waited for an hour, it is worth it. “I’m very happy to be able to see a doctor now. It’s a big relief knowing that if something happens we don’t have to pay.” ■
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This needs to be discussed. I was shocked that Indonesia has the largest government medical insurance program in the world. I mean, I know India has nothing similar to it, but surely obamacare and the Chinese socialist state would have had a bigger insurance. Apparently not.

With an estimated deficit of 9 Trillion IDR this year, this might become a growing problem, though not nearly as bad as the fuel subsidies.
 
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Indonesia, S Korea open new phase of strategic partnership
Kamis, 19 April 2018 23:15 WIB - 13 Views

Reporter: Yashinta Difa

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Indonesian President Joko Widodo (right) received South Korean President Moon Jae-in at Bogor Presidential Palace (ANTARA/Puspa Perwitasari)

Jakarta, April 19 (ANTARA News) - Indonesia and South Korea have opened a new round of bilateral ties, after President Joko Widodo (Jokowi) and President Moon Jae-in agreed to elevate the partnership between the two countries into a special strategic partnership in November 2017.

South Korean Ambassador to Indonesia, Kim Chang-beom, told Antara in Jakarta on Thursday that the two countries have been natural partners since the start of the diplomatic relations in 1973.

"We have never been involved in issues or conflicts but just ideas of collaboration and collaboration," he stated.

Moon`s visit to Indonesia last year was considered as a prelude to a further jump in a more intensive and substantive strategic partnership.

South Korea, he continued, has been working intensively with Indonesia, especially in industry, culture, and research and development.

Now, he believed that Korean businessmen show more interest in infrastructure development, consumer goods trade, lifestyle products, healthcare, biotechnology, pharmaceuticals, logistics, as well as cosmetics and beauty products.

"I think we are increasingly opening a new chapter in bilateral relations between Indonesia and South Korea," he noted.

South Korea and Indonesia agreed to strengthen cooperation in four specific areas, including the defense industry, increase in trade value, community exchange between both countries, and cooperation at regional and global level, during a meeting between Moon and Jokowi last year.

Moon sees the cooperation between the two countries as being well at the moment, especially in areas of human rights protection, democracy, and economic growth.

"For future cooperation, we agree to enhance bilateral relations to specific strategic partnerships, in order to contribute to the ASEAN framework, as well as promote peace and prosperity throughout Asia," he pointed out. *** 2 ***


Editor: Andi Abdussalam

COPYRIGHT © ANTARA 2018
 
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