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Indonesia economy shrinks in 2020 for first time in two decades

A man walks in a quiet Jakarta business district on June 8, 2020

JAKARTA — Indonesia’s economy contracted in 2020 for the first time in more than two decades as COVID-19 crippled business activity across the archipelago.

The gross domestic product of Southeast Asia’s largest economy plunged 2.07% from a year earlier, according to data released Friday — a marked downturn from 2019 when Indonesia recorded growth of 5.02%.

The median forecast of 17 economists polled by Reuters was for a 2% annual contraction, while Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati had previously forecast the economy would shrink between 1.7% and 2.2%.

Indonesia’s last annual contraction was in 1998, when GDP fell 13.1% amid the Asia Financial Crisis, according to data from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

While the numbers show Indonesia fared far better than neighboring Philippines, which recorded an annual contraction of 9.5%, 2020 proved to be one of the toughest years Indonesia has endured in its history.

Indonesia never imposed a full-scale lockdown, but looser restrictions on social activities were implemented across the archipelago throughout last year, hampering businesses as well as ordinary families. Biannual unemployment numbers released last year showed that the country’s open unemployment rate in August stood at 7.07%, the highest since 2011. Between February and August, 2.67 million people lost their jobs, data showed.

Household consumption, which makes up over half of Indonesia’s GDP, dropped 2.63% year-on-year, after growth of 5.04% last year.

Meanwhile, fourth-quarter GDP shrank 2.19% year-on-year, from a contraction of 3.49% in the previous three month period. The archipelago has now endured three consecutive quarters of negative growth.

The government accelerated spending in the fourth quarter to boost consumption, but was only able to distribute 83.4% of its 695.2 trillion rupiah ($49.5 billion) stimulus package by the end of last year.

The finance minister said Wednesday that it will expand its COVID-19 recovery budget for this year to 619 trillion rupiah. The government had initially set a budget of 372.3 trillion rupiah, but lifted that to 553.09 trillion rupiah in late January.

The country is also hinging its hopes on its vaccination program for a speedy recovery, prioritizing those in the working age group, in the hope that they can kick-start economic activity faster.

The government said the improvement in the fourth quarter means the country’s economy is headed for recovery.

“Indonesia’s economic performance continues to show a direction of recovery and is already on the right track,” the country’s finance ministry said in a statement. “Going forward, the direction of this recovery will be pushed more quickly, especially with the start of the vaccination in a measured and well-planned manner.”

Airlangga Hartarto, the country’s chief economic minister, said at a press briefing on Friday that he expects GDP growth to return to positive territory in the three months ending in March, with a growth rate between 1.6% and 2.1%. For 2021, he expects GDP to grow between 4.5% and 5.5%.

The World Bank projects Indonesia will record 4.4% growth this year, but said it is contingent on the gradual easing of mobility restrictions and the wide availability of an effective and safe vaccine.

Sung Eun Jung, an economist at Oxford Economics, said in a memo that the company remains cautious about Indonesia’s economic fortunes this year.

“The retightening of mobility restrictions in Java and Bali islands in January will lead to a further weakening of recovery momentum in private consumption,” she said.

The economist added that stronger growth in the U.S. and China “present a more favorable” external condition, but “temporary renewed shutdowns to contain the virus may still occur around the world, adding uncertainty to the exports outlook.”

Oxford Economics forecasts Indonesia’s GDP to grow 4.7% in 2021.

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Indonesia in recession for first time in 22 years

South East Asia’s biggest economy saw growth fall 3.49% in the third quarter of the year, compared to the same period in 2019.

Following a fall of 5.32% in the second quarter of 2020, this has pushed Indonesia into a recession.

The last time this happened was during the 1998 Asian financial crisis.

Authorities in Indonesia have predicted that 3.5m people could lose their jobs due to the coronavirus downturn.

Indonesia has the highest infection rate in the region.

Tourist trap

While agriculture is a major component of its economy, Indonesia relies heavily on tourist dollars.

Millions of foreigners fly to Bali each year in search of deserted beaches, terraced rice fields and sprawling Hindu temples.

But their numbers have dropped sharply since Indonesia closed its borders to non-residents, like other countries battling with the pandemic.

The 3.49% fall in economic growth during July to September is slightly worse than the 3% that economists had predicted.

The capital city Jakarta went into a second semi-lockdown for four weeks starting in mid-September with rising cases straining its health system.

“All in all, Indonesia’s economy is past its weakest point, but with the domestic outbreak not under control yet, economic activity is likely to remain under pressure,” wrote ANZ bank.

Government officials have pledged to accelerate spending to counter the pandemic’s impact and push Indonesia’s gross domestic product (GDP) back into growth.

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Joe Biden Menang Pilpres AS, Apa Dampaknya Buat Ekonomi RI?

Jakarta – Kemenangan Joe Biden atas Donald Trump dalam pemilihan presiden Amerika Serikat (AS) akan memberi dampak ke ekonomi global termasuk Indonesia. Bagi Indonesia, kemenangan Biden akan menurunkan tensi perang dagang antara AS dan China yang mendorong nilai komoditas dan stabilitas pasar keuangan global.

Kondisi itu akan menguntungkan Indonesia dari sisi ekspor dan nila tukar.

“Kemenangan Joe Biden diharapkan dapat membawa sentimen positif bagi perekonomian Indonesia dengan perubahan kebijakan ekonomi yang akan diambil Amerika Serikat dalam empat tahun ke depan yang berbeda dari pemerintahan saat ini,” kata Managing Partner Grant Thornton Indonesia, Johanna Gani dalam keterangannya.

Meski begitu, turunnya tensi perang dagang dapat mengurangi rencana investor di China yang akan memindahkan pabriknya ke negara lain. Sehingga, bukan tidak mungkin muncul risiko terhambatnya arus aliran investasi langsung (FDI).

“Ketidakpastian ekonomi akibat perang dagang dan pandemi sepanjang tahun 2020 diharapkan dapat segera pulih dan hubungan dagang Indonesia-Amerika Serikat tetap akan stabil dan bergerak lebih positif,” katanya.

Dalam keterangan tersebut dijelaskan, kemenangan Biden akan berdampak terhadap perubahan peta perekonomian dunia di mana perang dagang menjadi sorotan. Perang dagang ini secara tidak langsung menekan kinerja ekspor dan impor dunia, termasuk perekonomian Indonesia.

Dalam hal ini, Biden sendiri diproyeksikan beberapa pengamat akan mengurangi tensi hubungan dagang dengan China. Dari sisi ekonomi, Joe Biden, dalam manifesto kebijakan ekonominya akan melakukan kebijakan baru seperti menaikkan berbagai macam pajak termasuk pajak korporasi yang diprediksi akan naik sebesar 15%.

Terkait belanja negara, Biden berjanji akan memberikan stimulus fiskal yang jauh lebih besar yakni sekitar US$ 2,5 triliun selama periode 2021-2024.

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Perkembangan Industri Perbankan dan Fintech Belum Sejalan

Seiring berkembangnya zaman, Industri financial Technology (fintech) kian gencar diperkenalkan ke berbagai pihak. Tidak hanya konsumen, namun juga ke industri perbankan. Industri fintech akan lakukan kerjas ama dengan industri perbankan untuk menciptakan ekosistem pembayaran yang lebih efisien.

Meski begitu, kerja sama ini dinilai masih memerlukan diskusi yang lebih lanjut terutama dari pihak perbankan. Hal tersebut disampaikan Rico Usthavia Frans, Direktur Teknologi Informasi dan Operasi Bank Mandiri dalam Seminar Nasional Kolaborasi Industri Perbankan dan Fintech dalam Sistem Pembayaran di Jakarta.

“Ada beberapa aspek (antara fintech dengan industri perbankan) yang kita nilai tidak ekuilibrium, misalnya dari sisi revenue. Bank masih konvensional ambil revenue mengais dari biaya admin, biaya transfer, dan sebagainya. Sedang fintech justru malah kasih cashback saat bayar listrik,” ungkapnya di Jakarta, (21/02/2019).

Rico juga menilai selama ini perbankan tidak pernah mendapat komisi dari transaksi yang dihasilkan fintech, padahal konsumennya berasal dari nasabah perbankan.

Dari sisi rekrutmen pegawai, Bank masih merekrut dengan latar belakang pendidikan dan keahlian teknis tertentu. Sementara fintech merekrut semua kalangan dengan fokus soft skillseperti kepemimpinan, manajemen tim dan lainnya.

Rico menyatakan, nanti akan ada konvergensi dari seluruh aspek itu jika fintech berkolaborasi dengan industri perbankan.

Pemakaian pembayaran digital makin pesat selama dua tahun terakhir di Indonesia. Hal itu mendorong Indonesia lebih dekat ke China dan India dalam ekonomi digital.

Hal disebutkan dalam laporan Morgan Stanley bertajuk financial technology (fintech) terus pimpin pasar pembayaran digital yang disusun oleh Analis Morgan Stanley Mulya Chandra dan Yulinda Hartanto, seperti dikutip pada Kamis (21/2/2019).

Dalam laporan itu menunjukkan Indonesia berada empat tahun di belakang India untuk pangsa pasar pembayaran digital. Pembayaran digital Indonesia yaitu dari transaksi nontunai melompat dari 1,3 persen pada 2016 menjadi 2,1 persen pada 2017. Kemudian 7,3 persen pada 2018. 

Hal ini menempatkan Indonesia pada tingkat yang sama dengan India. Pangsa pasar pembayaran digital di India bergerak dari 6,4 persen pada 2014 hingga menjadi 10,9 persen pada 2015.

Dibandingkan China, Indonesia berda tiga tahun di belakang negara itu dalam penetrasi smartphone. Penetrasi ponsel pintar naik dari 28 persen pada 2014 menjadi 54 persen pada 2017. Jumlah ini sama dengan China sebesar 52 persen pada 2017, dan dua kali lipat dari India pada 2017.

Lonjakan pertumbuhan uang elektronik mirip dengan China pada tiga tahun lalu.  Biasanya adopsi revolusioner ditandai dengan lonjakan nilai transaksi. Ini ditunjukkan di Indonesia dengan pertumbuhan 381 persen pada 2018. Kondisi itu mirip China pada 2016.

Indonesia juga memiliki populasi yang tidak memiliki rekening bank lebih tinggi dari India dan China. Bank Dunia menyatakan Indonesia  masih memiliki 51 persen populasi yang tidak memiliki rekening bank pada 2017. Angka ini jauh lebih tinggi dari India dan China, kedua negara itu memiliki populasi 20 persen pada 2017.

Selain itu, Morgan Stanley menyebutkan pembayaran digital dari e-commerce masih tertinggal dari fintech. Secara kelompok, 90 persen responden menggunakan fintech e-wallet dan hanya 35 persen menggunakan e-commerce.

Pola penggunaan pembayaran digital di Indonesia pun berbeda dengan China dan India. Survei menunjukkan kalau penggunaan pembayaran digital di Indonesia untuk transportasi, pemesanan makanan online dan mobile. Sedangkan di China dan India, pembayaran digital untuk belanja online.

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Indonesia has benefited from the US-China trade war, minister says

The ongoing trade war between the U.S. and China has opened up new opportunities for Indonesia, the Southeast Asian nation’s minister of industry said Tuesday.

Indonesia is the largest economy in Southeast Asia, the region tipped by many to be one of the beneficiaries of a tariff fight that has threatened global growth. Experts have said the conflict between the world’s two largest economies would push companies to speed up plans to move parts of their supply chains from China to countries such as VietnamThailand and Indonesia.

And Indonesia has seen that shift happening, Minister Airlangga Hartarto told CNBC’s Nancy Hungerford at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

The official said a number of companies that produce textiles and footwear have explored the opportunity to move from China to Indonesia. The Southeast Asian country has also been exporting more steel to the U.S., he added. That’s despite U.S. President Donald Trump imposing additional tariffs on steel and aluminum imports in March last year.

Indonesia exports of iron and steel to the U.S. jumped 87.7 percent year-over-year in the January through November period of 2018, according to data from the country’s trade ministry. During the same period, total exports to the U.S. grew 3 percent, the data showed.

Those opportunities aside, Airlangga said the trade war could end up hurting the global economy and that’s not good for all countries.

“I think the new norm of slow growth is not good for everybody … It’s not good enough for Indonesia to create jobs for the people,” the minister said.