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20131202 2
1. 1
PROSPEK DAN TANTANGANPROSPEK DAN TANTANGAN
PEREKONOMIAN INDONESIAPEREKONOMIAN INDONESIA
Faisal Basri
22 DesemberDesember 20132013
BagianBagian II
AncamanAncaman MiddleMiddle--Income TrapIncome Trap
2. 2
Source: World Bank, World Development Indicators.
Indonesia:Indonesia: pendapatanpendapatan perkapitaperkapita
0
500
1,000
1,500
2,000
2,500
3,000
3,500
4,000
1969
1971
1973
1975
1977
1979
1981
1983
1985
1987
1989
1991
1993
1995
1997
1999
2001
2003
2005
2007
2009
2011
Gross National Income per capita,
Atlas method (current US$)
Gross national income per capitaGross national income per capita
880
1,260
1,400
1,530
2,470
3,420
5,210
7,610
9,740
9,800
11,630
12,700
16,392
22,670
36,560
47,210
0 10,000 20,000 30,000 40,000 50,000
Cambodia
Lao PDR
Vietnam
India
Philippines
Indonesia
Thailand
South Africa
Mexico
Malaysia
Brazil
Russia
Taiwan
Korea
Hong Kong
Singapore
Sources: World Bank, World Development Indicators.
High income
Current US$, 2012
โฅ US$ 12,616
3. 3
CiriCiri--ciriciri berpotensiberpotensi alamialami middlemiddle--income trapincome trap
Investment to GDP ratio rendah
Pertumbuhan industri manufaktur rendah
Diversifikasi industri terbatas
Kondisi pasar kerja buruk
Gross fixed capital formation (% of GDP)Gross fixed capital formation (% of GDP)
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
50
1980
1981
1982
1983
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
Indonesia Malaysia Thailand Philippines China
Sources: World Bank, World Development Indicators.
5. 5
0
2
4
6
8
10
First semester (Jan-Jun)
Source: BPS.
Non-tradable
GDP
Tradable
Low quality of growth, 2000Low quality of growth, 2000--20132013
Percent
Source: BPS.
PerananPeranan industriindustri manufakturmanufaktur terusterus merosotmerosot
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
Percent of GDP
6. 6
BagianBagian IIII
PeranPeran NegaraNegara LoyoLoyo
Population, GDP/capita, and structure of GDP, 2012Population, GDP/capita, and structure of GDP, 2012
Sources: World Bank, World Development Indicators.
Population GDP per capita GDP components (%)
Country (million) (current US$) Cp Cg I X M
China 1,351 6,188 36 14 46 31 27
India 1,237 1,489 60 12 30 24 32
Indonesia 247 3,557 57 9.0 33 24 26
Brazil 199 11,340 62 21 18 13 14
USA 314 49,965 72 17 15 14 18
Japan 128 46,720 60 20 21 15 16
Germany 82 41,514 58 19 18 52 46
UK 63 38,514 66 22 14 32 34
Korea 50 22,590 54 16 27 57 53
Philippines 97 2,587 74 11 19 31 34
Vietnam 89 1,596 64 5 28 90 90
Thailand 67 5,480 56 14 29 75 74
Malaysia 29 10,381 49 14 26 87 76
7. 7
(average 2005-2010, % of GDP)
GeneralGeneral govโtgovโt final consumption expenditurefinal consumption expenditure
Source: World Bank.
General government final consumption expenditure (formerly general
government consumption) includes all government current expenditures
for purchases of goods and services (including compensation of
employees). It also includes most expenditures on national defense and
security, but excludes government military expenditures that are part of
government capital formation.
Indonesia tax ratioIndonesia tax ratio
Sources: Ministry of Finance.
10.0
11.0
12.0
13.0
14.0
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
Taxratio (tax revenues/GDP),percent
8. 8
Tax ratio in selected countries, 2010Tax ratio in selected countries, 2010
Sources: world Bank.
Tax revenues as % of GDP
PeranPeran pemerintahpemerintah makinmakin loyoloyo dalamdalam
penyediaanpenyediaan public goodspublic goods
Source: IMF, Indonesia: selected Issues, IMF Country Report No. 12/278, September 2012.
9. 9
Source: World Bank, World Development Indicators.
Electric power consumption (kWh per capita)Electric power consumption (kWh per capita)
BagianBagian IIIIII
KualitasKualitas SDMSDM dandan KetenagakerjaanKetenagakerjaan
10. 10
Human development indexHuman development index
Sources: UNDP, Human Development Report 2013.
Pada tahun 2030, HDI
bisa mencapai tingkat
seperti Malaysia
sekarang.
HDI in selected countries, 2012 (n = 186)HDI in selected countries, 2012 (n = 186)
Sources: UNDP, Human Development Report 2013.
HDI HDI Overall Change Adjusted
Rank Country Value Value loss (%) in rank Rank
3 United States 0.937 0.821 12.4 -13 16
28 Czech Republic 0.873 0.826 5.4 9 19
45 Argentina 0.811 0.653 19.5 -8 53
71 Venezuela 0.748 0.549 26.6 -17 88
85 Brazil 0.730 0.531 27.2 -12 97
91 Colombia 0.719 0.519 27.8 -11 102
92 Sri Lanka 0.715 0.607 15.1 11 81
101 China 0.699 0.543 22.4 0 101
103 Thailand 0.690 0.543 21.3 0 103
108 Bolivia 0.675 0.444 34.2 -12 120
114 Philippines 0.654 0.524 19.9 4 110
121 Indonesia 0.629 0.514 18.3 3 118
127 Viet Nam 0.617 0.531 14.0 14 113
136 India 0.554 0.392 29.3 1 135
138 Lao, PDR 0.543 0.409 24.7 4 134
138 Cambodia 0.543 0.402 25.9 3 135
161 Haiti 0.456 0.273 40.2 -7 168
Inequality-adjusted HDI
11. 11
Health expenditure, 2011Health expenditure, 2011
0 3 6 9 12 15 18
South Sudan
Qatar
Myanmar
Indonesia
Lao PDR
Malaysia
Bangladesh
India
Philippines
Thailand
Timor-Leste
China
Cambodia
Russia
Turkey
Vietnam
Israel
South Africa
Brazil
Australia
Norway
Sweden
Switzerland
Germany
France
United States
Health expenditure, total (% of GDP)
Total health expenditure is the sum of
public and private health expenditure. It
covers the provision of health services
(preventive and curative), family planning
activities, nutrition activities, and
emergency aid designated for health but
does not include provision of water and
sanitation.
Sources: World Bank, World Development Indicators.
Selected basic health indicatorsSelected basic health indicators
1. % Age 5 are under weight: Percentage of children under age 5 falling two standard deviations or more below the median weight-for-age of the
reference population, 2010 (UNDP)
2. Under 5 mortality: probability of dying between birth and exactly age 5, expressed per 1,000 live births, 2010 (UNDP)
3. Maternal mortality ratio: ratio of the number of maternal deaths to the number of live births in a given year, expressed per 100,000 live births,
2010 (UNDP)
4. Malaria: deaths due to malaria expressed per 100,000 people, 2008 (UNDP)
5. Tuberculosis: estimated rate per 100,000 population, 2011 (WHO)
Country
% Age 5
are under
weight
Under 5
mortality
rate
Maternal
mortality
ratio Malaria Tuberculosis
Brazil 1.7 19 56 0.1 42
China 3.8 18 37 0.0 75
Thailand 7.0 13 48 0.4 124
South Africa 8.7 57 300 0.2 993
Malaysia 12.9 6 29 0.1 81
Indonesia 18.4 35 220 3.2 187
Vietnam 20.2 23 59 0.1 199
Sri Lanka 21.1 17 35 0.0 66
Philippines 21.6 29 99 0.2 270
India 42.5 63 200 1.9 181
13. 13
Profile of workforce by job statusProfile of workforce by job status
Source: World Bank, presented by Shubham Chaudhuri at Kompas Economic Panel Discussion, June 21, 2012.
(% of GDP)
R&D expenditureR&D expenditure
Source: World Bank.
15. 15
Financial inclusion index:Financial inclusion index:
Financial deepeningFinancial deepening
Indonesia has yet to optimize its domestic resourcesIndonesia has yet to optimize its domestic resources
Source: Solana (WEF) based on World Bank dan IMF
16. 16
The financial development index (1)The financial development index (1)
Source: World Economic Forum, The Financial Development Report 2010.
Country
2011 rank
(n = 60)
2010 rank
(n = 58)
2011 score
(1-7)
Change
in score
Banking
Rank
Banking
score
Hong Kong SAR 1 4 5.16 +0.12 3 5.43
United States 2 1 5.15 +0.03 21 4.19
Singapore 4 3 4.97 -0.08 16 4.40
Malaysia 16 17 4.24 +0.04 15 4.49
Korea 18 24 4.13 +0.13 20 4.21
China 19 22 4.12 +0.08 9 4.92
South Africa 29 32 3.64 +0.11 33 3.53
Brazil 30 31 3.61 +0.09 41 3.31
Thailand 35 34 3.32 -0.04 31 3.70
India 36 37 3.29 +0.05 43 3.12
Russian Fed 39 40 3.18 -0.04 57 2.35
Mexico 41 43 3.16 +0.09 47 2.82
Turkey 43 42 3.14 -0.02 34 3.48
Philippines 44 50 3.13 +0.17 36 3.41
Vietnam 50 46 2.98 -0.05 29 3.91
Indonesia 51 51 2.92 +0.02 53 2.69
Venezuela 59 55 2.44 -0.12 58 2.34
Nigeria 60 57 2.44 +0.03 56 2.43
The financial development index (2)The financial development index (2)
Source: World Economic Forum, The Financial Development Report 2010.
Country
2010 rank
(n = 57)
2009 rank
(n = 55)
2010 score
(1-7)
Private credit
to GDP (%)
Bank deposits
to GDP (%)
United States 1 3 5.12 211 78
Singapore 4 4 5.03 91 113
Japan 9 9 4.67 95 183
Germany 13 12 4.49 102 104
Malaysia 17 22 4.20 96 100
China 22 26 4.03 n.a. 145
Korea 24 23 4.00 90 61
South Africa 31 32 3.53 162 63
Brazil 32 34 3.53 54 61
Thailand 34 35 3.37 78 84
India 37 38 3.24 48 63
Russian Fed. 40 40 3.21 39 31
Vietnam 46 45 3.03 90 74
Philippines 50 50 2.97 27 46
Indonesia 51 48 2.90 23 34
Bangladesh 55 54 2.55 36 50
Venezuela 56 55 2.55 27 31
Nigeria 57 52 2.43 24 21
17. 17
Source: World Bank.
Domestic credit provided by the banking sector includes all credit to various sectors on a
gross basis, with the exception of credit to the central government, which is net. The
banking sector includes monetary authorities and deposit money banks, as well as other
banking institutions where data are available (including institutions that do not accept
transferable deposits but do incur such liabilities as time and savings deposits). Examples
of other banking institutions are savings and mortgage loan institutions and building and
loan associations.
Domestic credit provided by banking sectorDomestic credit provided by banking sector
Source: Asian Development Bank.
Size of local currency bonds market (1)Size of local currency bonds market (1)
200
49
62 53 60
40 35 33 32
14 11
18
77 43
33 16
32
20 13 5
0 2
0
50
100
150
200
250
Governmentbonds Corporatebonds
% of GDP, June 2013
18. 18
Source: Asian Development Bank.
Size of total local currency bonds market (2)Size of total local currency bonds market (2)
% of GDP
102
74 73
48
27
35
17
31
0
37
217
126
105
86
76 72
46
37
15 14
0
50
100
150
200
250
December2000 June2013
Source: World Bank, World Development Indicators.
Stock market capitalizationStock market capitalization
125
159
32
24
32
67
49
16
137
129
89
78 74
60
46 46
15
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
160
180
2000 2011
Percent of GDP
19. 19
BagianBagian VV
PerlindunganPerlindungan dandan SistemSistem JaminanJaminan SosialSosial
Sources: KOF Swiss Economic Institute, KOF Index of Globalization, March 2013.
Globalization index, 2012Globalization index, 2012
Globalization Index Economic Globalization Social Globalization Political Globalization
1. Belgium 1. Singapore 1. Cyprus 1. Italy
2. Ireland 2. Luxembourg 2. Singapore 2. France
3. Netherlands 3. Ireland 3.Ireland 3. Belgium
4. Austria 4. Malta 4. Austria 4. Spain
5. Singapore 5.Netherlands 5. Belgium 5. Austria
6.Denmark 6. Belgium 6. Switzerland 6. UK
7. Sweden 7. Hungary 7.Netherlands 7. Sweden
8. Portugal 8. Estonia 8. Canada 8.Brazil
9. Hungary 9. Bahrain 9. Denmark 9. Portugal
10.Switzerland 10. Sweden 10.France 10. Egypt
12. UK 11. UAE 12. UK 11. Denmark
21. Australia 12. Denmark 14. Norway 13. Netherlands
22. Germany 25. Malaysia 15. Germany 14. Switzerland
27. Malaysia 26. Qatar 17. Sweden 17. Germany
32. UAE 29. UK 25. UAE 18. India
34. USA 41. Norway 27. USA 19. USA
39. Qatar 48. Germany 34. Malaysia 20. Norway
48. Russia 52. Thailand 47. Russia 34. South Africa
54. South Africa 66. South Africa 56. Qatar 39. Indonesia
56. Japan 73. Viet Nam 64. Oman 43. Philippines
57. Thailand 76. Cambodia 90. China 44. China
73. China 82. USA 93. South Africa 45. Russia
76. Brazil 88. Indonesia 95. Thailand 47. Malaysia
88. Philippines 97. Russia 118. Brazil 59. Thailand
90. Indonesia 101. Philippines 127. Philippines 73. Qatar
107. India 104. Brazil 144. India 109. Cuba
118. Cuba 109. China 147. Indonesia 118. Kuwait
126. Viet Nam 128. India 165. Viet Nam 134. UAE
205. Somalia 201. Timor-Leste 205. Somalia 135. Viet Nam
20. 20
RezimRezim perdaganganperdagangan IndonesiaIndonesia sudahsudah sangatsangat bebasbebas
8.6
8.2
7.9
5.7
5.6
5.2
4.9
4.8
4.5
4.1
4.0
3.8
3.7
2.7
2.6
1.6
Venezuela (2011)
India (2009)
Brazil(2011)
Vietnam(2010)
Argentina(2011)
Russia (2011)
Thailand (2009)
Philippines (2010)
SouthAfrica(2011)
China (2011)
Malaysia(2009)
Qatar (2009)
Bolivia (2011)
Turkey (2011)
Indonesia(2011)
UnitedStates (2011)
Tariff rate, applied, weighted mean, all products (%)
(2011 or latest data available)
Sources: World Bank, World Development Indicators
http://data.worldbank.org/indicator/TM.TAX.MRCH.WM.AR.ZS
Aras tariff (Aras tariff (beabea masukmasuk))
Versi Kemenkeu
1995: 15,48%
1998: 9,24%
2007: 7,81%
2011: 7,56%
Versi Bank Dunia
1995: 10,8%
1999: 6,1%
2007: 3,9%
2011: 2,6%
World Bank: Tariff rate, applied, weighted mean, all products (%)
Weighted mean applied tariff is the average of effectively applied rates weighted by the product
import shares corresponding to each partner country. Data are classified using the Harmonized
System of trade at the six- or eight-digit level. Tariff line data were matched to Standard
International Trade Classification (SITC) revision 3 codes to define commodity groups and import
weights. To the extent possible, specific rates have been converted to their ad valorem
equivalent rates and have been included in the calculation of weighted mean tariffs. Import
weights were calculated using the United Nations Statistics Division's Commodity Trade
(Comtrade) database. Effectively applied tariff rates at the six- and eight-digit product level are
averaged for products in each commodity group. When the effectively applied rate is unavailable,
the most favored nation rate is used instead.
21. 21
Sources: Asian Development Bank, The Social Protection Index: Assessing Results for Asia and the Pacific, 2013.
Social protection index (n=35)Social protection index (n=35)
3 Pillars of social protection3 Pillars of social protection
1. Social insurance uses contributory schemes to help people
respond to common risks, such as illness, old age, and
unemployment. Its major components are health insurance,
pensions, and unemployment insurance.
2. Social assistance provides unrequited transfers to groups, such
as the poor, who cannot qualify for insurance or would receive
inadequate benefits from such a source. The major components of
social assistance are cash or in-kind transfers, child welfare,
assistance to the elderly, health assistance, disability benefits, and
disaster relief.
3. Active labor market programs help people to secure
employment. Their major components are skill development and
training programs and special work programs, such as cash- or
food-for-work programs. This report categorizes passive labor
market programs, such as unemployment insurance or severance
payments, as forms of social insurance.
22. 22
Year of introduction of social insuranceYear of introduction of social insurance
Industrial Unemploy- Family
Country accident Health Pension ment allowance
Belgium 1903 1894 1900 1920 1930
Netherlands 1901 1929 1913 1916 1940
France 1898 1898 1895 1905 1932
Italy 1898 1886 1898 1919 1936
Germany 1871 1883 1889 1927 1954
Ireland 1897 1911 1908 1911 1944
U.K. 1897 1911 1908 1911 1945
Denmark 1898 1892 1891 1907 1952
Norway 1894 1909 1936 1906 1946
Sweden 1901 1891 1913 1934 1947
Finland 1895 1963 1937 1917 1948
Austria 1887 1888 1927 1920 1921
Switzerland 1881 1911 1946 1924 1952
Australia 1902 1945 1909 1945 1941
New Zealand 1900 1938 1898 1938 1926
Canada 1930 1971 1927 1940 1944
U.S.A. 1930 -- 1935 1935 --
Sources: Christopher Pierson, Beyond the Welfare State, 3rd edition. Cambridge: Polity Press, 2006, p.110.
Asumsi: 32 jt pekerja sektor formal; gaji Rp 1,5 juta/bulan, iuran
5%, pertumbuhan gaji 10%, pekerja 6%
Tahun Rp miliar/th
Akumulasi
Rp miliar
Th 1 28.800 28.800
Th 2 33.581 62.381
Th 3 39.155 101.536
Th 4 45.655 147.191
Th 5 53.234 200.425
Th 6 62.070 262.495
Th 7 72.374 334.869
Th 8 84.388 419.257
Th 9 98.397 517.654
Th 10 114.731 632.385
Akumulasi Iuran:
Memastikan
ketersediaan
dana
Kepastian
investor faskes,
alkes dan
medical supplies
Memastikan
pasien
AkumulasiAkumulasi IuranIuran JamkesJamkes
Sumber: Hasbullah Thabrany, โDampak Ekonomi Pelaksanaan SJSN,โ disajikan pada
Round Table Discussion GP Farmasi 27 April 2010.
23. 23
JaminanJaminan harihari tuatua//pensiunpensiun ((iuraniuran 6%)6%)
Jaminan hari
tua/Pensiun
merupakan
sumber dana
investasi
jangka
panjang yang
luar biasa
besar.
Tahun
Iuran/th
Rp miliar
Akumulasi
Rp miliar
Th 1 34.560 34.560
Th 2 40.297 74.857
Th 3 46.986 121.843
Th 4 54.786 176.629
Th 5 63.880 240.509
Th 6 74.485 314.994
Th 7 86.849 401.843
Th 8 101.266 503.109
Th 9 118.076 621.185
Th 10 137.677 758.862
Sumber: Hasbullah Thabrany, โDampak Ekonomi Pelaksanaan SJSN,โ disajikan pada
Round Table Discussion GP Farmasi 27 April 2010.
BagianBagian VIVI
KembaliKembali keke JatiJati DiriDiri
24. 24
KeunikanKeunikan IndonesiaIndonesia
NegaraNegara maritimmaritim the archipelago economythe archipelago economy
โUntuk membangun Indonesia menjadi negara besar, negara kuat, negara makmur, negara damai yang merupakan
National Building bagi negara Indonesia, maka negara dapat menjadi kuat jika dapat menguasai lautan. Untuk
menguasai lautan kita harus menguasai armada yang seimbang.โ
(Ir. Soekarno dalam National Maritime Convention I (NMC), 1963)
25. 25
Price disparities (Rupiah)Price disparities (Rupiah)
Region Rice Wheat flour Sugar Cooking oil Salt
East Jawa 4,250 3,606 6,000 4,150 1,600
West Kalimantan 4,400 4,000 5,800 4,500 2,450
East Kalimantan 4,500 4,000 6,500 4,500 2,000
South Sulawesi 4,400 3,500 6,500 4,500 2,000
East Nusa Tenggara 4,200 4,500 5,800 6,300 2,000
Merauke 5,000 7,000 7,000 6,670 3,000
Nabire 6,000 10,000 11,000 11,000 4,000
Paniai 18,000 7,500 8,000 7,000 8,000
Source: Ministry of Trade.
ManaMana lebihlebih murahmurah??
Jeruk Medan, Indonesia Jeruk Mandarin, China
26. 26
Prices of orangesโฆPrices of orangesโฆ
Prices were measured in a supermarket in Jakarta
Jeruk MedanโฆโฆRp. 20,000 per kg
Jeruk Chinaโฆโฆโฆโฆ..Rp. 17,000 per kg
WHY IS THIS THE CASE?
This explains why oranges from Medan areThis explains why oranges from Medan are
more expensive to some extentโฆ.more expensive to some extentโฆ.
27. 27
Cement in Papua is 20
times more expensive
than in Jakarta because
of shipping costs
Container Shipment cost:
Padang โ Jakarta = US$600
Jakarta โ Singapore = US$185
FaktaFakta lain yanglain yang membuatmembuat mirismiris
Source: R.J. Linoโs presentatatiom, March 2011.
JarakJarak ekonomiekonomi makinmakin jauhjauh
Source: R.J. Linoโs presentatatiom, March 2011.
29. 29
Public and customers perception improvedPublic and customers perception improved
Source: JR Lino presentation (IPC) based on World Bank, January 2013.
Butโฆ. the solution is this!!!Butโฆ. the solution is this!!!
30. 30
BagianBagian VIIVII
MomentumMomentum AkselerasiAkselerasi
PendudukPenduduk IndonesiaIndonesia miripmirip JepangJepang tahuntahun 19501950
Source: Badan Pusat Statistik and http://www.economist.com/blogs/dailychart?page=1&fsrc=scn/fb/wl/bl/dailychartjan10 (20101120_WOC951)
Indonesia Jepang
66%
29%
5%
15-49
= 55%
31. 31
Maximizing opportunities:Maximizing opportunities:
Indonesiaโs remaining demographic dividendIndonesiaโs remaining demographic dividend
Children: 14 and
below (%)
Elderly: above 64
(%)
Working age: 15 to
64 (%)
Dependency ratio
(%)
0.0
10.0
20.0
30.0
40.0
50.0
60.0
70.0
80.0
90.0
0.0
10.0
20.0
30.0
40.0
50.0
60.0
70.0
80.0
90.0
1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 2020 2030 2040 2050
Dependencyratio:
childrenandelderlytoworkingage(%)
%ofpopulation
Source: World Bank, โIndonesia economic update: Near-term issues and looking ahead to 2012, โ March 2011.
* August
Source: Bank Indonesia.
Central government debt outstandingCentral government debt outstanding
68.4 63.5 73.3 76.6 71.3 70.5
82.3 85.3 82.8
104.2
118.4
131.0 140.8 140.6
61.1
58.9
63.7
68.9
68.6 63.1
62.0 62.3 66.7
65.0
68.7
68.5
63.8 58.8
0
50
100
150
200
250
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013*
Securities Loans
USDbillion
32. 32
Source: Kementerian Keuangan
Government debt outstandingGovernment debt outstanding
743 803 906 979 1,064 1,118
1,359
559
586
730 611
617 621
633
0
500
1,000
1,500
2,000
2,500
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012
Securities Loans
Source: Bank Indonesia.
Composition of government debt
(percent)
33. 33
Holders of tradable domestic
government securities (percent)
Continued increasing proportion of foreignContinued increasing proportion of foreign
ownership of government securitiesownership of government securities
Foreign ownership of domestic government
securities by maturity (percent)
* October
Source: Bank Indonesia.
* September
Source: World Bank for 1990-2000, and Bank Indonesia and Ministry of Finance for 2001-2012.
41.9
32.3
97.9
77.0
67.4
61.3
56.4
47.1
39.0
35.2 33.1
28.4 26.1 24.4 24.0 23.4
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
Government debt to GDP ratioGovernment debt to GDP ratio
percent
34. 34
Central government gross debt ratioCentral government gross debt ratio
Sources:ADB, Asian Development Outlook 2012 Update, October 2012..
Indonesiaโs sovereign rating by 5 agenciesIndonesiaโs sovereign rating by 5 agencies
IG = Investment Grader.;
-1 IG = one notch below investment grade.
Sources: Bank Indonesia.
Rating Agency Rating
Latest
Awarded Date Outlook Note
Moody's Baa3 Nov. 22, 2012 Stable IG
Fitch BBB- Nov. 15, 2013 Stable IG
Rating and Investment BBB- Oct. 11, 2013 Stable IG
Japan Credit Rating Agency BBB- July 22, 2013 Stable IG
Standard & Poor's BB+ May 2, 2013 Stable -1 IG
35. 35
Terima Kasih
Email: faisal.basri@gmail.com
Twitter: @faisalbasri
Infografis: visuallyconomic.com
Blog: kompasiana.com/faisalbasri
Blog: faisalbasri01.wordpress.com
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Tak perlu ada Menko.
Bappenas jadi westwing
Likuidasi kementerian: pernanan perempuan, pemuda &
olahraga, kemensos.
Reposisi kementerian: agama, kominfo, kemenkeu (pajak
dan bea cukai dikeluarkan)
Kemenlu