Is Being Stuck with a Five Percent Growth Rate a New Normal for Indonesia?
Loading...
Date
Authors
Resosudarmo, Budy
Abdurohman, A
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Taylor & Francis Group
Abstract
Indonesia’s economic growth overthe past three years has been stuck at approximately
5% annually, despite a changing global environment and the Indonesian government’s
efforts to boost growth. This paper asks whether this level of growth is a new normal
for Indonesia—i.e. do government efforts and the global environment matter, or will
the country’s economic growth remain at around 5% annually. If private consumption,
the major component of GDP, continues to grow at its current level and inflation is
controlled, this paper concludes that Indonesia might maintain its current annual
growth rate of 5% for several more years. The probability of higher growth, however,
is not promising. Lower growth seems more likely. To ensure the current level of
economic growth will be sustained in the foreseeable future, this paper recommends
stricter economic reforms to allow larger and more productive capital investments; more
aggressive management of exchange rates to improve the country’s competitiveness;
a more effective fiscal space to support improvements to needed infrastructure by
developing innovation to increase revenue; a reduced energy subsidy; and a more
flexible upper bound of deficit. Effective programs to improve the country’s human
capital and innovation are crucial.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Collections
Source
Bulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
2099-12-31