APSN Banner

With 5% growth, Indonesia needs 5 decades to become developed nation: Expert

Source
Jakarta Globe - July 6, 2023

Jayanty Nada Shofa, Jakarta – Indonesia's recent promotion to the upper-middle income rank does not mean that the Southeast Asian country should be complacent especially if it aims to be a developed nation by 2045, according to an expert.

The World Bank recently announced that Indonesia's gross national income (GNI) per capita had jumped 9.8 percent from $4,170 in 2021 to $4,580 in 2022. And so Indonesia finally regained its upper-middle income status after losing it in 2021 due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

The government's "2045 Golden Indonesia" blueprint envisions Indonesia as a developed country by its centennial anniversary. Economist Bhima Yudhistira, however, said that Indonesia might get into the high-income band of countries by 2070 – decades later than the target – if its economy only grows at 5 percent on average.

"Getting promoted from a lower-middle income to an upper-middle income country is not as tough as trying to be classified as high-income," Bhima, who is the executive director at economic think-tank Celios, recently told reporters in Jakarta.

"We need to book a post-pandemic growth of between 7 and 8.5 percent on average to be an advanced economy. If our economy keeps growing at 5 percent on average, Indonesia would only be able to become a developed country by 2070. We would not achieve the '2045 Golden Indonesia'. That also means we could get stuck in the middle-income trap," Bhima said.

According to the World Bank, Indonesia's economy is forecast to expand at 4.9 percent in 2023. Indonesia last year posted a 5.3 percent economic growth.

Will we attract investors?

Bhima also commented on Finance Minister Sri Mulyani's statement that the upper-middle income status could help attract foreign investors into the country.

"The upgraded status only works for portfolio investment. When it comes to foreign direct investment [FDI], investors would check what Indonesia has done to address corruption. They would ask 'is it a high-cost economy? What about logistic costs and bureaucratic red tape?'. We should really work on our competitiveness," Bhima said.

Indonesia has set a goal to attract Rp 1,400 trillion (around $93 billion) in investment this year. As of the first quarter of 2023, Indonesia has already amassed Rp 328.9 trillion in investment, of which 53.8 percent (Rp 177 trillion) came from foreign investors.

Source: https://jakartaglobe.id/business/with-5-growth-indonesia-needs-5-decades-to-become-developed-nation-exper

Country