JAKARTA, Feb 5 — Indonesia’s economy picked up pace last year to grow more than five per cent, data showed today, thanks to a pick-up in consumption following a huge government stimulus package.
The government unveiled a US$1.5 billion (RM6 billion) package of economy-boosting measures in June including discounts for train, plane and ferry fares, as well as toll subsidies to boost tourism.
It also disbursed additional social aid, while giving cash transfers to low-income workers and discounts on unemployment insurance premiums.
The spending was part of a drive to get growth close to President Prabowo Subianto’s election pledge of eight per cent by the end of his term.
But Statistics Indonesia figures today showed South-east Asia’s biggest economy expanded 5.1 per cent last year, up from 2024 but short of the 5.2 per cent forecast by the government.
Still, growth in the fourth quarter came in at 5.4 per cent, a significant rise on the same period a year before and much better than expected.
“The drivers of growth are consumption and production,” BPS head, Amalia Adininggar Widyasanti, told a news conference.
“One of the reasons is that people’s purchasing power has remained intact,” she said, praising the government’s measures.
The figures come days after the country’s stock market suffered its worst crash in decades after index compiler MSCI threatened a downgrade over the transparency of the free-float stocks.
“There should be positive sentiment from investors because the growth is indeed above expectations, although the figure is still lower than the government’s target,” Bhima Yudhistira Adhinegara, executive director of the Center of Economic and Law Studies, told AFP.
Jason Tuvey of Capital Economics said: “The official data will probably continue to show growth of close to five per cent.
“But government and central bank officials have not been shy about their desire for faster growth in order to meet President Prabowo’s target for growth of eight per cent.”
Indonesia is also still recovering from massive flooding and landslides in three provinces on the island of Sumatra late last year, which killed at least 1,200 people. — AFP