Macroeconomic policies conducive to job-rich and inclusive growth

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Macroeconomic policies conducive to job-rich and inclusive growth Enrique Blanco Armas Senior Economist World Bank April 14, 2011 Launch of Labour and Social Trends Report for Indonesia Inter-Continental Hotel, Jakarta

Outline What I will be talking about Recent economic trends Growth above expectations in Q4 2010 External balances leading to record high reserves Macro policies supporting stability and growth Monetary policy inflation, exchange rate Fiscal policy financing and demand management Microeconomic reforms will be key to support job-creating growth Investing in infrastructure Improving the business environment Enhancing human capital

Positive near-term momentum Growth in Q4 2010 was above expectations Real GDP growth reached 6.9 percent in Q4, year-on-year, and was the highest seasonally adjusted quarterly growth since 2000 Q1 Source: CEIC, World Bank Note: Seasonal adjustment by World Bank staff

Growth has increasingly been broad based Growth has been broadly based, with manufacturing, agriculture and services equally supporting growth.

Recent rise in exports has also been broad based Export Value (US$ billion)

Positive near-term momentum record financial account inflows Surge in portfolio flows over 2010 as a whole but also an upward trajectory for FDI Source: BI

Portfolio flows into Indonesia but high relative to FDI flows Source: CEIC, BI, BPS

Following capital inflows and current account surplus, reserves at record highs

Rice prices leading food price increases domestically Note: Domestic prices are low quality (IR 64 III) wholesale prices and international prices are Vietnamese 25% broken rice in Rupiah. Depreciation of Vietnam currency explains much of recent fall in international prices Sources: Jakarta wholesale market, FAO

Food prices and the poor Rising global domestic food prices In Indonesia and in other countries around the world Sources: BPS and CEIC

Rising food prices affect the poor and vulnerable the most The rise in poverty basket inflation in Indonesia BI has recently increased interest rates. Much of Indonesia s recent inflation was due to supply side constraints difficult to manage through monetary policy Core inflation still low but rising. BI more concerned with core inflation, which signals whether economy is overheating Source: BPS, World Bank staff market, FAO High poverty basket inflation may lead to increases in poverty levels, as in 2005/06

400 350 300 250 200 150 100 50 0 Significant exchange rate appreciation since 2006 Jan 2002=100 IDR Appreciation NEER (LHS) REER (LHS) IDR per USD IDR/USD Spot (RHS) Jan-96 Jun-98 Dec-00 May-03 Nov-05 Apr-08 Oct-10 0 2000 4000 6000 8000 10000 12000 14000 16000 Private sector is not complaining much about this. Possible reasons: (i) commodities not much affected by it, (ii) other problems (e.g. infrastructure) more pressing In any case, the stagnation of the manufacturing sector started much before 2006

Indonesia has had remarkable success in lowering its debt-to-gdp ratio debt-to-gdp has declined since 2000 from around 90 percent to almost 25 percent

Indonesia has a small government as well as conservative fiscal policy Indonesia has one of the smallest governments, when measured as expenditure as a share of GDP Indonesia runs relatively conservative fiscal policy, with deficits in the order of 1 percent, even at the height of the global financial crisis. This fiscal conservatism means stability, but also lost opportunities in terms of financing needed investments.

Indonesia s large fuel subsidies and rising oil prices pose a challenge for fiscal policy Limiting spending on other priorities (capital spending, social security). Indonesia has consistently overspent on subsidies.

Job creation remains a problem especially good jobs Despite positive macroeconomic performance, job creation remains a problem with employment being created in less productive sectors. Microeconomic reforms necessary.

Indonesia is lagging behind most ASEAN peers in infrastructure development Country Main Airport Optimum Passenger (mil) Optimum Cargo (tons) Jakarta 22 300,000 Manila 25 600,000 KL 40 1,200,000 BKK 45 3,000,000 Singapore 73 3,000,000 Source: PT Angkasa Pura II, other airports, media reports (Standard Chartered) Country Main Seaports Container handling (box per hour) Vessel berthing (h) Vessel waiting (h) Jakarta 23.3 50-57 2 Surabaya 10 65 2 Thailand (LC) 35 8 0.4 Manila 28 NA NA Singapore 31.3 Varies 2 Source: ASEAN Ports Association (Standard Chartered) Source: LPI 2010 (World Bank)

Infrastructure levels have not recovered to pre-crisis levels yet Public Infra Spending/ GDP Investment in infrastructure (% of GDP) Subnational Central Source: Philippine s Transport for Growth, 2009 (World Bank), various years Indonesia needs a big push on infrastructure with the government and public sector playing a lead catalytic role. Private sector participation is often around 20% of investment, PPP will need market friendly design. Rationalize/ prioritize investments. See next slide for connectivity priorities. Identifying and implementing financing, accountability and capacity-building mechanisms to incentivize and empower local governments to deliver on water, sanitation and roads Creatively tackling tariff reform in the power sector

Indonesia scores relatively poor in a number of indicators Source: Global Competitiveness Report 2009-2010

Why is Indonesia s competitiveness low? quality of institutions (government bureaucracy, corruption, political instability), infrastructure, access to finance and labor regulations. Macroeconomic factors (inflation, exchange rate) very low in the list of problems.

Strengthening the investment climate and creating jobs Some data and principles Net FDI inflows-to-gdp (percent) Global Rank in Doing Business 2011 - selected countries in East Asia

Skill levels in the labor force seem to be low both on the supply and demand side but this could be more a reflection of low demand for skills rather than abundance of skills Change in capabilities ranking (bars) Capabilities ranking, 2005 (dots) Private sector does not seem to have great difficulties in filling skilled vacancies in Indonesia