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Can Prabowo’s economic policies steer Indonesia through troubled waters?

  • Experts say the president-elect will face significant financial hurdles, including high debts, weak consumption and geopolitical risks

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Indonesia’s Defence Minister and President-elect Prabowo Subianto speaking at the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore on June 1. Photo: Reuters
Indonesia’s President-elect Prabowo Subianto will face a challenging economic landscape when he takes office in October, marked by slowing growth and heightened geopolitical uncertainties.
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Indonesia Chamber of Commerce and Industry (Kadin) and economists say weak domestic consumption, high interest rates, falling commodity prices, geopolitical tensions, rising debts in state-own enterprises and China’s struggling economy are among the many hurdles awaiting Prabowo.
“Kadin Indonesia is closely monitoring global external challenges filled with uncertainty due to escalating global geopolitical issues and the global macroeconomic state, driving a high-interest rate era, particularly in the United States,” Kadin chairman Arsjad Rasjid told This Week In Asia.

“We see that global geopolitical escalation [creates] challenges for global commodity prices…,” said Arsjad.

Indonesia is a major producer of commodities such as coal, palm oil and nickel.

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Despite the geopolitical challenges, Arsjad is optimistic Indonesia’s economic growth will be “solid.”

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