Indonesia's regional elections will not derail economic
reforms: fin min
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[January 10, 2018]
By TABITA DIELA
JAKARTA (Reuters) - Indonesia's finance
minister, pledging steady support for investment and exports, said on
Wednesday the government won't be distracted from its economic reform
program by provincial elections this year.
In 2018, Indonesia is due to hold scores of provincial elections, ahead
of a presidential vote in 2019. The local elections have caused some
concern that a heated political environment could hamper efforts by
President Joko Widodo's administration to push through reforms.
In a note on the 2018 outlook for Asia-Pacific sovereign credits,
Moody's Investors Service said on Wednesday that in India and Indonesia,
regional elections are "likely to slow down any reform momentum".
Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati expressed disagreement with that
view.
"I want to point out that any reasoning that says this year the
government will be distracted and not push through its reform programs,
that is wrong," she told reporters.
Last year, a bruising election for governor of the capital Jakarta saw
political and religious tensions in the world's biggest Muslim-majority
country hit the highest in decades.
Indrawati said the government "is now sitting together, coordinating
(and) collaborating to make concrete improvements in investment and to
support exports".
She said there was a change of "mindset" to resolve problems facing
investors and noted that authorities were also addressing issues faced
by small and medium enterprises in paying taxes.
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Indonesian Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati smiles during an
interview with Reuters at the Finance Ministry in Jakarta, Indonesia
November 2, 2017. REUTERS/Darren Whiteside
"Procedures will be easier, the terms will be simpler and everything can be done
digitally," she said.
The government has also rolled out a series of regulatory changes intended to
encourage foreign investment and reduce the dependence on private consumption.
Among them are steps to ease working with Indonesia's notorious bureaucracy.
However, cutting red tape has proved difficult. Last year, Widodo told off
cabinet ministers for issuing regulations that will "add to bureaucracy and
increase complications" for businesses wanting to expand or invest.
Foreign direct investment (FDI) rose 12 percent in the third quarter of 2017
from a year earlier in rupiah terms, compared with a 10.6 percent annual
increase in April-June.
The government has made progress in building infrastructure, although sluggish
growth in consumption and bank lending has meant policymakers have struggled to
push economic growth significantly above 5 percent in recent years.
(Writing by Fergus Jensen; Editing by Ed Davies and Richard Borsuk)
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