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Indonesia readies stimulus, rate cuts to ensure 5% growth

Grace Sihombing and Norman Harsono / Bloomberg
Grace Sihombing and Norman Harsono / Bloomberg • 3 min read
Indonesia readies stimulus, rate cuts to ensure 5% growth
Indonesia's Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati. Photo: Bloomberg
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Indonesia pledged to use its fiscal and monetary firepower to ensure economic growth maintains its 5% pace this year.

Growth was the focal point of a quarterly meeting of top economic policymakers on Monday, as Indonesia faces weakening consumption and manufacturing at home, as well as the threat of higher tariffs and slowing trade abroad.

“The message this time is clear: we at the KSSK are working together to maintain economic growth amid a financial system that remains stable,” Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati said at a briefing in Jakarta.

The KSSK is Indonesia’s Financial System Stability Committee, comprised of the finance ministry, the central bank, the banking regulator and deposit insurance agency.

“We will use fiscal, monetary and regulatory instruments to maintain the economic growth momentum. We will also collaborate to anticipate risks arising from global dynamics,” Indrawati said.

The rupiah weakened 0.3% on Tuesday, in line with most Asian peers. Stocks slid 0.3%, snapping four days of gains, as global markets awaited this week’s corporate earnings and the US Federal Reserve’s interest-rate decision. Bond yields were little changed.

See also: Southeast Asia will likely grow faster than China over this decade in GDP and FDI, but mainly due to political reasons

The government is preparing a third stimulus package aimed at boosting domestic transportation, tourism and economic activity in the regions during the year-end holidays, according to Indrawati. The stimulus aims to maintain Indonesia’s gross domestic product growth at around 5% this year, she said.

A US$1.5 billion package of measures rolled out in June — which included salary and social aid top-ups as well as toll discounts — likely supported GDP growth in the second quarter, she added. Electricity discounts and food assistance were also given out at the start of the year.

Meanwhile, Bank Indonesia Governor Perry Warjiyo reiterated that he continues to look for room to cut interest rates and support economic growth.

See also: Indonesia consolidates its place in Asia

“The magnitude and timing of rate cuts will be in accordance with global and domestic dynamics,” he said, adding that core inflation will likely be around 2.4% this year, below the midpoint of the 1.5%-3.5% target.

BI eased monetary policy anew at its July meeting, for a total of 75 basis points in rate cuts so far in 2025. It also plans to continue reducing the issuance and yields for its rupiah securities, Warjiyo said.

“Indonesia’s coordinated policy efforts are likely to bolster investor confidence and help underpin macroeconomic stability,” said Shier Lee Lim, Convera Singapore lead FX and macro strategist. “However, external conditions including global trade tensions remain a key risk that could impact both fiscal balances and investor sentiment.”

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