CEO Morning Brief

Indonesia Will Keep Fiscal Metrics Under Legislated Limits, Officials Say

edgeinvest
Publish date: Tue, 25 Jun 2024, 10:49 AM
edgeinvest
0 23,303
TheEdge CEO Morning Brief

JAKARTA (June 24): Indonesia's ministers and officials with the incoming government on Monday sought to allay market worries about President-elect Prabowo Subianto's expansionary fiscal policy, saying that the 2025 budget gap would remain under the legislated ceiling.

Investors have been selling government bonds and the rupiah, sending the currency to its weakest since 2020, due to a shifting outlook for US monetary policy and investor concerns about the budget impact of Prabowo's policies.

The concerns were heightened by a report that the debt-to-GDP (gross domestic product) ratio would rise to 50%, from under 40% currently, under the incoming government.

Prabowo's economic advisor Thomas Djiwandono, speaking alongside the outgoing government's economic ministers, said the President-elect was committed to fiscal targets set by the current government, including the 2025 fiscal deficit within the range of 2.29% to 2.82% of GDP.,

"The debt-to-GDP ratio that was reported several weeks ago at 50% is not possible," Thomas said.

The cost for Prabowo's flagship programme to give free meals to school children has been projected at 71 trillion rupiah (US$4.32 billion) in next year's budget, already included in the total spending and would not widen the budget gap forecast, current finance minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati said.

"This 71 trillion rupiah is a very good figure. We're committed to run Prabowo's programme gradually, within the principles of quality spending and ... with the fiscal posture in mind," Thomas said, adding that Prabowo is committed to keeping the fiscal deficit under 3% of GDP.

Indonesia has laws limiting the annual budget deficit at 3% of GDP and the debt-to-GDP ratio at 60%.

"Amid uncertainties in the global economic situation, with US. rates potentially staying high in the next year, I think it's important to explain that fiscal discipline will be maintained," said Indonesia's former finance minister Chatib Basri.

A deficit within the given range for 2025 could lower Jakarta's debt-to-GDP ratio to between 37%-38%, Basri said.

The currency and bond prices recovered slightly on Monday, after the press conference.

Strong fundamentals

At the conference, chief economic minister Airlangga Hartarto underlined Indonesia's strong fundamentals, saying the country runs a smaller fiscal deficit than countries like the US, China and neighbouring Thailand, Malaysia and the Philippines.

Airlangga blamed the rupiah's depreciation on a strong US dollar, but said the central bank has intervened to steady the currency.

Bank Indonesia (BI) governor Perry Warjiyo told lawmakers at a separate event that the central bank has been focusing on currency intervention and selling rupiah-denominated notes to attract portfolio inflows. He said he sees no need for further rate hikes for now, after April's surprise increase.

Separately on Monday, the World Bank said Indonesia's budget deficit is forecast to increase this year and may widen further, as Prabowo implements his policy agenda, but revenue-side reforms could keep the gap under the legislated ceiling.

Source: TheEdge - 25 Jun 2024

Discussions
Be the first to like this. Showing 0 of 0 comments

Post a Comment