The Phnom Penh Post

Reform ‘urgent’ for Indonesia’s sluggish manufactur­ing sector

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THE downturn in Indonesia’s manufactur­ing sector is likely to continue until the end of the year as demand and factory activity will remain low even after the Covid-19 pandemic ends, analysts have warned.

Centre for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies economic department head Yose Rizal Damuri said the sluggish growth of Indonesia’s manufactur­ing industry, which was the worst among Asian countries in April, may further decline in the coming months as demand would remain low and many factories would remain closed.

“Looking ahead, manufactur­ing industry will indeed experience a downturn because the market is dwindling,” Yose told The Jakarta Post on April 6.

In addition to the closure of many factories especially in Jakarta, Banten and West Java, the decline in manufactur­ing growth is also a result of difficulti­es in the procuremen­t of raw materials abroad.

He said the country’s manufactur­ing industry was heavily reliant on raw materials from overseas, which were hard to get during the crisis because of lockdown measures that not only disrupted distributi­on but also led to the closure of many factories.

Consumers were also delaying the purchase of manufactur­ed goods that are durable and considered nonessenti­al, with the exception of a few products such as health equipment, Yose told the Post.

He believed that the trade in manufactur­ed goods would take longer to recover from Covid-19 than from the 2008 financial crisis. “In the past, the problem was demand. Now, the problem is demand and supply.”

He went on to say that for spending on manufactur­ing goods to return, people needed to be able to maintain a steady job with a stable income. Without that sense of security, it is possible that the demand for manufactur­ed products would not recover even after the pandemic ended as people were still uncertain about spending.

“We should take this as an opportunit­y for structural reform,” he said, noting how even before the pandemic Indonesia’s manufactur­ing industry had been stagnating and was not considered to be an attractive place for investment.

Foreign investment has fled to neighbouri­ng countries such as Cambodia and Vietnam, which are deemed to be more competitiv­e.

Contributi­ng less to GDP

Statistics Indonesia (BPS) data published on May 5 shows that manufactur­ing growth slowed to 2.06 per cent in the first quarter of this year from 3.85 per cent recorded during the same period last year.

Its contributi­on to the country’s gross domestic product (GDP) has also declined. In the first three months of this year, ma n u f a c t u r i n g i n d u s t r y accounted for 19.98 per cent of GDP, a decline from 20.06 per cent reported in the previous year, BPS data shows.

Meanwhile, data firm IHS Markit announced on May 4 that Indonesia’s Purchasing Managers Index (PMI), a gauge of the nation’s manufactur­ing activities, fell to 27.5 last month from the 45.3 recorded in March, the worst decline in the survey’s nine-year history and the steepest drop recorded in Asia.

South Korea reported a PMI of 41.6, Taiwan 42.2, Vietnam 32.7, Malaysia 31.3 and the Philippine­s 31.6.

‘Ramadan tumble’

“We expect manufactur­ing industry to record only 1.5 per cent growth in 2020, implying a 230-basis points reduction compared with the 2019 figure,” Mirae Asset Sekuritas Indonesia economist Anthony Kevin wrote in an economic outlook report published on April 30, explaining that the “major setback” projected for the industry throughout this year would be a result of weak internatio­nal trade.

Aside from weakening global trade, Bahana Sekuritas pointed to falling domestic demand to contribute to the industry’s gloomy outlook. “Core inflation, a representa­tion of aggregate demand, defied historical patterns as it tumbled during the Ramadan month,” the securities firm said in its weekly report published on May 5.

Institute for Developmen­t of Economics and Finance senior economist Aviliani expressed similar views. The downward trend in Indonesia’s manufactur­ing industry could carry on even after the crisis ends if there are no structural changes within the industry.

Gover nment i ncenti v e s, such as tax cuts had to be addressed for those selected industries, a task for the ministries of Industry and Finance to figure out, she said.

Indonesian Employers Associatio­n deputy chairman Bob Azam told the Post that many of its members’ cash flows could only sustain them until June.

“The manufactur­ing sector has been pressed for three months, so by June, it needs to get back on its feet. If not, the industry will collapse, impacting employment as it’s a labour-intensive sector,” Bob said on April 6, hoping that the relaxation of social restrictio­n measures would be accelerate­d so that by July 50 per cent of industry could operate again and by the first quarter next year manufactur­ing could run at full speed.

When asked about the worstcase scenario, he said it could take the industry two to three years to recover to the rate before the pandemic occurred if the handling of the crisis was ineffectiv­e.

On April 30, Coordinati­ng Minister for Economic Affairs Airlangga Hartarto said in an online briefing that only 15,000 manufactur­ing companies were still operating at present out of a total of 40,000 in normal times. Meanwhile, 4.7 million workers in the sector were still working, out of 17 million workers previously.

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