The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Indonesia’s Indrawati aims to build trust, boost tax revenue

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INDONESIAN Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati is putting trust-building at the top of her agenda as she tries to get more Indonesian­s to pay their taxes to raise funds for a massive infrastruc­ture plan aimed at stimulatin­g growth in Southeast Asia’s largest economy.

“My job, first, is to restore confidence in the whole fiscal policy and our budget,” Indrawati said Friday in an interview in Jakarta. “And that’s why clarity about what is the area of the fiscal side, both on the revenue side, spending side, financing side, should be as clear and as credible as possible.”

Indrawati, 53, built a reputation as a technocrat and economic reformer when she was previously the finance minister, from 2005 to 2010. Following an opposition campaign accusing her and then-Vice President Boediono of abusing their authority, she left to join the World Bank as one of three managing directors.

Her return to the helm of the Finance Ministry last month was lauded by investors as adding impetus to the economic plans of President Joko Widodo, known as Jokowi.

She will help steer a tax amnesty programme that the government hopes will boost its coffers by as much as 165 trillion rupiah (RM50 billion) this year. Indonesia has one of the lowest tax-collection rates in the region: In 2014, just 900,000 Indonesian­s submitted returns.

“We’re improving ourselves, but if you’re not compliant, I’m going to take it very seriously,” she said, referring to those who don’t pay their taxes. “Serious action, domestical­ly as well as internatio­nally. It’s about time for Indonesia to have this compliance level from all parties.”

An Organisati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t official criticised the amnesty programme this week, saying it risks favouring tax cheats and punishing payers. Those who have already declared their assets and paid their taxes will have ended up being treated unfavourab­ly by comparison, said Philip Kerfs, head of internatio­nal cooperatio­n in the OECD’s Centre for Tax Policy and Administra­tion.

Jokowi aims to boost economic growth to seven per cent during his term, in part by spending billions of dollars on rail, road and port projects. A tax-to-GDP ratio at around 11 per cent and sliding commodity prices have put that goal out of reach for now. A draft state budget handed down earlier this week forecasts growth of 5.3 per cent next year – a notch above the 5.2 per cent estimate for 2016.

“It’s not acceptable for a country like Indonesia to have a tax ratio which is very low,” Indrawati said. “This is not because we are poor, this is not because we don’t have business people, but it’s because both sides, the taxpayers as well as the government, have not been able to establish a good relationsh­ip based on trust, confidence and credibilit­y.”

Among her main challenges will be financing the infrastruc­ture program in the face of a tax shortfall and widening budget deficit. The government is forecastin­g a fiscal shortfall of 2.5 per cent of gross domestic product this year, close to the three per cent mandated ceiling, prompting Jokowi to call for spending curbs.

Indrawati indicated that the ceiling would remain for now.

“I think it still fits well today,” she said.

Indonesia has struggled to meet its revenue target on the back of weaker-than-expected global demand for commoditie­s and a slowdown in China, its top export market. China accounted for about 25 per cent of Indonesia’s coal exports last year.

Any shortfall that can’t be explained by these factors must be due to the ministry’s inability to collect taxes, Indrawati said. She pledged to address Indonesia’s complicate­d procedures and high tax rates compared with neighbouri­ng countries.

Jokowi said this week that he wants to accelerate developmen­t across the Indonesian archipelag­o – a string of more than 17,000 islands that would stretch almost from New York to London – in an effort to lift a vast number of the population of more than 250 million out of poverty. — WP-Bloomberg

My job, first, is to restore confidence in the whole fiscal policy and our budget. Sri Mulyani Indrawati, Indonesian Finance Minister

 ??  ?? Indrawati, Indonesia’s minister of finance, is putting trust-building at the top of her agenda as she tries to get more Indonesian­s to pay their taxes. She is shown during an interview in Jakarta, Indonesia, on Aug 19. — WP-Bloomberg photo
Indrawati, Indonesia’s minister of finance, is putting trust-building at the top of her agenda as she tries to get more Indonesian­s to pay their taxes. She is shown during an interview in Jakarta, Indonesia, on Aug 19. — WP-Bloomberg photo

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