The Sun (Malaysia)

Indonesia eyes ‘ catastroph­e bonds’

> Govt to launch new strategy to fund disaster recovery as country faces devastatio­n from earthquake and tsunami

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JAKARTA: Indonesia plans to launch a new strategy to fund disaster recovery, which could include selling “catastroph­e bonds”, a government official said yesterday, as the country faced up to the devastatio­n from a huge earthquake and a tsunami.

The city of Palu and surroundin­g districts on the island of Sulawesi were rocked by the 7.5 magnitude earthquake last week, killing more than 1,400 people and destroying thousands of homes.

Suahasil Nazara, who heads the fiscal policy office at the finance ministry, said the strategy would be launched when Indonesia hosts the the annual meetings of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank in Bali later this month.

“A disaster could come anytime, no one can predict, but whenever it occurs, we must have the capacity to address it,” Nazara told reporters on the sidelines of a book launch by the IMF and Bank Indonesia.

The National Disaster Mitigation Agency estimated a series of earlier quakes that hit the resort island of Lombok in July and August had caused damages worth 12 trillion rupiah (RM3.3 billion) and killed nearly 500 people.

Agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho estimated the losses would be far greater in Sulawesi.

“The situation in Palu and Donggala makes us think harder on how to respond,” he said, referring to the capital of Central Sulawesi Province and a surroundin­g district.

Nazara said under the new strategy, starting next year, the government would begin to insure state assets against a major disaster.

The central government would then create a disaster risk financing instrument, which local government­s can draw upon if their budgets are wiped out because of a natural catastroph­e, he said.

The instrument would be managed in “an insurance type of process”, Nazara said, adding that the central government may reinsure the risks with either global or local insurance players.

The government could also sell “catastroph­e bonds”, which Nazara describes as a type of debt where the issuer pays interest but only gets the capital in the event of a disaster.

However, the strategy may require changes in the regulatory framework, including a revision to the Treasury Law, which currently only allows the government to issue bonds to finance its fiscal deficit.

Nazara said the government plans to change some rules to allow the new strategy. – Reuters

 ?? REUTERSPIX ?? The rupee is down 13.3% against the dollar since the start of the year.
REUTERSPIX The rupee is down 13.3% against the dollar since the start of the year.

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