Indonesia’s Economic Prospects: Challenges and Opportunities
Introduction to Indonesia’s Economic Performance
Indonesia’s economy showed resilience in 2025, growing at around 5 percent despite global uncertainty, geopolitical tensions, and shifting trade patterns. The growth was supported by solid investment and a temporary boost from exports, especially commodities such as palm oil, iron, steel, and gold. However, the economy faces emerging weaknesses, including slowed private consumption and credit growth, as well as fragile confidence among consumers and investors.
Challenges Facing the Indonesian Economy
An Economy That Is Stable but Losing Momentum
The economy’s stability hides underlying weaknesses. Private consumption, traditionally Indonesia’s main growth driver, slowed as household purchasing power weakened. Credit growth also softened, and confidence among consumers and investors became more fragile. The economy has avoided major shocks, but it is increasingly reliant on temporary factors such as commodity demand, rather than strong domestic engines of growth.
Jobs Are Growing, but Job Quality Is Not
Employment continued to rise in 2025, but most new jobs were created in low-paying sectors such as agriculture and low-value services. Better-quality, middle-class jobs remain scarce. Real wages have been falling for several years, especially for middle- and high-skilled workers, and the share of middle-skilled jobs is shrinking. Young people entering the labor market are mostly absorbed into informal, low-tier work, while many women remain outside the workforce well into their prime working years.
Impact on Households
These trends have direct consequences for households. Even though poverty has continued to decline, many families feel less secure. Surveys show that more Indonesians now consider themselves poor, particularly among the middle class. Income volatility is rising, savings are limited, and households are increasingly cautious in their spending. As a result, consumption growth is weakening, making the economy more vulnerable to shocks.
Policy Response and Digital Infrastructure
Policy Support Under Tight Constraints
The government responded to these pressures with targeted fiscal and monetary support, but policy space is narrowing. Public revenues weakened in 2025 due to easing commodity prices, faster tax refunds, and the transfer of state-owned enterprise dividends to the new sovereign wealth fund. Despite this, the government delivered fiscal stimulus equivalent to about 0.5 percent of GDP, focused on social assistance, worker support, and incentives for selected sectors.
Digital Foundations for the Next Phase of Growth
The report’s special focus argues that Indonesia’s long-term growth challenge cannot be solved without better digital infrastructure. Internet use has expanded rapidly, but access remains uneven and quality is low by regional standards. Fixed broadband reaches only a small share of households, internet speeds lag behind peers, and rural and eastern regions remain poorly connected. Mobile coverage is nearly universal, but limited spectrum and slow 5G rollout reduce performance.
Conclusion
In conclusion, Indonesia’s economy faces significant challenges, including slowed private consumption, fragile confidence, and limited job opportunities. The government’s policy response has been constrained by narrowing policy space. However, improving digital infrastructure is crucial for Indonesia’s long-term growth. Expanding broadband, increasing competition, clarifying digital regulations, and mobilizing private investment can help Indonesia create better jobs, boost productivity, and ensure that growth benefits more people. Without these reforms, Indonesia may remain stable in the short term, but its ambition of sustained, inclusive, high-income growth will be much harder to achieve.




