Indonesia's Economic Deadlock: Policy Uncertainty Trumps Rate Cuts
Indonesia's central bank halted its rate-cut campaign to press banks for lower lending costs. Businesses, however, blame government policy uncertainties for hindering investments. Despite attempts to boost growth, companies remain cautious amid fears of unpredictable regulation and fiscal cuts impacting the economy.
Indonesia's central bank made an unexpected decision this week, choosing to pause its aggressive rate-cutting efforts in favor of pressuring banks to lower loan costs. However, the business community is pointing fingers elsewhere, suggesting that it's government policy, not banks, that poses the true obstacle.
Despite President Prabowo Subianto's push for Southeast Asia's largest economy, companies are hesitant to invest, citing policy uncertainties barely a year into his presidency. This cautious stance is affecting consumer spending, with job insecurity contributing to the overall economic slowdown.
Bank Indonesia's decision to maintain its policy rate at 4.75% contrasts market expectations for a fourth consecutive cut. While the central bank stresses improving policy transmission, sluggish credit uptake highlights the challenges within Indonesia's $1.4 trillion economic landscape.
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