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This book represents a synthesis of research findings on energy in
remote rural areas in East Nusa Tenggara in Indonesia, demarcating
a localised understanding of electricity issues that are relevant
to similar community profiles in other developing countries, which
are facing similar challenges. The authors discuss several key
issues relating to electricity access in the Indonesian context,
such as government energy expenditure and policies for geothermal
development. The book also presents empirical estimates of the
social effects of electricity access. In focusing on an
underdeveloped area in eastern Indonesia affected by innumerable
problems relating to poverty, the book contributes to related
discussions on the first Sustainable Development Goal in proposing
possibilities for poverty reduction vis-a-vis improved energy
infrastructure. It demonstrates the impact of electricity access on
people's welfare. Co-published with the Indonesia Institute of
Science (LIPI), this updated edition is a valuable reference for
policymakers and scholars interested in the electricity sector in
Indonesia and rural areas in developing countries elsewhere. It
appeals to specialists researching and working in the energy sector
and is also interested in scholars and practitioners focused on
sustainable development and Indonesian policymaking more broadly.
This article reports the findings of an online survey conducted in
November-December 2021 on Indonesians' experience and perception of
fintech tools, focusing on fintech adoption in the Greater Jakarta
region, which besides Jakarta, includes Bogor, Depok, Tangerang and
Bekasi. One key finding is that, in the Greater Jakarta region,
socio-economic status as measured by income is not a key
determinant of fintech adoption. This is likely due to the more
developed and mature ICT infrastructure in the Greater Jakarta
region, which makes fintech tools readily accessible. However, the
kinds of fintech tools that are more likely to be used-M-banking,
E-wallet, Online Lending, Investment, Donations, and so on-are
influenced by factors such as income, education, gender, age and
occupation, suggesting that different fintech tools appeal to
different groups in society according to their needs and resources.
Psychological factors that are important in the adoption of fintech
include having many choices in the needed financial services and
feeling in control. While fintech users are concerned about data
leaks and fraud, this does not deter them from using fintech. It
may be anticipated that with the deepening of ICT infrastructure
and public education on the safe use of fintech, fintech usage in
Indonesia will continue to spread throughout the country.
By any indicator, Indonesia, the fourth most populous nation on
earth, is a development success story. Yet 20 years after a deep
economic and political crisis, it is still in some respects an
economy in transition. The country recovered from the 1997-98
crisis and navigated the path from authoritarian to democratic rule
surprisingly quickly and smoothly. It survived the 2008-09 global
financial crisis and the end of the China-driven commodity super
boom in 2014 with little difficulty. It is now embarking on its
fifth round of credible national elections in the democratic era.
It is in the process of graduating to the upper middle-income
ranks. But, as the 25 contributors to this comprehensive and
compelling volume document, Indonesia also faces many daunting
challenges - how to achieve faster economic growth along with more
attention to environment sustainability, how to achieve more
equitable development outcomes, how to develop and nurture stronger
institutional foundations, and much else.
To Singapore's immediate south, Indonesia's Riau Islands has a
population of 2 million and a land area of 8,200 sq. km scattered
across some 2,000 islands. The better-known islands include: Batam,
the province's economic motor; Bintan, the area's cultural
heartland and site of the provincial capital, Tanjungpinang; and
Karimun, a ship-building hub strategically located near the Straits
of Malacca. Leveraging on its proximity to Singapore, the Riau
Islands-and particularly Batam-have been a key part of Indonesia's
strategy to develop its manufacturing sector since the 1990s. In
addition to generating a large number of formal sector jobs and
earning foreign exchange, this reorientation opened the way for a
number of far-reaching political and social developments. Key among
them has been: large-scale migration from other parts of the
country; the secession of the Riau Islands from the larger Riau
Province; and the creation of a new provincial government. Adopting
a multidisciplinary framework, this book explores three issues:
what have been the social, political, and environmental effects of
the rapid economic change set in motion in the Riau Islands; to
what extent can or should the province seek to reconfigure its
manufacturing-based economy; and how have the decentralization
reforms implemented across Indonesia affected the Riau Islands.
ISEAS – Yusof Ishak Institute has commissioned a second
nationwide survey in Indonesia as a follow-up to the first similar
project in 2017 called the Indonesia National Survey Project
(INSP). Its broad aim is to enhance understanding of political,
economic, and social developments in Indonesia. Its key findings
are as follows: The approval rating of President Joko Widodo hovers
around 71.8 per cent, at least before the September 2022
announcement on the fuel subsidy cut. His major infrastructure push
as his flagship development programme still garners the most
positive assessment. However, poverty, unemployment and cost of
living remain key flashpoints that the government should be
concerned with.
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