Base penduduknya yg terbesar pak AA...cmiiw ya.

On Tue, Nov 18, 2008 at 3:22 AM, abdulrahim abdulrahim <
[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>   Nanya dunk
> Kenapa si Indonesia suka disebut sebagai SouthEast Largest Economy?
>
> Apakah karena kekayaan alamnya atau komoditinya ? Bukannya ekonomi
> Singapura, Malaysia dan Thailand lebih besar daripada ekonomi
> Indonesia?
>
>
> On Mon, Nov 17, 2008 at 9:18 PM, meizal <[EMAIL 
> PROTECTED]<d.meizal%40gmail.com>>
> wrote:
> > Indonesia's GDP Expands at Slowest Pace in 6 Quarters (Update2)
> >
> >
> http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601013&sid=aozNnivhfxbQ&refer=emergingmarkets
> >
> > By Aloysius Unditu and Arijit Ghosh
> >
> > Nov. 17 (Bloomberg) -- Indonesia's economy grew at the slowest pace in
> six
> > quarters as declining commodity prices reduced the value of exports and
> > agricultural output slowed.
> >
> > Southeast Asia's largest economy expanded 6.1 percent in the third
> quarter
> > from a year earlier, after growing 6.4 percent in the preceding three
> > months, the Central Statistics Bureau said in Jakarta today. That's more
> > than the median 5.9 percent forecast of 22 economists in a Bloomberg News
> > survey.
> >
> > Exporters in Indonesia, the world's biggest producer of palm oil and the
> > second-largest maker of rubber, are reeling from a slump in commodity
> prices
> > amid recessions in the U.S. and Europe. Japan fell into its first
> recession
> > since 2001, according to a Cabinet Office report today in Tokyo, after
> the
> > world's second-largest economy unexpectedly shrank in the third quarter.
> >
> > ``Going forward it's going to be a tough year in 2009,'' said Destry
> > Damayanti, an economist at PT Mandiri Sekuritas in Jakarta. ``We will be
> > affected as exports and imports are expected to slow significantly.''
> >
> > The rupiah fell 2.2 percent to 11,825 against the dollar at 5 p.m. in
> > Jakarta.
> >
> > The government last month cut next year's target for Indonesia's
> > overseas-sales growth to below 11.9 percent. Frozen credit markets are
> > making it difficult for companies to obtain the letters of credit needed
> to
> > secure payment for their shipments.
> >
> > `Financial Turmoil'
> >
> > ``A few months ago I had five out of six containers already on their way
> to
> > the port returned because the client suddenly called and said he couldn't
> > secure the payment,'' said Umar Chotob, owner of CV Java Marindra Jaya,
> > which exports wooden furniture. ``The impact of the financial turmoil is
> > remarkable. It's overwhelming.''
> >
> > Exports growth slowed to 14.3 percent in the quarter from a year earlier.
> > Farm output grew 2.4 percent in the three months ended September, the
> > slowest pace in six quarters. Construction increased 7.5 percent, the
> least
> > since the quarter ended December 2005.
> >
> > Rising prices of coal, palm oil, coffee and rubber earlier this year
> > increased the income of farmers and miners. That helped boost sales of
> > motorcycles to a record 612,032 in August, after Indonesians purchased an
> > unprecedented 60,830 cars in July.
> >
> > Since then, commodity prices have tumbled. Power station coal prices at
> > Australia's Newcastle port, a benchmark for Asia, fell 6.2 percent in the
> > week to Nov. 14 amid declines in global energy prices.
> >
> > ``All export prices are down and you can't compensate that with extra
> volume
> > because demand is not there,'' said Tony D. Costa, the president of PT
> Bank
> > Rabobank International Indonesia, a unit of the world's biggest
> agricultural
> > lender. Consumer spending is slowing and ``motorcycle sales will be much
> > lower. That means the economy will slow.''
> >
> > Global Slump
> >
> > Indonesia's economic growth may ease to as low as 5 percent next year as
> the
> > world tilts toward a recession, Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati
> said
> > on Nov. 9.
> >
> > ``It will be very, very challenging for us to maintain growth under the
> > current circumstances,'' Sri Mulyani said. ``Just like other developing
> > countries, we have to be prepared for a longer period of weakening in the
> > economy.''
> >
> > Government spending rose 16.9 percent in the third quarter, the fastest
> pace
> > since the three months ended June 2006, while consumer demand grew 5.3
> > percent.
> >
> > ``Private consumption may still be able to sustain Indonesia's growth
> > trajectory amidst a deteriorating external trade position,'' said Enrico
> > Tanuwidjaja, an economist in Singapore at Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp.
> >
> > The statistics agency forecasts 2008 economic growth to be a ``minimum''
> 6
> > percent and less than 6 percent next year.
> >
> > To contact the reporter on this story: Arijit Ghosh in Jakarta at
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED] <aghosh%40bloomberg.net>; Aloysius Unditu in
> Jakarta at [EMAIL PROTECTED] <aunditu%40bloomberg.net>;
> >
> > Last Updated: November 17, 2008 05:30 EST
> >
> > Indonesia's Rupiah Approaches Seven-Year Low; Bonds Decline
> >
> > By Lilian Karunungan
> >
> > ________________________________
> >
> > Nov. 17 (Bloomberg) -- Indonesia's rupiah approached a seven-year low
> after
> > the government reported the slowest economic growth in six quarters.
> Bonds
> > declined.
> >
> >
> http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601083&sid=aJxWD3ZlC6Cw&refer=currency
> >
> >
> >
> > The currency was Asia's worst performer today versus the dollar, sliding
> in
> > tandem with regional shares, as reports confirming recessions in Hong
> Kong
> > and Japan prompted investors to seek safer bets than emerging-market
> assets.
> > Southeast Asia's largest economy expanded 6.1 percent in the third
> quarter
> > from a year earlier, beating the 5.9 percent growth predicted by
> economists
> > in a Bloomberg survey.
> >
> > ``Even though the figure came in better than expected, it doesn't have
> much
> > impact on the rupiah itself,'' said Gundy Cahyadi, an economist at
> > IDEAglobal in Singapore. ``Global growth is giving skepticism to the
> market.
> > Risk appetite is not going to change much.''
> >
> > The rupiah slumped 1.5 percent to 11,750 per dollar as of 4:29 p.m. in
> > Jakarta, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The currency touched
> > 11,988 on Nov. 13, the lowest level since April 2001.
> >
> > The MSCI Asia-Pacific Index of shares fell 0.5 percent, extending last
> > week's 4.7 percent slide. Overseas investors sold more Indonesian shares
> > than they bought on all but three of this month's trading days, according
> to
> > stock exchange data.
> >
> > Ten-year government bonds dropped for a fourth day on concern a weakening
> > rupiah is keeping overseas investors away from the securities.
> >
> > ``The negative sentiment is coming from the rupiah,'' said Handy
> Yunianto, a
> > Jakarta-based bond analyst at Mandiri Sekuritas, part of Indonesia's
> largest
> > lender. ``When the rupiah is volatile, the risk increases for foreign
> > investors.''
> >
> > The yield on the 9 percent note due September 2018 rose 18 basis points,
> or
> > 0.18 percentage point, to 16.1 percent, according to closing prices at
> the
> > Inter Dealer Market Association. The price fell 0.6317, or 6,317 rupiah
> per
> > 1 million rupiah face amount, to 65.5100. A basis point is 0.01
> percentage
> > point.
> >
> > To contact the reporter on this story: Lilian Karunungan in Jakarta at
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED] <lkarunungan%40bloomberg.net>.
> >
> > Last Updated: November 17, 2008 04:40 EST
>
> 
>

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