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Southeast Asia’s Worst Outbreak Hammers Indonesia’s Economy

Southeast Asia’s Worst Virus Outbreak Hammers Indonesia Economy

Indonesia’s economy capped its first annual contraction since the 1998 Asian financial crisis as the region’s worst coronavirus outbreak continued to sap activity through the fourth quarter.

Gross domestic product in the final three months of 2020 fell by 2.19% from a year earlier, the statistics bureau said Friday. The median estimate in a Bloomberg survey was for a contraction of 2.3%. For the full year, GDP slipped 2.07%, in line with a 2.1% drop economists forecast.

Southeast Asia’s Worst Outbreak Hammers Indonesia’s Economy

The rupiah fell 0.2% to 14,047 to the dollar as of 10:44 a.m. Jakarta time, while the benchmark stock index was up 0.2% after earlier swinging between gains and losses.

Southeast Asia’s largest economy has struggled to find a clear path out of recession, as looser curbs on movement during much of the fourth quarter failed to spur private consumption. Covid-19 infections and deaths continued to rise by record numbers in January, prompting more stringent anti-virus measures and raising doubts about whether Indonesia could return to growth this quarter.

Some economic indicators are already showing signs of improvement and a successful vaccination roll-out will be key to recovery, according to Suhariyanto, the head of the statistics agency, who goes by only one name. More than 700,000 people have already received their first dose of the vaccine since the inoculation began three weeks ago, official data showed.

“Our hope is to see recovery in the first quarter and see high growth in the second quarter and following quarters,” Suhariyanto said.

What Bloomberg Economics Says...

“High frequency data tracked by Bloomberg Economics point to a deceleration in activity in January. Even so, there remains scope for a pickup for the remainder of the quarter. New virus cases are showing signs of moderating, which, if sustained, would pave the way for an easing of movement restrictions.”

-- Tamara Mast Henderson, Asean economist

For the full note, click here

While Friday’s GDP figures were broadly in line with expectations, “the degree of decline suggests that the all-important private consumption remains bogged down by ongoing pandemic resurgence,” said Wellian Wiranto, economist at Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp. in Singapore. “We are hopeful for growth to return to positive territory in the first quarter.”

Latest economic indicators point to still-tepid demand in a nation where private consumption accounts for about 60% of GDP. Core inflation notched a historic low in January, and retail sales continue to fall while consumers remain pessimistic.

Southeast Asia’s Worst Outbreak Hammers Indonesia’s Economy

Highlights from the fourth-quarter GDP data Friday include:

  • Private consumption fell 3.61% year-on-year, continuing its narrowing from the second quarter
  • Government spending rose 1.76%, slower than 9.76% seen in the third quarter
  • Exports shrank 7.21%
  • Gross fixed capital formation dropped 6.15%

“While domestic high-frequency indicators point towards a cautious start to 2021,” said Radhika Rao, economist at DBS Bank Ltd., “a stronger net exports balance, helped at the margin by commodity price upcycle, and the government’s decision to scale up stimulus spending, presumably backed by frontloading of public expenditure, are likely to be key counterbalancing factors.”

The government has scaled up stimulus as it looks to achieve 5% GDP growth this year. It raised the economic recovery budget to 619 trillion rupiah ($44 billion), 66% more than its initial estimate, which will fund tax breaks, cash subsidies and free vaccines, among other items.

Bank Indonesia has pledged to keep monetary policy loose, saying it sees no “immediate concern” over inflation. Governor Perry Warjiyo said in January that monetary authorities have room to cut interest rates further and are weighing further action.

The economy shrank 0.42% from the previous quarter on a non-seasonally adjusted basis, worse than the 0.22% drop forecast by economists.

Indonesia’s Financial System Stability Committee is working on a policy package that aims to overcome the credit crunch and lift bank lending to businesses. Credit growth fell 2.4% in 2020 despite liquidity injections from the central bank and the government’s credit-guarantee program.

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.