Indonesia’s economy maintains steady growth momentum in the first quarter

Indonesia’s economy maintains steady growth momentum in the first quarter


Morning commuters at a pedestrian crossing in the central business district of Jakarta, Indonesia, on Nov. 5, 2021. Indonesia’s economy grew for the fourth straight quarter between January and March as Covid-19 restrictions continued to be relaxed, statistics bureau data showed on Monday.

Dimas Ardian | Bloomberg | Getty Images

An historic rise in commodity prices and relaxation of Covid-19 curbs helped Indonesia’s economy grow for a fourth straight quarter between January and March, official data showed on Monday.

Southeast Asia’s largest economy grew 5.01% in January-March from the same period last year, compared with 5.02% growth in October-December. A median forecast by 19 analysts polled by Reuters had expected 5.00% growth in the first quarter.

Growth in the January-March period was supported by recovery in consumption, investment and exports. Surging prices of global commodities such as coal, palm oil and nickel, also contributed to record high trade surpluses for Indonesia, a major supplier of these resources.

Covid-19 restrictions imposed earlier in the year, which have now been lifted, led to a strong pick-up in Indonesia’s economic activities, Margo Yuwono, head of Indonesia’s statistics bureau, told a news conference.

“Household consumption has improved, even for tertiary spending such as travels,” he added.

But President Joko Widodo has warned of inflation risks stemming from rising global fuel and food prices and supply chain disruptions made worse by the war in Ukraine.

Analysts also cited geopolitical concerns as factors that could hamper growth.

“Several global risks that will affect the national economic recovery include geopolitical risks, China’s economic slowdown and rising global inflation that has prompted tightening of global monetary policy,” Josua Pardede, an economist at Bank Permata, said.

Indonesia’s central bank last month lowered its economic growth outlook for the year to 4.5%-5.3%, from 4.7%-5.5% previously, citing slower global growth and disruptions to trade.

Bank Indonesia (BI), which has pledged to keep interest rates at record lows until it sees signs of pressure on core inflation, intends to review its monetary policy normalization plan in May to June, and assess any risks to the inflation outlook if the government changes energy prices and subsidies.

It had previously said interest rate levels would only be reviewed in the third quarter.

On a quarterly, non-seasonally adjusted basis, the economy contracted 0.96%, compared with 1.06% growth in October-December and forecasts of a 0.89% decline.



Source

Trump threatens to ‘knock the hell’ out of Iran if they build weapons
World

Trump threatens to ‘knock the hell’ out of Iran if they build weapons

U.S. President Donald Trump speaks to the media next to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu upon arrival for meetings at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Florida, U.S., Dec. 29, 2025. Jonathan Ernst | Reuters President Donald Trump on Monday appeared open to additional military action against Iran if the country attempts to build up […]

Read More
Nvidia quietly bought a competitor last week. Why analysts believe this could be big deal for the stock
World

Nvidia quietly bought a competitor last week. Why analysts believe this could be big deal for the stock

Nvidia has considerable room to run after spending billions of dollars on assets from artificial intelligence accelerator chipmaker Groq — a deal that analysts think can give its graphics-processing units an edge over competitors. Groq announced its $20 billion “non-exclusive licensing agreement” with Nvidia on Wednesday, marking the largest such deal in the semiconductor manufacturer’s […]

Read More
Wharton’s Jeremy Siegel thinks the market’s gain next year will be much more modest. Here’s why
World

Wharton’s Jeremy Siegel thinks the market’s gain next year will be much more modest. Here’s why

Wharton professor emeritus Jeremy Siegel believes that the stock market’s surge higher will finally lose some of its momentum next year. The benchmark S & P 500 is on pace for a nearly 18% gain for 2025. But in 2026, Siegel expects, the index — which is still heavily weighted towards technology stocks — could […]

Read More