Business

Indonesia GDP sees first growth in over a year

Surge of 7.07% in Q2 thanks to pick-up in exports, imports

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 05 Aug 2021 11:59PM

Indonesia GDP sees first growth in over a year
Domestic consumption also contributes to the Indonesian economy’s comeback, with motorcycle and car sales jumping between 2.5% and 7.5%, respectively, from Q1. – TechCrunch pic, August 5, 2021

JAKARTA – Indonesia's economy bounced back in the second quarter to post its first growth in more than a year, but analysts warned the recovery might be short-lived as Covid-19 surges.

Southeast Asia's largest economy grew by 7.07% in the April-to-June quarter compared with the same period last year, the Central Statistics Agency (BPS) said today.

The figure is higher than a projection by the Central Bank of Indonesia, which predicted a growth of 6.75%.

The expansion, the first positive figure in five quarters, was driven by a pick-up in exports and imports as Indonesia's trading partners also saw greater activity.

“For the economy to keep growing, the key is how we manage the health sector, comply with health protocols and vaccinate people to reach herd immunity,” BPS head Margo Yuwono told a press conference.

Domestic consumption also contributed to the comeback, with motorcycle and car sales jumping between 2.5% and 7.5%, respectively, compared with Q1.

Greater business activity and more public mobility as a result of pandemic restrictions being relaxed also contributed to the recovery, Margo added.

But, analysts believe Indonesia will struggle to record continued growth as a virus surge triggered by the Delta variant wracks the country.

“Indonesia's economy is struggling badly, with Q2’s gross domestic product (GDP) data showing that the recovery lost some momentum even before the latest surge in virus cases,” Gareth Leather, a senior Asia economist for Capital Economics, said in a statement. 

The archipelago has reported more than 3.5 million infections and over 100,000 deaths from Covid-19, though official figures are widely believed to be an underestimate.

It has never implemented a full lockdown, but introduced restrictions in early July limiting travel and non-essential business activity.

Last year, the country's economy shrunk by 2.07% as it entered its first recession since the 1997 Asian financial crisis. 

The central bank recently cut its 2021 GDP growth forecast to between 3.5% and 4.3%. – AFP, August 5, 2021

Related News

Malaysia / 4d

Selangor still Malaysia’s top economic engine, DOSM data counters political claims

Malaysia / 1mth

Penang initiates measures to minimise impact of Middle East conflict

Malaysia / 1mth

Penang CM: New developments key to stimulating state economy

Malaysia / 2mth

Hajiji denies claims Sebatik Island land was handed over to Indonesia

Malaysia / 2mth

Selangor allocates over RM130 million to face West Asia crisis

World / 2mth

Oil surges past US$100 as US plans blockade at Strait of Hormuz

Spotlight

Malaysia

Malaysia must accelerate energy transition to safeguard future

By The Vibes Says

Opinion

World suffers from shortage of trust, Modi tells G7 leaders

Malaysia

Mother, son perish in Johor crash with trailer

Malaysia

Head-on crash with durian lorry kills two on Pahang highway

Malaysia

MACC smashes RM2.5 million procurement cartel in sweeping multi state raids

Malaysia

Malaysian tourists spark backlash in China over alleged rude behaviour (video)

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir

Diary

Penang: Strict enforcement to ensure food hygiene, focus on deliveries

By Ian McIntyre

Malaysia

Four men arrested in Sabah following gang rape of teenager in her bedroom

You may be interested

Business

Oil prices slide as US-Iran peace deal raising hopes of supply recovery

Business

KPJ posts strong FY2025 performance, sets sights on next growth phase

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir

Business

Brent crude plummets below US$80 as US-Iran peace deal hopes eclipse Wall Street AI slump

Business

US dollar surges to three-month high as Fed signals possible rate hike

Business

US dollar weakens as markets await Warsh's first Fed decision