JAKARTA (Reuters) – Indonesia’s economic growth this quarter is expected to be higher than the 5.44% rate in Q2, even with a potential fuel price hike, a senior cabinet minister said on Tuesday.
Southeast Asia’s biggest economy is considering raising prices of some fuels to rein in its ballooning energy subsidies budget, a move that would increase everyday costs for businesses and consumers and stoke inflation.
“We still see that GDP growth this quarter can be better than last quarter,” Luhut Pandjaitan told an economic seminar held by the Indonesian Employers Association (Apindo). He said higher private spending as the country recovers from the COVID-19 pandemic would still drive growth.
Amid expectation of imminent fuel price hike, Indonesia’s finance minister on Monday announced that the government will reallocate 24.1 trillion rupiah of its fuel subsidy budget to social spending.
Lawmakers from parliament’s energy committee last week told Reuters the government may raise fuel prices by 30% to 40% and that such a move will add 1.9 percentage points to the inflation rate this year.
Indonesians currently pay 7,650 rupiah per litre (about 51 U.S. cents) for its most popular gasoline product, which authorities say is about 40% below the estimated market price, while subsidised diesel is sold at 5,150 rupiah (about 35 U.S. cents) per litre, about a third of the market price.
At the same event on Tuesday, Industry Minister Agus Gumiwang Kartasasmita said he believed an adjustment in gasoline prices will not significantly impact production costs of middle- to large-sized industries, but he said a diesel fuel price hike may cause a 10% to 15% rise in the cost of some goods.
($1 = 14,860.0000 rupiah)
(Reporting by Bernadette Christina Munthe, Stefanno Sulaiman; Editing by Fransiska Nangoy and John Geddie)