1Q24 gross domestic product release and policy outlook | Bahasa
Indonesia.22 May 2024.0 min read
Indonesia, 22 May 2024 - 1Q24 Gross Domestic Product Release and Policy Outlook
Economic Outlook
About DBS
DBS is a leading financial services group in Asia with a presence in 19 markets. Headquartered and listed in Singapore, DBS is in the three key Asian axes of growth: Greater China, Southeast Asia and South Asia. The bank’s “AA-” and “Aa1” credit ratings are among the highest in the world.
Recognised for its global leadership, DBS has been named “World’s Best Bank” by Global Finance, “World’s Best Bank” by Euromoney and “Global Bank of the Year” by The Banker. The bank is at the forefront of leveraging digital technology to shape the future of banking, having been named “World’s Best Digital Bank” by Euromoney and the world’s “Most Innovative in Digital Banking” by The Banker. In addition, DBS has been accorded the “Safest Bank in Asia“ award by Global Finance for 15 consecutive years from 2009 to 2023. DBS Indonesia is ranked second in the top as World’s Best Bank in Indonesia for three consecutive years from 2020 to 2022.
Established in 1989 as part of the Singapore-based DBS Group, PT Bank DBS Indonesia (Bank DBS Indonesia) is one of the banks with the longest history in Asia. Currently operating 1 Head Office, 13 Branch Offices, 16 Assistant Offices and 4 Functional Offices and 3,011 active employees in 15 Major Cities in Indonesia, Bank DBS Indonesia provides comprehensive banking services in the corporate, SME and consumer banking segments that focuses on the customer experience to 'Live more, Bank less'. We also see a purpose beyond banking and are committed to supporting our customers, employees and the community towards a sustainable future.
PT Bank DBS Indonesia is licensed and supervised by The Indonesian Financial Services Authority (OJK), and an insured member of Indonesia Deposit Insurance Corporation (LPS).
DBS is committed to building lasting relationships with customers, as it banks the Asian way. Through the DBS Foundation, the bank creates impact beyond banking by supporting businesses for impact: enterprises with a double bottom-line of profit and social and/or environmental impact. DBS Foundation also gives back to society in various ways, including equipping underserved communities with future-ready skills and helping them to build food resilience.
With its extensive network of operations in Asia and emphasis on engaging and empowering its staff, DBS presents exciting career opportunities. For more information, please visit www.dbs.com.
Economic Outlook
- We expect real GDP growth to average 5.0 percent yoy in 2024
- Domestic demand will be a key counterweight to weak trade performance
- Investment spending is being frontloaded by the outgoing government
- Spending towards personnel (salary increase for civil servants), social assistance (special programs extended) and infrastructure (to complete ongoing projects) have risen.
- External trade will remain under a cloud on low commodity prices and spare capacity in China.
- February’s elections produced a clear winner, boding well for political stability and policy continuity. Bent towards welfare spending might push up the fiscal deficit in 2025
- Risks: Global growth is faring better, but commodity price correction and geopolitics are a challenge; Bear case: growth 4.7 percent
- Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) interest in Indonesia’s downstream industries is strong. EV battery sector will seek to be competitive in the face of alternatives
- Progress on the new capital under watch. Plans are to inaugurate parts of Nusantara during the Independence Day celebrations in August
- 1H24 inflation will stay firm above 3 percent on higher food and religious festivities, before stabilizing around 2.5-3.0 percent in 2H
- Price controls and absence of fuel price hikes will keep overall inflation within the new 1.5-3.5 percent inflation target this year
- Dollar strength and delay in US Fed rate cut expectations (and unfavorable domestic cues) have led to a weaker rupiah, attracting active intervention
- Bank Indonesia (BI) has kept short-end rates high to attract inflows, introducing new instruments
- After a 25bp hike in Apr24, BI is likely to stay on an extended pause for the rest of the year.
- Incoming government’s spending plans, timing of VAT rate hike and higher social spending will see fiscal deficits head back up past –2 percent of GDP this year and next
- Current account is expected to stay in red (–1.5 percent of GDP) on decelerating goods exports, and upturn in imports, but at manageable levels
- Long term external debt: End-23: 24.6 percent of GDP
- Short term external debt: End-23: 5 percent of GDP
- The Indonesian economy expanded 5.1 percent yoy in 1Q24, along our expectations and largely steady from the 2023 average. Output contracted -0.8 percent qoq, in line with past trends.
- The key lift was from higher government and campaign-related spending, while investments slowed ahead of the elections. Trade was a drag on the headline
- On indexed basis, consumption is roughly 10 percent above pre-pandemic levels, slower than the 13 percent rise in headline growth
- With 2Q likely to benefit from seasonal updrift, we maintain our full year forecast of 5 percent for the year.
- Expenditure side
- Final consumption was the main contributor to the headline, rising by a sharp 6.6 percent yoy from average 4.7 percent in 2023. While household consumption was steady at 4.9 percent yoy, government demand rose a sharp 20 percent yoy coupled with nonprofit Institutions serving Households Final Consumption Expenditure (which includes political parties) which rose 24.3 percent percent on pre-election spending.
- Investment growth slowed to 3.8 percent yoy from 5 percent average last year, while the net exports turned negative.
- The contribution of total consumption (led by GCE) was high at 4 percent, strongest in over a decade, while that of investment and trade fell (net exports shaved -0.2 percent from growth.
- Pre-festive demand, social schemes (includes rice aid and cash handouts to needy households), adjustment in civil servant salaries (8 percent increase), disbursement of the 13month bonus and campaign spending was likely behind the increase. Frontloading of investments failed to provide a material lift to the segment, while goods exports slowed.
- Industry side
- Overall, the pickup was driven by non-farm sectors. The key sub-segments of manufacturing and Wholesale and Retail Trade-Repair of Motor Vehicles and Motorcycles rose 4.1 percent and 4.6 percent respectively.
- Indonesia’s GDP growth kickstarted the year on a positive note. We expect 2Q growth to benefit from festive related seasonality, backing our full year growth forecast at 5 percent.
- Steady growth provides the headroom to the BI to be steadfast in managing price and rupiah stability. After the April rate hike, while the possibility of further rate hikes remains on the table, the response framework might include sterilised intervention, bond purchases, drawing inflows at the shorter end of the curve and calling on state owned enterprises to optimize/ restrain their sizeable dollar purchases.
- A strong intervention presence has pushed down the foreign reserve stock by $6bn in 1Q24, after climbing by $9bn in 2023. The bias to keep the short-term/ open market operations rate high to draw in foreign flows is also bound to continue, with the return on SRBIs drifting up since Feb24 and markedly higher than the rate on offer when the instrument was introduced in Sep23.
- We delay rate cuts to 2025.
About DBS
DBS is a leading financial services group in Asia with a presence in 19 markets. Headquartered and listed in Singapore, DBS is in the three key Asian axes of growth: Greater China, Southeast Asia and South Asia. The bank’s “AA-” and “Aa1” credit ratings are among the highest in the world.
Recognised for its global leadership, DBS has been named “World’s Best Bank” by Global Finance, “World’s Best Bank” by Euromoney and “Global Bank of the Year” by The Banker. The bank is at the forefront of leveraging digital technology to shape the future of banking, having been named “World’s Best Digital Bank” by Euromoney and the world’s “Most Innovative in Digital Banking” by The Banker. In addition, DBS has been accorded the “Safest Bank in Asia“ award by Global Finance for 15 consecutive years from 2009 to 2023. DBS Indonesia is ranked second in the top as World’s Best Bank in Indonesia for three consecutive years from 2020 to 2022.
Established in 1989 as part of the Singapore-based DBS Group, PT Bank DBS Indonesia (Bank DBS Indonesia) is one of the banks with the longest history in Asia. Currently operating 1 Head Office, 13 Branch Offices, 16 Assistant Offices and 4 Functional Offices and 3,011 active employees in 15 Major Cities in Indonesia, Bank DBS Indonesia provides comprehensive banking services in the corporate, SME and consumer banking segments that focuses on the customer experience to 'Live more, Bank less'. We also see a purpose beyond banking and are committed to supporting our customers, employees and the community towards a sustainable future.
PT Bank DBS Indonesia is licensed and supervised by The Indonesian Financial Services Authority (OJK), and an insured member of Indonesia Deposit Insurance Corporation (LPS).
DBS is committed to building lasting relationships with customers, as it banks the Asian way. Through the DBS Foundation, the bank creates impact beyond banking by supporting businesses for impact: enterprises with a double bottom-line of profit and social and/or environmental impact. DBS Foundation also gives back to society in various ways, including equipping underserved communities with future-ready skills and helping them to build food resilience.
With its extensive network of operations in Asia and emphasis on engaging and empowering its staff, DBS presents exciting career opportunities. For more information, please visit www.dbs.com.