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Jakarta Post

RI inequality increases slightly as poverty declines

Deni Ghifari (The Jakarta Post)
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Jakarta
Tue, August 8, 2023

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RI inequality increases slightly as poverty declines Hanging on: Despite sustained economic growth for more than two decades, Indonesia has some 25.9 million poor people. (JP/Dhoni Setiawan)

I

ndonesia has become slightly more unequal over the past three years, even as more people have been lifted out of poverty, a fact that experts attribute to economic development policy choices in recent years.

As of March, 25.9 million Indonesians lived in poverty, down from 26.42 million in the same period in 2020, according to Statistics Indonesia (BPS).

Over the same period, inequality as measured by the Gini coefficient inched up to 0.409 from the previous 0.393, according to BPS data. The higher the Gini coefficient, the more economically unequal a society is.

As of March, the top 20 percent of Indonesia’s earners accounted for 46.71 percent of spending in the country, up from 45.49 percent in the last three years.

Institute for Development of Economics and Finance (Indef) researcher Nailul Huda said some government policies might have contributed to the bump in inequality.

He told The Jakarta Post on Friday that 2021 luxury tax cuts had prompted the middle and upper classes to spend more on high-ticket items such as vehicles.

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Meanwhile, most Indonesians have been coping with higher living costs resulting from a decrease in motor fuel subsidies in September 2022. Through the subsidy cuts, the government sought to lighten the burden on the state budget amid soaring oil prices and a weak rupiah.

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