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View all search resultsMidway into the official campaign period for the country's 2024 presidential election, the candidates and their supporters have been trading increasingly sharp barbs and allegations as they seek an edge in the Feb. 14 vote.
The economic teams of all three presidential candidates have told an Apindo event that a gradual approach to achieving the local content target would help boost economic growth, downstream development and investments.
All the candidates share a common plan to establish a new state revenue agency that requires the Finance Ministry to spin off and combine two of its revenue arms, namely the tax and customs and excise offices.
While the 2024 presidential candidates have been pounding the pavement seeking to win over the country’s voters, some of the political parties backing them appear to have turned their attention away from the top of the ticket and toward the legislative elections.
The presidential candidates glaringly omit two critical issues of the country’s military reform: the need for robust civilian supremacy and the troubling trend of assigning active military personnel to civilian bureaucratic roles.
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