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View all search resultsDespite demonstrable resilience, as long as economic policy prioritizes headline growth over the creation of high-quality jobs, the country risks leaving an entire generation of educated youth behind in a cyclic trap of informal jobs and wasted potential.
To unlock Indonesia’s STEM potential, we must dismantle the "hidden curriculum" that quietly trades a girl’s public authority for domestic virtue, turning classrooms into rehearsal spaces for expertise rather than compliance.
Striking a balance between pursuing a passion and considering the economic realities requires career planning and counseling that is integrated into the education system, especially in today's tech-centric jobs market.
Even during the peak of the COVID-2019 pandemic in 2021 the manufacturing sector’s contribution to the gross domestic product (GDP) still increased from Rp 2.76 quadrillion (US$190.3 billion) in 2020 to Rp 2.94 quadrillion or about 19 percent in 2021.
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