Indonesia targets 83% increase in MSME investment next year

Indonesia targets 83% increase in MSME investment next year

The country’s micro, small and medium-sized enterprises currently employ about 97% of its workforce.

A vendor sells face masks at a traditional market in Jakarta in June last year. (Reuters pic)
JAKARTA:
Indonesia seeks to attract at least 5 trillion rupiah (US$348 million) in foreign and direct investment to its micro, small and medium-sized enterprises (MSME) next year to boost their competitiveness as the nation rebounds from the pandemic.

That would be an 83% jump from the 2.73 trillion rupiah raised in 2021 that went to 383 MSMEs, the nation’s Investment Coordinating Agency said in a statement late Saturday.

President Joko Widodo is directing big businesses to collaborate with MSMEs to provide training and help them gain international market access, investment chief Bahlil Lahadalia said.

The nation has more than 64 million MSMEs, employing roughly 97% of the country’s workforce accounting for more than 60% of gross domestic product.

More than 30 million MSMEs have closed down in the pandemic, according to data from the Indonesian MSMEs Association, with those in agriculture, fishery and trade among the most affected.

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