Pathways to Middle-Class Jobs in Indonesia

‘Our dream, our ambition is that by 2045, after one century of Indonesian independence, Indonesia should, Insya Allah (God willing), have escaped the middle-income trap,' President Joko Widodo declared in the opening lines of his inaugural add...

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Main Authors: Wihardja, Maria Monica, Cunningham, Wendy
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/891451624897518888/Pathways-to-Middle-Class-Jobs-in-Indonesia
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35848
id okr-10986-35848
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-358482022-03-04T05:10:27Z Pathways to Middle-Class Jobs in Indonesia Wihardja, Maria Monica Cunningham, Wendy EMPLOYMENT POVERTY MACROECONOMIC TRENDS MIDDLE CLASS WAGES SHAPLEY DECOMPOSITION GROWTH MODEL STRUCTURAL TRANSFORMATION FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT JOB CREATION LABOR DEMAND MANUFACTURING PRODUCTIVITY LABOR LAW ‘Our dream, our ambition is that by 2045, after one century of Indonesian independence, Indonesia should, Insya Allah (God willing), have escaped the middle-income trap,' President Joko Widodo declared in the opening lines of his inaugural address in October 2019. Indonesia is on its way, with single digit poverty rates and economic growth averaging 5 percent annually between 1990 and 2018. However, nearly half (47 percent) of Indonesians are stuck just below the middle-class threshold and belong to an ‘aspiring middle class.’ They are neither poor, nor highly vulnerable to becoming poor, but have not reached a level or stability of consumption associated with middle-class status. Indonesia’s jobs situation may be preventing the country from making rapid progress toward realizing its dream. Jobs have contributed to both growth and poverty reduction. Indonesia created an average of 2 million new jobs each year in the past decade. These take many forms, such as 40-hours-a-week Jakarta office jobs, food stalls run by families, online motorcycle taxi drivers, and subsistence farmers in Papua. In 2018, there were approximately 124 million working youth and adults in Indonesia, the employment rate had reached a two-decade record high, with 67.2 percent of youth and adults in the labor force, and the unemployment rate was at a two-decade low of 5.3 percent. This report posits that Indonesia is currently a story of growth in low-productivity jobs. Jobs are being created, and they fuel the economy, but productivity growth is insufficient to unlock the backlog of people aspiring, but unable, to move up to the middle class. This report explores the factors holding back productivity growth and thus the creation of middle-class jobs, and offers policy levers that could unlock the barriers. This Overview presents a cross-sectoral narrative about the current jobs situation and the policy framework that is needed to spur the creation of middle-class jobs toward a middle-class Indonesia. It draws from sector-specific empirical analysis of the macroeconomy, and of firms and workers; the empirical analysis is presented in a companion technical report. The Overview is intended to give a broad picture of the challenge of creating middle-class jobs, identify potential policy priorities, and map out initial actions to move a complex agenda. The preparation of the report overlapped with the COVID-19 crisis. While it refers to the economic crisis caused by the pandemic, it primarily looks toward a post-COVID-19 period of rebuilding better. 2021-06-29T13:53:47Z 2021-06-29T13:53:47Z 2021-06 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/891451624897518888/Pathways-to-Middle-Class-Jobs-in-Indonesia http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35848 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work Economic & Sector Work :: General Economy, Macroeconomics and Growth Study East Asia and Pacific Indonesia
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic EMPLOYMENT
POVERTY
MACROECONOMIC TRENDS
MIDDLE CLASS
WAGES
SHAPLEY DECOMPOSITION
GROWTH MODEL
STRUCTURAL TRANSFORMATION
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
JOB CREATION
LABOR DEMAND
MANUFACTURING
PRODUCTIVITY
LABOR LAW
spellingShingle EMPLOYMENT
POVERTY
MACROECONOMIC TRENDS
MIDDLE CLASS
WAGES
SHAPLEY DECOMPOSITION
GROWTH MODEL
STRUCTURAL TRANSFORMATION
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
JOB CREATION
LABOR DEMAND
MANUFACTURING
PRODUCTIVITY
LABOR LAW
Wihardja, Maria Monica
Cunningham, Wendy
Pathways to Middle-Class Jobs in Indonesia
geographic_facet East Asia and Pacific
Indonesia
description ‘Our dream, our ambition is that by 2045, after one century of Indonesian independence, Indonesia should, Insya Allah (God willing), have escaped the middle-income trap,' President Joko Widodo declared in the opening lines of his inaugural address in October 2019. Indonesia is on its way, with single digit poverty rates and economic growth averaging 5 percent annually between 1990 and 2018. However, nearly half (47 percent) of Indonesians are stuck just below the middle-class threshold and belong to an ‘aspiring middle class.’ They are neither poor, nor highly vulnerable to becoming poor, but have not reached a level or stability of consumption associated with middle-class status. Indonesia’s jobs situation may be preventing the country from making rapid progress toward realizing its dream. Jobs have contributed to both growth and poverty reduction. Indonesia created an average of 2 million new jobs each year in the past decade. These take many forms, such as 40-hours-a-week Jakarta office jobs, food stalls run by families, online motorcycle taxi drivers, and subsistence farmers in Papua. In 2018, there were approximately 124 million working youth and adults in Indonesia, the employment rate had reached a two-decade record high, with 67.2 percent of youth and adults in the labor force, and the unemployment rate was at a two-decade low of 5.3 percent. This report posits that Indonesia is currently a story of growth in low-productivity jobs. Jobs are being created, and they fuel the economy, but productivity growth is insufficient to unlock the backlog of people aspiring, but unable, to move up to the middle class. This report explores the factors holding back productivity growth and thus the creation of middle-class jobs, and offers policy levers that could unlock the barriers. This Overview presents a cross-sectoral narrative about the current jobs situation and the policy framework that is needed to spur the creation of middle-class jobs toward a middle-class Indonesia. It draws from sector-specific empirical analysis of the macroeconomy, and of firms and workers; the empirical analysis is presented in a companion technical report. The Overview is intended to give a broad picture of the challenge of creating middle-class jobs, identify potential policy priorities, and map out initial actions to move a complex agenda. The preparation of the report overlapped with the COVID-19 crisis. While it refers to the economic crisis caused by the pandemic, it primarily looks toward a post-COVID-19 period of rebuilding better.
format Report
author Wihardja, Maria Monica
Cunningham, Wendy
author_facet Wihardja, Maria Monica
Cunningham, Wendy
author_sort Wihardja, Maria Monica
title Pathways to Middle-Class Jobs in Indonesia
title_short Pathways to Middle-Class Jobs in Indonesia
title_full Pathways to Middle-Class Jobs in Indonesia
title_fullStr Pathways to Middle-Class Jobs in Indonesia
title_full_unstemmed Pathways to Middle-Class Jobs in Indonesia
title_sort pathways to middle-class jobs in indonesia
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2021
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/891451624897518888/Pathways-to-Middle-Class-Jobs-in-Indonesia
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35848
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