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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 8 page paper provides an overview of the economy in Indonesia. Aspects discussed include inflation, currency value, unemployment, debt ratio, and balance of payments. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Page Count:
8 pages (~225 words per page)
File: MM12_PGindns.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
the escalation of inflation (Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation, 2003). In 2002, inflation dropped to 10.03 percent from 12.55 percent in 2001 (Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation, 2003). CPI inflation began a downward trend
in the first half of 2003 at the same time as the rupiah exchange rate improved (Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation, 2003). The improved strength of the rupiah "allowed room for the
monetary authority to gradually and consistently ease interest rates" (Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation, 2004). The labor market was sluggish in 2002 and continued that trend in 2003 (Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation,
2003). The open unemployment rate rose from 9.1 percent in 2001 to 9.1 percent in 2002, more than 38 million people were unemployed in 2002, this includes 28.9 million who
are underemployed and 9.1 million who are openly unemployed (Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation, 2003). At least two-thirds of those unemployed are between the ages of 15-24 (Guerin, 2004). Labor problems added
to the unemployment rates, including illegal Indonesians working outside of the country (Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation, 2003). Unemployment continued to be a problem in 2003, which is complicated by the rising
population (Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation, 2003). There just are not enough jobs available (Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation, 2003). The World Bank reported that labor costs in 2004 in Indonesia are 35 percent
higher than they were in 1996 but there is no commensurate increase in productivity (Guerin, 2004). Corruption increases the costs and the failing infrastructure limits the ability of the country
to compete in the world market (Guerin, 2004). The World Bank reported that services to Indonesias poor population are the among the worst in the entire region (Guerin, 2004). There
are many school buildings in a state of collapse, children go to school without shoes and health clinics consistently run out of the most basic medicines (Guerin, 2004).
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