Foreigners will be allowed to own a majority stake of up to 67 per cent of
businesses in Indonesia's healthcare and transport sectors, as part of sweeping
reforms to liberalise its economy.
Rules over other sectors that involve
sovereignty issues will also be relaxed, but with caps of 49 per cent in foreign
ownership. Indonesia is freeing up more businesses for foreign investors in a
bid to rejuvenate its economy and raise the competitiveness of local
enterprises. Caps on foreign ownership under a "negative investment list" (DNI)
will be eased, many for the first time in recent years. This means a ban on
foreigners taking up a stake in businesses that support the healthcare sector,
for instance, will finally be lifted once the new rules kick in in "one or two
weeks' time", said Coordinating Minister for Economic Affairs Darmin Nasution.
The revised DNI will also allow more foreign investors in its transport services
sector, he told a briefing at the Presidential Palace yesterday.
They will be
able to invest in or own firms providing, among other things, air and sea port
management services, cargo handling and air traffic control. In some businesses
in healthcare and transport, foreign investors will be able to own a majority
stake of up to 67 per cent, but foreign ownership of air and sea ports will be
capped at 49 per cent due to issues of sovereignty. Foreigners may also own up
to 49 per cent of taxi and bus service operations - a sector that is currently
closed to foreign investments.
Sectors ranging from fishery to retail - 49 in
all - will be affected by the reforms, with the government allowing non-citizens
to take up 100 per cent holdings in firms dealing in cold storage,
pharmaceutical raw material manufacturing and even those in the restaurant
business. Foreign direct investment into Indonesia reached US$29.28 billion
(S$40 billion) last year, just under US$1 billion higher than the previous year.
But it recorded growth of only 4.76 per cent - the fifth consecutive annual
decline for South-east Asia's largest economy.
President Joko Widodo told
Bloomberg News yesterday that he expects to make more changes to the DNI as he
seeks to turn around the flagging economy. "This is the first round, there will
be a second and a third... we will see the results of each step," he said.
Industry experts and analysts The Straits Times spoke to largely welcomed the
move to liberalise Indonesia's market, with the healthcare sector particularly
holding much promise.
"The quality of healthcare services in Indonesia is still
relatively lacking compared to those in ASEAN countries such as Singapore," said
Mr Subowo Musa, chief executive of Jakarta-based consulting firm Kiran Resources
Indonesia. "By freeing up this sector, it would encourage competition."
Singapore is Indonesia's largest foreign investor and second-largest trading
partner. It is also a popular destination for many wealthy Indonesians seeking
advance healthcare treatments.
Ms Cheryl Tan, deputy director of ASEAN at the
Singapore Institute of International Affairs, said the move is a sign of Mr
Joko's resolve to prove his critics wrong. "Following the political infighting
within his party that has distracted him during his first year as President,
there could be an urgency to prove that he still has the power to institute real
change in Indonesia, and to deliver on his promises of strong economic growth
for his country," she said. "If successful, his 'big bang' plan could help him
achieve this." .
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