publication 22 Juni 2020

Indonesia Public Expenditure Review: Spending for Better Results


www.worldbank.org/idper


The Indonesia Public Expenditure Review (PER) aims to support the Government of Indonesia in identifying key constraints to efficient and effective public spending and offer ways to improve the spending quality to achieve Indonesia’s development objectives. The report is divided into three parts.

  • Part 1: Aggregate level of Indonesia’s public finances and the institutional environment, providing the instruments to improve the quality of spending
  • Part 2: Spending on human capital
  • Part 3: Spending on infrastructure.

 

Download the full report | Join the launch event

 

Overview

  • Indonesia’s development trajectory has been remarkable over the past 20 years, supported by macroeconomic stability and prudent fiscal management.
  • However,
  • Indonesia needs to urgently increase fiscal space and the overall resource envelope, by enhancing domestic revenue mobilization (particularly tax collections), reallocating poorly and regressive subsidy spending, and mobilizing infrastructure financing from the private sector; and improving the efficiency and effectiveness of public expenditure across (systemic constraints) and within sectors to maximize its impact on development outcomes. For more details, download the Overview chapter | Download presentations

 

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Part 1: Institutional Environment

 

 

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Part 2: Human Capital

According to the World Bank Human Capital Index (HCI) for Indonesia, a child born in Indonesia today will only obtain 53 percent of its full potential it could achieve, if the child received the full set of health and education services.

  • . To achieve its ambitious goal of Universal Health Coverage, Indonesia needs to improve the quality of health spending by strengthening the governance and accountability mechanism, addressing financial and institutional fragmentation, and introducing a better design of performance-orientation service delivery. For more details, download the chapter on Health | Download presentation

  • Indonesia has undertaken several important reforms in the education sector over past two decades. Despite a significant increase in resources that lead to expansion in student enrolment and modest improvements in learning outcomes, Indonesia has a large learning gap between school attainment and learning. . For more details, download the chapter on Education | Download presentation

  • Indonesia’s social assistance system has made impressive progress since 2014, as demonstrated by significant coverage expansion of several core programs and rapid transition to electronic payment methods. Social assistance spending quality can be further improved through continued policy reform, adapted program designs, and strengthened delivery systems. For more details, download the chapter on Social Assistance. | Download presentation

  • In effort to reduce stunting prevalence, the Government of Indonesia launched a national strategy (StraNas) in August 2017. Indonesia’s spending on nutrition seems adequate to cover a full package of nutrition-related interventions to reduce stunting. Thus, efforts can be focused on improving governance, accountability, and the allocation and use of resources. For more details, download the chapter on Nutrition | Download presentation

     

     

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    Part 3: Infrastructure

    The Government of Indonesia has taken steps to reduce the country’s infrastructure gaps. However, challenges such as large geographic and income-related disparities in service delivery and outcomes remain, and closing these gaps will require significant resources from public and private sectors.

    • Although public spending on national roads has increased over the past decade, the Government needs to continue to focus its agenda of reforms on efficiency and effectiveness, development of longer-term strategies to address the backlog in road network capacity, increasing the pool of funding for national roads and expressways, and addressing institutional challenges to implementing reforms. For more details, download the chapter on National Roads | Download presentation
    • Indonesia has made progress toward its 2019 targets to deliver new houses and reduce the number of substandard houses. To continue this progress, Indonesia could evaluate and strengthen the subsidy programs, develop affordable housing through Public Private Partnerships (PPP), develop rental policies, and review and revise the housing regulatory framework. For more details, download the chapter on Housing | Download presentation
    • . For more details, download the chapter on Water Resources Management | Download presentation
    • , increase demand for the piped-water supply, promote a comprehensive urban sanitation system and provide support for sustainable community-based rural water supply and sanitation development. For more details, download the chapter on Water Supply and Sanitation | Download presentation