Masalahnya semua ingin bermain. Ya wasitnya, officialnya dan penontonnya ingin 
terlibat bermain.

Bahkan parahnya pengurus dan pemimpinnya pun ingin main.

Kesimpulannya, berikan pada yang ahlinya untuk bermain. Sedangkan yang lainnya 
menjalankan tugas sesuai fungsinya. Sehingga koordinasi yang baik, enak 
ditonton dan hasilnya positif kemenangan Indonesia.

Semoga berjaya INDONESIA

TAM

Sent from my BlackBerry® wireless device via Vodafone-Celcom Mobile.

-----Original Message-----
From: oki musakti <geo_musa...@yahoo.com>

Date: Thu, 13 Aug 2009 02:28:17 
To: <iagi-net@iagi.or.id>
Subject: Re: [iagi-net-l] Fwd: Indonesia may grow as fast as China

Ibarat kesebelasan, Indonesia sebenarnya punya pemain yang handal, pelatih yang 
canggih, manajer yang mumpuni, penonton yang fanatik sampai stadion yang 
kolosal.
Tinggal bagaimana mensinergikan semua potensi itu untuk memenangkan 
pertandingan.

Yang sering terjadi kan manajer salah rekrut pemain, pelatih salah pasang, 
pemain saling tabrak dan penonton yang malah menimpuki pemain dan membakar 
stadion sendiri.......

Salam
O'
--- On Wed, 12/8/09, Rovicky Dwi Putrohari <rovi...@gmail.com> wrote:

From: Rovicky Dwi Putrohari <rovi...@gmail.com>
Subject: [iagi-net-l] Fwd: Indonesia may grow as fast as China
To: "Perwakilan Khusus Muhammadiyah M'sia" <muhammadiyah...@yahoogroups.com>, 
"Serba_KL Serba_KL" <serba...@googlegroups.com>, "IAGI" <iagi-net@iagi.or.id>, 
kagamamalay...@yahoogroups.com, "org mg" <muhammadiyah_soci...@yahoogroups.com>
Received: Wednesday, 12 August, 2009, 10:54 AM

http://biz.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2009/8/11/business/4491106&sec=business

Mungkin anda minder dengan Malaysia, tapi koran lokal Kuala Lumpur
kemarin (11 August 09) memuat artikel yg isinya Indonesia memiliki
peluang lebih baik dari Malaysia, bahkan mungkin menyamai China  ...
Bahkan bom-pun tak mampu menggoyahkan .. .. .. TAPI Ingat ini
"peluang", bukan 'kepastian'. Tergantung bagaimana kita memanfaatkan
peluang ini.

Indonesia .... KAMU (pasti) BISA !

dibawah ini email dari kawan Malaysian
________________________________
From: Joseph, Tony
To: Putrohari, Rovicky
Sent: Tue Aug 11 17:59:35 2009
Subject: Indonesia growth

I agree with this writer:

http://biz.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2009/8/11/business/4491106&sec=business

Indonesia has better business fundamentals than Malaysia in next 15 years.


Rgds,
Tony Joseph

Tuesday August 11, 2009
Indonesia may grow as fast as China
Singular Vision - By Teoh Kok Lin


Indonesia – the next economic powerhouse

I WAS in Singapore on July 17, meeting up with some fund manager
friends when news broke about the bombings in Jakarta. The initial
reaction was of sadness and sympathy for the victims and Indonesia in
general.

We also thought that it could be an opportunity to invest more in
Indonesia’s stock market if it were to correct sharply.

The Jakarta Stock Exchange opened down 2% that morning but quickly
recovered within hours and closed the day down by only 0.5%.

While the hunch did not turn out to be correct, Indonesia’s stock
market reaction illustrates that investors today have much more
confidence in the country’s management.

Similarly, Indonesia’s government also clearly projected its financial
confidence later that day when it went ahead and successfully sold 35
billion yen (US$375mil) 10-year samurai bonds to global investors.

Indonesia is no longer a developing economy dependent largely on
agriculture and mining. Politically and economically, it has been
transformed since the end of the Asian financial crisis in 1999.

My many visits to Indonesia over the past few years, doing the leg
work of speaking to many company directors, investment analysts,
bankers and so on, have convinced me that Indonesia is on a very
strong and progressive path, especially in the last two to three
years.

In a way, Indonesia is in a similar situation as China was 10 years
ago, when the vast Chinese population moved beyond the subsistence
level and consumption power was increasing with accumulated wealth as
the economy grew at a fast pace.

Today, Indonesia may already be on the cusp of such a transition.

We know Indonesia has the basic ingredients for success, among which are:

·The fourth largest population in the world at 226 million – which
also means a big domestic consumer base;

·Huge natural resources – Indonesia is the largest producer of palm
oil in the world and is a major producer of crude oil, natural gas,
iron ore, tin, lead, gold, etc.; and

·Young urban population – 50% of Indonesians live in urban areas (a
rate higher than in China or India) and more than 52% of the
population is aged 20-54. Dynamic young urban population’s
productivity growth would be at a faster pace with the right economic
environment.

There are compelling reasons to believe that with the right catalysts,
Indonesia may grow as fast as China or faster in the years ahead.

Among the key catalysts for Indonesia to emerge as an economic star in
the global economy are:

·Leadership in Jakarta continues to provide political stability and
sound economic policies: President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono did a good
job steering the economy in his first term and he was re-elected with
a strong 60% of the popular vote for another five-year term on July 8.

Yudhoyono’s Democratic Party holds the most parliamentary seats (150)
and with his coalition holding more than 56% of parliamentary seats,
Yudhoyono will have more say now than during his first term when his
party held fewer seats (55) than other coalition partners.

The current leadership team has a good track record and credentials in
managing the economy; that includes the Vice President-elect Boediono,
who was Finance Minister and Central Bank governor before, and the
current Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati, both of whom are well
respected technocrats.

·Infrastructure development: Indonesia has a pressing need for great
infrastructure like many developing nations.

The mega infrastructure proposed during the first term of Yudhoyono’s
presidency did not take off well, but with Yudhoyono now having
greater control over the parliament, this is likely to change.

In response to the economic downturn, Indonesia set aside US$7.5bil in
the 2009 budget for infrastructure spending and an additional
US$703mil for labour intensive infrastructure projects.

Infrastructure development will help spur economic growth, improve
efficiency in Indonesia, much like how such investments boosted the
economies of Malaysia in the 1990s and China in 2000s.

·Banking system reform continues to provide the lifeblood for the
economy to grow: The banking system underwent drastic reform after the
Asian financial crisis with the Indonesia Bank Restructuring Agency,
resulting in the demise of insolvent banks and ownership changes in
major private banks.

The recapitalisation and reform resulted in one of the most
liberalised banking systems in Asia, with little restrictions on
foreign ownership.

The banking reform also fostered healthy competition and that in turn
has benefited many Indonesian companies and consumers alike.

In Indonesia, the household debt to gross domestic product ratio is
11.2, one of the lowest in the region when compared with Taiwan
(53.8), Hong Kong (53.2) or Malaysia (46.7).

This means that consumers not only have room to borrow for large
purchases such as cars and homes, but banks also have huge
opportunities to sell their loans to Indonesian households.

Ten years ago, banks preferred to lend to big corporations and the
average Indonesian would have difficulty getting consumer financing,
plus they would have had to pay interest rates in excess of 20% a
year.

Today, Indonesian banks are actively courting consumers to borrow from them.

In addition, the bank base lending rates have declined substantially
(see chart) and home mortgage rates, for example, are now below 10%,
the lowest ever.

·Confidence of Indonesians in their economy and stock markets: People
I met over the past two to three years, from senior management of
companies to young executives, are confident about the prospects in
Indonesia. This is also a reflection of how they overwhelmingly voted
for Yudhoyono this past election.

Recent events have proved that Indonesia has not only the economic
resilience but also the confidence to be a major economic powerhouse
in the future.

Indonesia is moving in the right direction to be a formidable global
economic powerhouse.

The rest of Asia should view the emergence of Indonesia not as a
threat, but as a motivation for healthy competition.

Just like the emergence of China, which helped advance the economies
of North Asia such as Taiwan, South Korea, Hong Kong and Macau in the
past 20 years, I believe Indonesia’s economic growth in the next
decade will do the same for South-East Asia.


Teoh Kok Lin is the founder and chief investment officer of Singular
Asset Management Sdn Bhd. Readers’ feedback to this article is
welcomed. Please email to star...@thestar.com.my

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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