http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/home/census-indonesia-grows-by-3m-a-year/376902

May 25, 2010 
Camelia Pasandaran

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The president has said that the information on Indonesia's population gathered 
by the census will help future governance.

Census: Indonesia Grows by 3m a Year

Indonesia's population is continuing to grow rapidly, expanding by 30 million 
in the past decade, preliminary results of the national census show.

The world's fourth largest nation now numbers an estimated 235 million to 240 
million people, Central Statistics Agency head Rusman Heriawan revealed on 
Monday. 

With about 90 percent of the monthlong national census now completed, Rusman 
said the agency, better known as the BPS, believed the population would not top 
240 million. 

"The number of Indonesian people is between 235 and 240 million," he said on 
the sidelines of a food security conference.

The last national population census in 2000 put the population at 205 million, 
while the best estimates for 2009 were around 231 million, he said. The figures 
mean the nation has added three million people a year.

"We have to make new projections based on the census, such how to compose a 
food security strategy in regard to demand for rice, corn, beef and so on. We 
can no longer use the current data, but should make a prediction based on the 
population 10 years ahead," Rusman said.

Opening the conference, President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono said Indonesia 
should be aware of the impact on food stocks of the fast-growing population. 

"The population needs food," he said. "Meanwhile, around the world there is an 
increase in the number of middle-class people, who consume more food. Growing 
demand is not only caused by population growth but also the rise in their 
[prosperity] levels."

A population of 235 million this year would mean the annual population growth 
rate has averaged  1.4 percent over the past decade, while 240 million would 
mean an average annual growth rate of 1.6 percent.

Home Affairs Minister Gamawan Fauzi said the rapid population growth showed the 
country's family planning program, remarkable for having successfully reined in 
an explosive population rise during the three decades under President Suharto, 
was no longer effective.
"Our family planning program is not running well, especially in outer regions," 
Gamawan said.

Suharto's program was internationally recognized as having pushed down the 
population growth rate to 1.6 percent by 1996 from 2.3 percent at its inception 
in 1972. The end of Suharto's highly centralized government in 1998 was 
followed by decentralization, which also resulted in a waning emphasis on 
family planning.

"Probably people have already forgotten the family planning program," Rusman 
said.

He said another aspect highlighted by the preliminary results was that 
migration patterns were changing. The largest migration levels were recorded in 
cities such as Denpasar, Manokwari in Papua, Mamuju in West Sulawesi, Batam and 
Pekanbaru in Riau.

"Denpasar and Manokwari have become migration destinations as they are 
provincial capitals," Rustam said. "Developing districts and cities such as 
Mamuju, Batam and Pekanbaru are also becoming target destinations. Regional 
autonomy has significantly changed the map of the Indonesian people."

The census is due to be completed by May 31.


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