http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2008/11/25/ri-bracing-mass-layoffs.html

RI bracing for mass layoffs
Mustaqim Adamrah ,  The Jakarta Post ,  Jakarta   |  Tue, 11/25/2008 7:07 AM  | 
 Headlines 

Compounding a bleak financial situation that has experts forecasting 
Indonesia's economy has nowhere to hide from the global financial crisis, the 
Manpower and Transmigration Ministry has said it expects 40,000 workers to be 
laid off.


Registered companies employing workers are required to report any plans to the 
ministry that could result in layoffs, especially of permanent employees.


Myra Maria Hanartani, a director general at the ministry, said the figure for 
planned layoffs would see roughly half of the number fired and the other half 
temporarily dismissed.


Temporarily dismissed workers will still receive their basic monthly salary and 
could be summoned back to work once the company's condition improves.


"The workers the firms said they intended to dismiss so far number 40,486. 
Around half of them will be permanently dismissed," Myra said.


She said only 2,000 of that number had already been layed off.


With the global financial crisis dragging the world's economies into an 
recession estimated to be the worst in a decade, economists and business 
associations have said Indonesia's economy will not be left untouched and that 
the inherited negative impacts could be long lasting.


While the government in its 2009 state budget forecasts the economy will grow 
next year by 6 percent, economists have put the figure far lower.


The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU), a respected global think tank, forecast 
the country's economy to grow 3.7 percent next year. UBS Securities has put the 
figure at 2.5 percent - which would be a nine-year low.


Separately, the Indonesian Rattan Furniture and Craft Producers Association 
(AMKRI), supported the gloomy outlook Monday when it announced the industry 
could have to lay off some 35,000 workers before the end of the year.


AMKRI chairman Hatta Sinatra said the industry was facing tough challenges due 
to a raw rattan shortage, in part caused by the implementation of a quotas 
system regulating rattan exports. 


"(Because) of the raw rattan supply shortage, up to 144 rattan craft companies 
have so far been forced to cease their business operations since the 
implementation of the 2005 regulation," he said after a meeting with Trade 
Ministry and Industry Ministry officials.


Secretary-general Abdul Sobur said the closures of the 144 enterprises, all in 
West Java's town of Cirebon, had resulted in thousands of workers being laid 
off.


Rattan craft enterprises in Cirebon made up 90 percent of the total number of 
enterprises in the country, he said.


"With remaining rattan craft enterprises experiencing a 45 percent to 50 
percent drop in revenues, more enterprises are expected to fold this year," he 
said.


The 2005 regulation allows a maximum of 25,000 tons of raw rattan to be 
exported 
per year, a maximum of 16,000 tons of semifinished rattan products to be 
exported from sega and irit plants per year, and a maximum of 36,000 tons of 
semifinished rattan products from other plants to be shipped overseas per year.


Indonesian Textile Association (API) deputy chairman and head of API's West 
Java branch, Ade Sudrajat, said the country's textile industry had temporarily 
laid off over 14,000 workers due to weakening demand for export.


"Almost 700 textile manufacturers have temporarily laid off a total of 14,000 
workers as of today (Monday)," he told The Jakarta Post. (hwa)



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