https://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2020/02/24/sri-mulyani-invites-saudi-arabia-to-invest-in-indonesias-sovereign-wealth-fund.html
*Sri Mulyani invites Saudi Arabia to invest in Indonesia’s sovereign wealth
fund*

   -

   News Desk

   The Jakarta Post

Jakarta   /   Mon, February 24, 2020   /   08:03 pm



Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati (center) speaks while flanked by
Yerlan Syzdykov (left), the global head of emerging markets at Amundi Asset
Management, and Zainab Ahmed, Nigeria’s former finance minister, during the
2019 Emerging + Frontier Forum at Bloomberg’s European headquarters in
London in June 2019. (Bloomberg/MacGregor)

Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati hopes to get Saudi Arabia on board
to invest more in Indonesia, particularly through the planned sovereign
wealth fund that is to be channeled for projects intended to aid the
country’s development.

The minister’s efforts to offer investment projects through the sovereign
wealth fund to Saudi Arabia came amid what she described as sluggish
economic conditions in the United States and China, two countries that had
been Indonesia’s main investment sources.

She explained that according to a survey — which was unnamed — investments
from the US and China had decreased. Meanwhile, investment from Japan,
another foreign investor in Indonesia, had been relatively stable.

“On the other hand, investment from Saudi Arabia has increased
significantly. This situation can be optimized to increase the Saudi
Arabian investment in Indonesia,” Sri Mulyani said in a written statement
on Monday as quoted by *kontan.co.id <http://kontan.co.id>. *

In 2018, the Middle Eastern kingdom was ranked 40th on the list of
Indonesia’s sources for realized foreign investments, with US$5.3 million
invested that year, an increase from $3.5 million invested in 2017,
according to the Investment Coordinating Board (BKPM).

The government is currently on the track to establish a sovereign wealth
fund — aimed at managing and allocating a sum of funding and/or state
assets — which will also be used for, among other things, financing the
development of Indonesia’s new capital in East Kalimantan and/or projects
in Aceh.

Sri Mulyani claimed that the Saudi Arabian finance minister had agreed on
the potential sectors that could be developed, though she declined to
elaborate further.

Read also:
https://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2020/02/24/omnibus-bill-provides-legal-certainty-on-indonesias-sovereign-wealth-fund.html
<https://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2020/02/24/%3Ca%20href=>"
target="_blank">Omnibus bill provides legal certainty on Indonesia’s
sovereign wealth fund

The formation of the sovereign wealth fund, however, still has to wait for
the completion of the omnibus law on job creation, which will be discussed
by the House of Representatives soon.

Secretary to the coordinating economic minister Susiwijono Moegiarso
explained that as a special agency, the sovereign wealth fund could be on
par with the Indonesian Export Financing Institution (LPEI), which is a
special body formed to support the implementation of national export
financing activities.

“Take as an example, the LPEI. We are confused about whether it is a bank
or a non-banking finance institution [IKNB], but we know that the
institution has special authority. Similarly, the sovereign wealth fund
will later have special authority to represent the sovereign status of the
government,” Susiwijono explained as quoted by a *Kontan* report on Jan. 19.

President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo had said during an annual meeting of the
financial services industry last month that once the legal aspects of the
sovereign wealth fund had been established, there would be an inflow of a
minimum of $20 billion into the fund.

Coordinating Maritime Affairs and Investment Minister Luhut Pandjaitan said
in a statement on Jan. 13 that the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Japanese
conglomerate SoftBank Group and the US’ International Development Finance
Corporation (IDFC) would be among the investors in the sovereign wealth
fund.

He said the possibility for other potential parties to join the fund was
still open.

The UAE government has prepared $6.8 billion to invest in Indonesia’s
development projects through a sovereign wealth fund, while the IDFC has
pledged to invest $5.5 billion in Indonesia. SoftBank Group, meanwhile, has
offered up to $40 billion to invest in the development of the country’s new
capital city. (ydp)

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