*https://asiatimes.com/2020/05/indonesia-eases-lockdown-while-virus-cases-rise/
<https://asiatimes.com/2020/05/indonesia-eases-lockdown-while-virus-cases-rise/>
*
*Indonesia eases lockdown while virus cases rise*

Government plans gradual five-phase easing of lockdown measures to save the
economy and stave off instability

*By **JOHN MCBETH* <https://asiatimes.com/author/john-mcbeth/>MAY 15, 2020

Women wear face masks and queue to buy low cost groceries at a government
foods stock center in Banda Aceh on May 14, 2020. Photo: AFP/Chaideer
Mahyuddin

JAKARTA – Despite recording the highest number of cases in a single day,
the Indonesian government is planning a five-phase return to post Covid-19
normalcy, starting with the freeing up of transport services on June 1 and
the opening up of all economic activities by the end of July.

“Until the discovery of an effective vaccine, we must live in peace with
the coronavirus for some time to come,” said President Joko Widodo, whose
chief concern all along has been the danger of a collapsing economy
triggering an outbreak of social unrest.

In his May 8 statement, he noted that after avoiding a nationwide lockdown
he now wants the “wheels of the economy to keep rolling” while intensifying
efforts to rein in a slow-burn pandemic in which 9,640 of the 14,000
confirmed cases so far have been on populous Java island.

The president is annoyed that the 50 laboratories capable of the task have
so far conducted only half the 10,000 swab tests-a-day target he set a
month ago, largely blamed on a shortage of medical staff and flaws in the
distribution of reagents.

Still, officials appear encouraged by the fact that 3,287 of the 15,438
patients with confirmed cases of the virus have recovered and that hospital
occupancy rates are now 70% nationwide and as low as  53% in Jakarta, the
epicenter of Indonesia’s outbreak.



As modest as the new daily infections have been compared with other
countries, there is no avoiding the fact that the 689 cases recorded on May
13 was the highest since Widodo declared the coronavirus a national
disaster on April 13.

Government officers spray the disinfectant liquid on road users to prevent
the spread of the Covid-19 coronavirus in Bali, March 23, 2020. Photo: AFP
via NurPhoto/Agoes Rudianto

The government’s phased recovery plan was conceived by Economic
Coordinating Minister Airlangga Hartarto and, according to government
sources, is firm at this point. “It is based more on economic calculations
than on the health aspect,” one senior official told the Asia Times..

Parliament passed a long-awaited regulation in lieu of law (Perppu) on May
13, allowing the government to extend the state budget deficit beyond the
mandated 3% of gross domestic product (GDP) in disbursing an initial
US$24.6 billion for Covid-19 relief measures.

As much as $21 billion is for an economic recovery program, but in a
reflection of the dominant position they have come to hold in the economy
under the Widodo administration about half of that has been allocated to
state-owned enterprises.

“The president has to keep the country together,” points out an Indonesian
economist, answering critics who have accused Widodo of paying more
attention to the economy than to the health crisis itself. “It is going to
get very messy if the lockdown continues.”



“In an emerging market situation, you don’t have the safety net of more
advanced countries, but I don’t think Jokowi (Widodo) has much choice,” he
says. “How you do it is the tricky part because inevitably more people are
going to get sick.”

During a weekend Cabinet meeting, Widodo is said to have expressed alarm
over economic growth slowing to 2.97% in the first quarter of this year,
well below the median 4% predicted by most analysts. That suggests the
second quarter will end up deep in the red.

Indonesia’s President Joko Widodo speaks at a press conference in an April
17, 2019 file photo. Photo: AFP Forum via NurPhoto/Andrew Gal

The first phase of the government plan will see the resumption of air, rail
and bus services, which were cancelled last month to prevent a flood of
people from returning to their hometowns before and after the Ramadan
fasting month, which ends on May 23.

Phase two of the government’s plan envisages the opening of malls and
markets on June 8, followed by a third phase on June 15 that allows for the
limited re-opening of schools. Phase four, timed for July 6, proposes the
gradual return to business of restaurants, cafes, bars and gyms.

Critics say with infections still on the rise, the government hasn’t done
nearly enough testing to justify a relaxation of the restrictions that have
left the economy barely ticking over and millions either out of work or
plunging ever-deeper into poverty.



But as with other countries, it is a decision that has to be made sooner or
later. The president has been worried all along at the impact of
unemployment on the country’s social fabric and particularly the informal
sector, which accounts for half the workforce.

Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati says first quarter data
showed consumption across the country declined by 9,000 trillion rupiah
($599 billion) last year to 4,000 trillion rupiah ($266.5 billion) this
year.

She told Parliament’s finance commission that the second quarter would see
an even greater slump, particularly without the surge in spending that
usually comes with the post-Ramadan holiday and delays in paying out
traditional bonuses.

Indonesian Muslims wearing face masks amid concerns over the Covid-19
during Friday prayers at Al Akbar Mosque in Surabaya, East Java, on March
27, 2020. Photo: AFP via NurPhoto/ Suryanto Putramudji

Widodo has been clinging to the hope of a full blown recovery in the third
quarter, but in a country where domestic consumption is the main driver of
the economy the scale of the contraction is such that analysts are now
predicting full year GDP growth as low as 1.3%.

A recent report by the Indonesian Employers’ Association (Apindo) says most
companies will have only enough funds to last them until the end of June
before they have to make hard decisions about retaining staff. Larger firms
can hold out until the fourth quarter.



Businessmen worry that re-opening the economy too soon could trigger a
second wave of infections, but while there has been a significant up-tick
in the past week, the coronavirus in Indonesia has not come in a wave,
certainly not in the same way as in Europe and the United States.

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