Ref: Boom ekonomi NKRI itu hanya dikertas saja, kalau benar boooooom harus juga 
tercermin pada kehidupan rakyat, bukan diatas kertas bagaikan bedak untuk 
melicinkan muka rezim yang bopeng. Kalau terdapat 70 juta orang miskin sepeti 
diberitakan oleh media  beberapa hari lalu berarti rezim Neo-Mojopahit dengan 
SBY sebagai rajanya serta komplotan koruptornya bersama para penyokongnya 
berusaha memanipulasi pendapat umum bahwa semua beres. Lihat saja contohnya di 
Aceh, Nusatenggara, terdapat bayi-bayi kekurangan gizzi, kurus kering. 
Pengungsi Timor Timur yang setia bendera putih merah, akhirnya sadar mereka 
ditipu. Jadi apa yang keluar dari mulut kaum elit nan berkuasa, jangan terus 
dipercayai sekalipun disepuh dengan kata-kata agama nan indah. Hendaklah 
diperiksa kebenarannya  agar tidak mudah tertipu dan terjerumus dalam jurang 
pembodohan.

http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/economy/poverty-income-gap-persist-amid-indonesias-economic-boom/574343?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=jgnewsletter

Poverty, Income Gap Persist Amid Indonesia's Economic Boom
Zakir Hussain - Straits Times | February 27, 2013

 Scavengers waiting for a digger to turn over rubbish so they can search for 
valuable items at a garbage dump in Jakarta. Millions still live on less than 
260,000 rupiah ($27) a month. (AFP Photo). 

Congested streets and growing consumer demand suggest that Indonesia's robust 
economic growth continues to benefit many.

But officials and observers are concerned that, rosy indicators aside, the 
country is losing ground in tackling the problems of poverty and a widening 
income gap.kaum m

"Inequality continues to be more acutely felt. This is politically corrosive 
and socially divisive, and needs to be a top priority for all local leaders," 
H.S. Dillon, the presidential special envoy for poverty alleviation, said in an 
interview. 

If the gap between the rich and poor grows even wider, he fears "this will 
engender social unrest."

Poverty and widening inequality have surfaced as issues at local elections amid 
labour unions' clamor for higher minimum wages.

Government statistics show that the decrease in the official poverty rate is 
slowing — from 12.3 percent of all Indonesians in September 2011 to 11.7 
percent a year later.

The government missed its initial target of bringing this figure to between 10 
percent and 11.5 percent last year, and has to catch up, National Development 
Planning (Bappenas) Minister Armida Alisjahbana said last week.

This means 28.6 million people still live on less than 260,000 rupiah ($27) a 
month. Many more are vulnerable to slipping into poverty.

There are also concerns that efforts to improve the lot of the poor — a 
mainstay of President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono's reform agenda — seem 
increasingly elusive.

Media Indonesia daily said in a recent editorial that poverty fell only 0.6 
percentage point a year from 2002 to last year. But Vivi Alatas, senior 
economist at the World Bank, said it is tougher getting the chronically poor 
out of poverty.

"When poverty was 20 or 30 percent of the population, there were many people 
living just under the poverty line, so moderate increases in income brought a 
large number out of poverty," she said.

In a speech to district leaders last week, Yudhoyono said job creation was the 
most effective way to reduce poverty, but admitted this was difficult for the 
extremely poor, especially those without skills.

"If we just say they have to get back on their feet, we won't see results," he 
said.

Hence, the state was committed to helping them through free schooling and 
health care, subsidized rice and handouts, he added.

But observers note that a significant number of the poor fail to get the help 
they need.

As for jobs, Vivi said, "The pace of job creation has not kept up with the 
growing workforce looking for better jobs in the formal and non-agricultural 
sectors."

More than half of the workforce are informally employed — one in three is in 
agriculture, and one in four is in services and industries.

She said labor laws must be less rigid and workers need to be better protected 
should they fall ill or out of work.

Dillon said bosses who gain from the economy should give workers a fairer deal.

"The tools are there. We can achieve all-encompassing equity and sustainability 
if we would just stop our profit-seeking mentality and combat our 
insecurities," he said.

"What we really need is the political will and commitment to really put our 
money where our mouths are."

Reprinted courtesy of The Straits Times

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