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Indonesia’s Trade Deficit Widens, Inflation Rate Rises
Rieka Rahadiana & Adriana Nina Kusuma | April 01, 2013

 An Indonesian vendor takes a nap while waiting for customers at a traditional 
market in Jakarta on April 1, 2013. Food ingredients quickened Indonesia\'s 
inflation in March to 5.9 percent year-on-year, surpassing the central bank\'s 
range target of 5.5 percent, the statistics office said on April 1. Indonesians 
who love adding lavish spices in their meal saw a steep rise in the prices of 
shallots, garlic and chili. (AFP Photo/Adek Berry)

Indonesian inflation surged to a nearly two-year high in March, breaking 
through the central bank’s target level and underlining the challenges facing a 
new Bank Indonesia governor and whoever replaces him as finance minister.

Annual headline inflation in March was 5.90 percent, compared with 5.31 percent 
the previous month.

The jump, driven by climbing prices for staple foods, will add pressure on the 
central bank to raise either its record low benchmark interest rate or its 
overnight deposit facility rate (FASBI) at a policy meeting on April 11.

“The inflation surge is worrying. And while core inflation is better behaved, 
the inflation spike raises the risk of a Bank Indonesia rate increase at the 
next meeting,” said Chua Hak Bin, economist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch in 
Singapore.

Analysts warned that Indonesia could see capital outflows if the central bank 
maintains its benchmark policy rate at 5.75 percent, a record low level that 
has not changed since February 2012. They said a rate rise would bolster the 
rupiah, which in 2012 was emerging Asia’s weakest currency.

The headline inflation for March was the highest since May 2011 and above the 
central bank’s target range of 3.5-5.5 percent for this year. A Reuters poll 
had forecast a March pace of 5.57 percent.

The statistics bureau said that March core inflation, which strips out volatile 
food and fuel prices, slowed to 4.21 percent from 4.29 percent the previous 
month.

The March data “will present an interesting test to see how the incoming 
central bank governor places weight on the headline versus core inflation,” 
said Santitarn Sathirathai, an economist at Credit Suisse in Singapore.

Parliament last week approved Finance Minister Agus Martowardojo to become 
central bank governor in May, but there is still no word on who will replace 
him to become President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono’s third finance minister in as 
many years.

Another trade deficit

The statistics bureau also announced a trade deficit for February of $330 
million, twice as large as forecast in a Reuters poll. Exports were 4.5 percent 
lower than in February 2012. The last time Indonesia had a monthly trade 
surplus was September.

Monday’s data adds to uncertainty over the management of the economy whose 
currency has been pressed down by trade and current account deficits while 
worries over inflation have made the government reluctant to tackle costly fuel 
subsidies that are digging a growing hole in the state budget.

The rupiah wasn’t much affected by the data. At 0718 GMT, it was trading in 
Singapore at 9,737, or 0.2 percent weaker than the previous close.

Trade and current account deficits have been factors putting pressure on the 
rupiah, which last year lost about 6 percent against the dollar. This year, it 
has shed about 1.1 percent.

Yudhoyono is expected to announce later this week new measures to restrict the 
use of subsidised fuel. But with elections due next year, and memories fresh of 
violent protests over fuel-price rises in 2005 and 2008, he is expected to bow 
to the populist wishes and not scrap subsidies.

A presidential economic advisory group has recommended the administration slap 
a nationwide ban on the use of subsidised fuel by the country’s 11 million 
private cars, a move that could save the government $8.6 billion this year and 
erase the widening fiscal deficit.

A survey released on Monday indicated that domestic demand - central to 
economic growth - remains strong in Indonesia.

Manufacturing activity in Indonesia rose in March and new export orders 
increased during the month, supported by a small boost in production triggered 
by strengthening new orders, a HSBC’s Markit survey showed on Monday. The March 
purchasing managers’ index climbed to a four-month high of 51.3, up from a 50.5 
reading in February.

Reuters

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