{
    "success": true,
    "data": {
        "id": 17792,
        "msgid": "ten-office-boys-per-foreigner-indonesia-039explains039-new-labor-law",
        "date": "2015-10-08 00:00:00",
        "title": "Ten Office Boys Per Foreigner? Indonesia 'Explains' New Labor Law",
        "author": "Chris Brummitt",
        "source": "Bloomberg",
        "tags": null,
        "topic": null,
        "summary": "Indonesia requires 10 locals to be hired per foreign worker. Non-resident foreign company directors need work permits. For companies worried about a new Indonesian law requiring 10 locals to be hired for every foreigner, the government has a workaround: stock up on drivers and \u201coffice boys\u201d to make tea.",
        "content": "<p>Indonesia requires 10 locals to be hired per foreign worker.<br>\nNon-resident foreign company directors need work permits.<\/p>\n<p>For companies worried about a new Indonesian law requiring 10 locals to be hired for every foreigner, the government has a<br>\nworkaround: stock up on drivers and \u201coffice boys\u201d to make tea.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cThere is no need to be afraid,\u201d Ruwiyono Septy Priharso, head of the work permit section at the manpower ministry, told an<br>\naudience of mostly foreign business people at a seminar on the rules. He suggested the quota could be filled by low-paid staff<br>\nlike office boys, a term that refers to mostly young men employed to do routine tasks. \u201cThey do not need to be permanent<br>\nworkers, but it is better if they are.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The rules, first unveiled in July, are undermining appeals by President Joko Widodo for foreign direct investment to help lift<br>\nan economy growing at the slowest pace since 2009. The president, who has promised to cut red tape and is courting China to<br>\nbuild infrastructure, may be facing a push back by trade unions worried about rising unemployment in the world\u2019s fourth-most<br>\npopulous nation.<\/p>\n<p>The manpower regulations also require non-resident foreign company directors to obtain a work permit, a process that can take<br>\nweeks and needs to be done within the country. International staff now need to get business visas in advance to attend internal<br>\nmeetings in Indonesia, do training or emergency jobs such as fixing machinery.<\/p>\n<p>One stage in the visa process requires applicants to conduct a Skype interview with manpower officials. Priharso acknowledged<br>\nthat technical issues and a lack of staff were making this process difficult, causing a backlog.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cThe latest regulations contradict the claims that Indonesia wants to create an FDI environment that is more attractive than its<br>\nSoutheast Asia neighbors,\u201d said Chris Wren, the executive director of the British Chamber of Commerce in Indonesia. \u201cSome<br>\nmembers are already planning to host regional meetings in Singapore rather than Indonesia. Some U.K. businesses that were<br>\nconsidering Indonesia as a regional hub are having a re-think.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The rules follow a series of other protectionist measures and policy u-turns this year. Trade Minister Tom Lembong, a former<br>\nprivate equity manager who has reversed some policies since his appointment in August, said the restrictions on foreigner<br>\npermits and local worker quotas is \u201ca big problem\u201d being created by bureaucrats.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cFor every one expat worker who comes in, that person creates between 3 and 12 jobs,\u201d Lembong said in an interview last month.<br>\n\u201cYou have to understand this is not coming from the president.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The government announced cuts in energy prices on Wednesday in the third installment of an economic reform package that the<br>\ncentral bank said was helping restore confidence in rupiah and stock markets. The rupiah has strengthened 5.9 percent this week,<br>\nparing its loss this year to 10.4 percent.<\/p>\n<p>The backlash against foreign workers has come despite a shrinking number in the country. Out of a total workforce of more than<br>\n100 million, there were 54,000 registered foreigners as of August this year, down about 30 percent from 2012, according to the<br>\nmanpower ministry. The largest group, numbering 13,000, are from China, it said.<br>\nChinese Workers<\/p>\n<p>Jokowi is looking to increase Chinese investment to build railways, power stations and dams, and local media have expressed<br>\nconcerns about an \u201cinvasion\u201d of foreign labor.<\/p>\n<p>Citing the number of Chinese in the province of East Java, the region\u2019s government said it would force foreign workers to learn<br>\nIndonesian as part of efforts to monitor them, according to a statement on its website. The manpower ministry had proposed, then<br>\nquietly dropped, a similar requirement at the national level earlier this year after complaints by foreign companies and<br>\ngovernments.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cThe central government looks at the economy, but regional governments need to protect the jobs on their patch,\u201d said Said<br>\nIqbal, president of the Indonesian Trade Union Confederation. \u201cThese rules are the only ones able to prevent the Chinese from<br>\ncoming in droves. They are a threat to Indonesian workers.\u201d<br>\nJob Losses<\/p>\n<p>Around 43,000 workers in Indonesia lost their jobs between January and September after cuts by industries such as garments,<br>\nfootwear, electronics and coal, the Bisnis Indonesia newspaper reported, citing Haiyani Rumondang, a director general at the<br>\nmanpower ministry.<\/p>\n<p>With unemployment rising as a result of the economic slowdown, the 10 Indonesians to one foreigner rule is \u201cto ensure that<br>\ncompanies that hire foreigners really need them,\u201d said Umar Kasim, head of legal research and international conventions at the<br>\nmanpower ministry. \u201cIt is to have a positive effect on job creation.\u201d<\/p>",
        "url": "https:\/\/jawawa.id\/newsitem\/ten-office-boys-per-foreigner-indonesia-039explains039-new-labor-law",
        "image": "office-boy-oktv.jpg"
    },
    "sponsor": "Okusi Associates",
    "sponsor_url": "https:\/\/okusiassociates.com"
}