Indonesian Political, Business & Finance News

Indonesia negative investment list most restrictive: BKPM

| Source: Antara

Indonesias Negative Investment List (DNI) is the most restrictive
regulation in the ASEAN system, Head of the Capital Investment
Coordinating Board (BKPM) Thomas Trikasih Lembong said.

"The DNIs revision effected in last February was the biggest step in the
last ten years to open the country for investments. Yet, to my mind, the
DNI still remains the most restrictive regulation in the Association of
South East Asian Nations. No other country has a regulation as
restrictive as that of Indonesia," Tom, as Thomas Lembong is popularly
called, said after signing a memorandum of understanding with the
state-owned PT Bank Mandiri (Persero) in Jakarta on Tuesday.

The government revised the DNI through a Presidential Regulation, No.
44/2016 that governs the List of Business Fields Closed and Business
Fields Open with Conditions to Investment in the Investment Sector.

Sectors, that are open (to foreign investment), included film in the
production sector, distribution and exhibition (movies), hotel
management with conditional local content and medical practitioner
services with requirements to abide by the Law on hospitals so that
medical profession in the country could be protected.

The opened sectors also included investment to support cold storage. But
in the upstream area, catch fish business field remains on the
restricted list and open only to 100 percent domestic investment.

Tom said as the DNI is too restrictive in nature, there is ample chance
to further carry out reforms in the regulations.

He said President Joko Widodo (Jokowi) has made public that the
government will open business opportunities to foreign investors as wide
as possible by gradually revising the DNI.

"I want to recall that in February, when the DNI was last revised, the
president had said that there will be the second step, then a third, a
fourth one and so on in an effort to open the Indonesian economy to
foreign investors," the BKPM chief said.

Tom, who assumed the BKPM top post two weeks ago, acknowledged that he
needed time to carry out consolidation as similar things were also
happening at other ministries/state institutions.

He said the proposal for DNI's revision did not come from businesses or
certain parties but from the reformist group within the governments
economic team.

"The proposal came not from the business people but from the reformist
group in the economic team. Many points and ideas came up for revision
but it is unethical to reveal the details here and now.

The BKPM chief said he needed to coordinate with economic ministers, the
president and the vice president regarding the revision of the DNI.

"We need to coordinate first with the chief economic minister through a
coordination meeting and a limited cabinet session with the president,"
Tom said.

When asked on Monday about the statement of Coordinating Minister for
Maritime and Natural Resources, Luhut Pandjaitan, about the possibility
of foreign fishing vessels being allowed to operate in Natuna waters,
Thomas said, "We are still awaiting directives from the Coordinating
Minister, the President and the Vice President."

The statement by Luhut has been strongly rejected by Marine and
Fisheries Minister Susi Pudjiastuti, who said she would resign if
foreign fishing vessels were allowed to operate again in Indonesian waters.

Thomas said a review of the DNI could be used to reduce investment in
the fisheries sector. He said investment in a number of industries such
as cement and rubber processing sectors might need to be stopped as the
industries already have over capacity. On the other hand, there are
sectors that need more investment, such as tourism.(*)

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