Mining Contributes Rp 138.37 Trillion in Non-Tax State Revenue, Its Role Remains Strategic for the Economy
JAKARTA — A sustainable mining industry is deemed insufficiently supported merely by the vast reserves of natural resources. Its development must be grounded in strategic decisions that deliver inclusive added value and can be held accountable.
From this need, the Indonesian Mining Industry Holding (MIND ID) supports the TAKJIL programme, or Takaran Jilid Sektor Strategis, as a forum for dissecting data to uncover the figures, assumptions, and rationales behind strategic policies.
The TAKJIL programme is said not merely to seek support, but to serve as a space for gathering constructive input to produce a roadmap that brings broader benefits.
This forum stems from fundamental questions for the government, investors, partners, and the public regarding the actual contribution of the mineral and coal sector, as well as the future policies needed.
The economic contribution of the mineral and coal sector is reflected in the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) balance.
These figures affirm the strategic role of the mineral and coal sector as one of the pillars of the national economic structure outside manufacturing and services.
However, in 2024, the contribution of the mining and quarrying subsector was recorded at 8.75%.
Thus, the need for data-based policy recalibration is considered increasingly relevant to maintain the strengthening of this sector’s contribution in the future.
The Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources records that the realisation of non-tax state revenue (PNBP) recorded in the ministry’s accounts reached Rp 138.37 trillion. This achievement surpassed the target, driven by significant contributions from several subsectors.
The largest contributor came from PNBP in the mineral and coal natural resources (SDA) sector, reaching 104.38% of the set target.
In addition to PNBP, contributions from state-owned enterprise (BUMN) dividends also form an important part of the TAKJIL forum discussion. MIND ID is said to be among the largest dividend payers.