Q2 2025 Investment Realisation Reaches Rp 477.7 Trillion, Creating 665,764 Jobs
JAKARTA: The Ministry of Investment and Downstream Industries/Investment Coordinating Board (BKPM) recorded that investment realisation in the second quarter of 2025 reached Rp 477.7 trillion, equivalent to 25.1 per cent of the Rp 1,905.6 trillion target.
Minister of Investment and Downstream Industries/Head of BKPM Rosan Roeslani said that the total investment inflow during Q2 2025 successfully created 665,764 jobs.
"This is the achievement in our Q2 investment realisation — we can see the figure of Rp 477.7 trillion, representing an 11.5 per cent increase year-on-year compared to the previous year's Rp 468.4 trillion," Rosan said at a press conference at BKPM on Tuesday (29 July 2025).
Domestic investment (PMDN) dominated the Q2 2025 figures compared to foreign investment (PMA). PMDN was recorded at Rp 275.5 trillion or 57.7 per cent of the total, whilst PMA stood at Rp 202.2 trillion or 42.3 per cent.
Rosan noted that investment outside Java surpassed investment on the island of Java. Investment in Java totalled Rp 237.5 trillion or 49.7 per cent, whilst investment outside Java reached Rp 240.2 trillion or 50.3 per cent.
"We had hoped that investment would be more evenly distributed across all regions, so that growth and new sectors, including job creation, would spread more widely," Rosan said.
The leading regions for combined PMA and PMDN investment realisation were West Java at Rp 72.5 trillion (15.2 per cent of total realisation), followed by DKI Jakarta at Rp 71.1 trillion (14.9 per cent), East Java at Rp 38.6 trillion (8.1 per cent), Central Sulawesi at Rp 31.6 trillion, and Banten at Rp 29.7 trillion.
PMA realisation in Q2 stood at Rp 202.2 trillion, down 6.95 per cent compared to Rp 217.3 trillion in 2024. Rosan acknowledged that competition to attract investment has intensified, particularly following United States government policies aimed at drawing investment back to American shores.
"Competition is increasingly fierce. At the same time, many policies — including those of the US seeking to pull investment back — are something we must navigate carefully and correctly," Rosan said.
He stressed that the government must be proactive in promoting its programmes to attract foreign investment. "We must be proactive. Our frontline efforts abroad must continue through socialisation of our policies, whilst simultaneously determining what policies can encourage investment inflows," Rosan explained.
Minister of Investment and Downstream Industries/Head of BKPM Rosan Roeslani said that the total investment inflow during Q2 2025 successfully created 665,764 jobs.
"This is the achievement in our Q2 investment realisation — we can see the figure of Rp 477.7 trillion, representing an 11.5 per cent increase year-on-year compared to the previous year's Rp 468.4 trillion," Rosan said at a press conference at BKPM on Tuesday (29 July 2025).
Domestic investment (PMDN) dominated the Q2 2025 figures compared to foreign investment (PMA). PMDN was recorded at Rp 275.5 trillion or 57.7 per cent of the total, whilst PMA stood at Rp 202.2 trillion or 42.3 per cent.
Rosan noted that investment outside Java surpassed investment on the island of Java. Investment in Java totalled Rp 237.5 trillion or 49.7 per cent, whilst investment outside Java reached Rp 240.2 trillion or 50.3 per cent.
"We had hoped that investment would be more evenly distributed across all regions, so that growth and new sectors, including job creation, would spread more widely," Rosan said.
The leading regions for combined PMA and PMDN investment realisation were West Java at Rp 72.5 trillion (15.2 per cent of total realisation), followed by DKI Jakarta at Rp 71.1 trillion (14.9 per cent), East Java at Rp 38.6 trillion (8.1 per cent), Central Sulawesi at Rp 31.6 trillion, and Banten at Rp 29.7 trillion.
PMA realisation in Q2 stood at Rp 202.2 trillion, down 6.95 per cent compared to Rp 217.3 trillion in 2024. Rosan acknowledged that competition to attract investment has intensified, particularly following United States government policies aimed at drawing investment back to American shores.
"Competition is increasingly fierce. At the same time, many policies — including those of the US seeking to pull investment back — are something we must navigate carefully and correctly," Rosan said.
He stressed that the government must be proactive in promoting its programmes to attract foreign investment. "We must be proactive. Our frontline efforts abroad must continue through socialisation of our policies, whilst simultaneously determining what policies can encourage investment inflows," Rosan explained.