JakartaPost-Nov 21, 2022
The Asian Development Bank has approved a US$500 million loan for the Indonesian government to reform state-owned enterprises (SOEs) in the country with the aim of improving their efficiency, resilience and corporate governance. The program will support efforts to reduce the number of SOEs and require them to focus on core operations, so that they can be financially viable and efficiently provide essential public services. Other areas include measures to improve the quality of SOE boards, strengthen financial monitoring and disclosure, and help SOEs transition to a climate-compatible business model. The German development-bank KfW will provide co-financing with a loan equivalent of €300 million (US$310 million). “SOEs can play a vital role in fostering inclusive and sustainable recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic in Indonesia,” ADB senior public-management specialist for Southeast Asia Yurendra Basnett said in a statement on Friday. “But to deliver greater value to the public, their structural weaknesses must be addressed,” he added. Prior to obtaining the loan from ADB, the Indonesian government has made efforts to downsize SOEs in the country. In 2019 alone, there were around 143 state-run firms, or more if one includes all subsidiaries. SOEs Minister Erick Thohir has asked two deputy ministers to help with dividing these SOEs into two main groups of 48 and 73 companies respectively. The effort included forming holding companies, especially for firms with good prospects and in a healthy financial state, while some firms that are underperforming or that depend on regular state-capital injections were to be liquidated, merged or divested. The number of SOEs has been brought down to 41 firms as of March. Erick said he aimed to push their number down further to 37 and hope a future SOEs minister could slash it again to below 30. Read more at: https://www.thejakartapost.com/paper/2022/11/21/adb-provides-us500-million-loan-to-help-indonesia-downsize-soes.html