Indonesia plans to restrict imports of capital and consumer goods and accelerate the use of biofuel to cut crude oil purchases to stem a slide in the nation’s currency, Bloomberg reported on Tuesday, quoting Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati. The minister said a 7.5 percent import tariff would be applied to 500 consumer goods, including those bought online, in a bid to curb imports. In addition, she said energy projects at state companies that require a large amount of imports would be delayed, Reuters report. Indonesia may have left the Fragile Five, but it may end up having to hike as aggressively as in 2013 if traders are jittery and pre-emptive tightening hasn’t worked, writes Shuli Ren for Bloomberg. Bank Indonesia is due to review the benchmark interest rate today.