Aspiring Indonesia—Expanding the Middle Class

Indonesia has seen tremendous progress in poverty reduction over the past couple of decades and, as a result, has made a successful transition from low-income to middle-income country status. As millions have moved out of poverty and extreme poverty, we have also witnessed the rise of Indonesia’s middle class, which now accounts for 20 percent of the total population, or 52 million Indonesians. This group important for Indonesia’s upward trajectory, but it still too small for the ambitions of Indonesia. Expanding the middle class will boost economic growth, strengthen an influential constituency for better governance, and widen and deepen the tax base. An expansion of the middle class, if accompanied by continued growth in the incomes of the poor and vulnerable, will also help to decrease inequality and prevent polarization of the country. One of the key development questions that Indonesia faces is how to expand the middle class. What will be required to bring the 115 million people who are no longer in poverty and vulnerability into the middle class? The future of Indonesia lies partly in the fate of this aspiring middle class, 45 percent of the population, so that they can both share in and help to drive the country’s growing prosperity. Government policy can play an instrumental role in expanding the middle class. This can be done by increasing the level and quality of education, and the skills of the population, and making sure there are well-paid jobs waiting for those in the aspiring middle class. It also means ensuring access to social protection to help lift these aspirers into the middle class and keep them there once they arrive, as well as improving the quality of the public services upon which they currently depend. Resolve to expand the middle class will place greater stress on government budgets. The government will need increasingly rely on the middle class, whose income taxes will finance much of the investment that a growing Indonesia will need. This will require a new social contract with the current – and future – middle class so that they will embrace the policies that both benefit themselves while also helping to expand their ranks, rather than closing off opportunities for others, and creating political polarization—as has occurred in some countries in the region in recent years.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Format: Report biblioteca
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2019-09
Subjects:MIDDLE CLASS, FEMALE LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION, TAX REVENUE, SHARED PROSPERITY, URBAN DEVELOPMENT, ECONOMIC GROWTH, SOCIAL PROTECTION, ACCESS TO HEALTH SERVICES, ACCESS TO BASIC SERVICES, EDUCATION QUALITY, SKILLS DEVELOPMENT, ENTREPRENEURSHIP, POVERTY LINE, PUBLIC SERVICE DELIVERY, JOB SKILLS, NEW SOCIAL CONTRACT, SOCIAL INSURANCE, UNIVERSAL HEALTH COVERAGE,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/519991580138621024/Aspiring-Indonesia-Expanding-the-Middle-Class
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/33237
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spelling dig-okr-10986332372021-05-25T09:32:01Z Aspiring Indonesia—Expanding the Middle Class World Bank MIDDLE CLASS FEMALE LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION TAX REVENUE SHARED PROSPERITY URBAN DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC GROWTH SOCIAL PROTECTION ACCESS TO HEALTH SERVICES ACCESS TO BASIC SERVICES EDUCATION QUALITY SKILLS DEVELOPMENT ENTREPRENEURSHIP POVERTY LINE PUBLIC SERVICE DELIVERY JOB SKILLS NEW SOCIAL CONTRACT SOCIAL INSURANCE UNIVERSAL HEALTH COVERAGE Indonesia has seen tremendous progress in poverty reduction over the past couple of decades and, as a result, has made a successful transition from low-income to middle-income country status. As millions have moved out of poverty and extreme poverty, we have also witnessed the rise of Indonesia’s middle class, which now accounts for 20 percent of the total population, or 52 million Indonesians. This group important for Indonesia’s upward trajectory, but it still too small for the ambitions of Indonesia. Expanding the middle class will boost economic growth, strengthen an influential constituency for better governance, and widen and deepen the tax base. An expansion of the middle class, if accompanied by continued growth in the incomes of the poor and vulnerable, will also help to decrease inequality and prevent polarization of the country. One of the key development questions that Indonesia faces is how to expand the middle class. What will be required to bring the 115 million people who are no longer in poverty and vulnerability into the middle class? The future of Indonesia lies partly in the fate of this aspiring middle class, 45 percent of the population, so that they can both share in and help to drive the country’s growing prosperity. Government policy can play an instrumental role in expanding the middle class. This can be done by increasing the level and quality of education, and the skills of the population, and making sure there are well-paid jobs waiting for those in the aspiring middle class. It also means ensuring access to social protection to help lift these aspirers into the middle class and keep them there once they arrive, as well as improving the quality of the public services upon which they currently depend. Resolve to expand the middle class will place greater stress on government budgets. The government will need increasingly rely on the middle class, whose income taxes will finance much of the investment that a growing Indonesia will need. This will require a new social contract with the current – and future – middle class so that they will embrace the policies that both benefit themselves while also helping to expand their ranks, rather than closing off opportunities for others, and creating political polarization—as has occurred in some countries in the region in recent years. 2020-01-27T17:19:50Z 2020-01-27T17:19:50Z 2019-09 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/519991580138621024/Aspiring-Indonesia-Expanding-the-Middle-Class http://hdl.handle.net/10986/33237 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work Economic & Sector Work :: Other Poverty Study East Asia and Pacific Indonesia
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
topic MIDDLE CLASS
FEMALE LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION
TAX REVENUE
SHARED PROSPERITY
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
ECONOMIC GROWTH
SOCIAL PROTECTION
ACCESS TO HEALTH SERVICES
ACCESS TO BASIC SERVICES
EDUCATION QUALITY
SKILLS DEVELOPMENT
ENTREPRENEURSHIP
POVERTY LINE
PUBLIC SERVICE DELIVERY
JOB SKILLS
NEW SOCIAL CONTRACT
SOCIAL INSURANCE
UNIVERSAL HEALTH COVERAGE
MIDDLE CLASS
FEMALE LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION
TAX REVENUE
SHARED PROSPERITY
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
ECONOMIC GROWTH
SOCIAL PROTECTION
ACCESS TO HEALTH SERVICES
ACCESS TO BASIC SERVICES
EDUCATION QUALITY
SKILLS DEVELOPMENT
ENTREPRENEURSHIP
POVERTY LINE
PUBLIC SERVICE DELIVERY
JOB SKILLS
NEW SOCIAL CONTRACT
SOCIAL INSURANCE
UNIVERSAL HEALTH COVERAGE
spellingShingle MIDDLE CLASS
FEMALE LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION
TAX REVENUE
SHARED PROSPERITY
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
ECONOMIC GROWTH
SOCIAL PROTECTION
ACCESS TO HEALTH SERVICES
ACCESS TO BASIC SERVICES
EDUCATION QUALITY
SKILLS DEVELOPMENT
ENTREPRENEURSHIP
POVERTY LINE
PUBLIC SERVICE DELIVERY
JOB SKILLS
NEW SOCIAL CONTRACT
SOCIAL INSURANCE
UNIVERSAL HEALTH COVERAGE
MIDDLE CLASS
FEMALE LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION
TAX REVENUE
SHARED PROSPERITY
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
ECONOMIC GROWTH
SOCIAL PROTECTION
ACCESS TO HEALTH SERVICES
ACCESS TO BASIC SERVICES
EDUCATION QUALITY
SKILLS DEVELOPMENT
ENTREPRENEURSHIP
POVERTY LINE
PUBLIC SERVICE DELIVERY
JOB SKILLS
NEW SOCIAL CONTRACT
SOCIAL INSURANCE
UNIVERSAL HEALTH COVERAGE
World Bank
Aspiring Indonesia—Expanding the Middle Class
description Indonesia has seen tremendous progress in poverty reduction over the past couple of decades and, as a result, has made a successful transition from low-income to middle-income country status. As millions have moved out of poverty and extreme poverty, we have also witnessed the rise of Indonesia’s middle class, which now accounts for 20 percent of the total population, or 52 million Indonesians. This group important for Indonesia’s upward trajectory, but it still too small for the ambitions of Indonesia. Expanding the middle class will boost economic growth, strengthen an influential constituency for better governance, and widen and deepen the tax base. An expansion of the middle class, if accompanied by continued growth in the incomes of the poor and vulnerable, will also help to decrease inequality and prevent polarization of the country. One of the key development questions that Indonesia faces is how to expand the middle class. What will be required to bring the 115 million people who are no longer in poverty and vulnerability into the middle class? The future of Indonesia lies partly in the fate of this aspiring middle class, 45 percent of the population, so that they can both share in and help to drive the country’s growing prosperity. Government policy can play an instrumental role in expanding the middle class. This can be done by increasing the level and quality of education, and the skills of the population, and making sure there are well-paid jobs waiting for those in the aspiring middle class. It also means ensuring access to social protection to help lift these aspirers into the middle class and keep them there once they arrive, as well as improving the quality of the public services upon which they currently depend. Resolve to expand the middle class will place greater stress on government budgets. The government will need increasingly rely on the middle class, whose income taxes will finance much of the investment that a growing Indonesia will need. This will require a new social contract with the current – and future – middle class so that they will embrace the policies that both benefit themselves while also helping to expand their ranks, rather than closing off opportunities for others, and creating political polarization—as has occurred in some countries in the region in recent years.
format Report
topic_facet MIDDLE CLASS
FEMALE LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION
TAX REVENUE
SHARED PROSPERITY
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
ECONOMIC GROWTH
SOCIAL PROTECTION
ACCESS TO HEALTH SERVICES
ACCESS TO BASIC SERVICES
EDUCATION QUALITY
SKILLS DEVELOPMENT
ENTREPRENEURSHIP
POVERTY LINE
PUBLIC SERVICE DELIVERY
JOB SKILLS
NEW SOCIAL CONTRACT
SOCIAL INSURANCE
UNIVERSAL HEALTH COVERAGE
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Aspiring Indonesia—Expanding the Middle Class
title_short Aspiring Indonesia—Expanding the Middle Class
title_full Aspiring Indonesia—Expanding the Middle Class
title_fullStr Aspiring Indonesia—Expanding the Middle Class
title_full_unstemmed Aspiring Indonesia—Expanding the Middle Class
title_sort aspiring indonesia—expanding the middle class
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2019-09
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/519991580138621024/Aspiring-Indonesia-Expanding-the-Middle-Class
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/33237
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