Indonesia Regional Industrial Development
The P.T. Multi Astra automobile assembly line, Jakarta
Nusantara Aircraft Company, Bandung, Jawa Barat Province
Courtesy Indonesian Department of Information
The pattern of regional development in Indonesia
mirrored the
diversity of natural resources among the Outer Islands and
the
historical dominance of Java as the densely populated
agrarian
center. Java remained the economic center of the nation,
producing
about 50 percent of total GDP in the 1980s. Sumatra, the
heart of
the nation's oil and rubber production, ranked second with
32
percent of GDP. Half of total foreign investment,
excluding the oil
sector, from 1967 to 1985 was in Java, with the remainder
dispersed
widely throughout the nation.
In spite of this regional imbalance, there were
important and
more-or-less uniform features of economic development. By
1983
agricultural production, including nonfood crops such as
rubber and
forestry and fishing, had declined to less than half of
total
production in almost all twenty-seven provincial-level
administrative units. The majority of the labor force
still found
employment in these activities, however. Almost all
provinces
shared in the rapid growth rates of the 1970s, and most
attained
annual growth rates between 4 and 8 percent per year.
Specific
industries usually reflected local resource endowments;
for
example, sawmills and plywood factories dominated
manufacturing in
Kalimantan, whereas Sumatran manufacturing was more
diverse,
including rubber processing, cement, and plywood. Major
industries
on Java included motor vehicle assembly in Jakarta,
weaving in Jawa
Barat Province and Yogyakarta, kretek cigarette
production
in Jawa Timur Province, and sugar refining in Jawa Tengah
Province.
Data as of November 1992
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