Sector
Agriculture
Indonesia, with its archipelago of volcanic soil and plentiful rainfall, offers a natural abundance that sustains the nation and plays a crucial role in its economic prosperity. One of the country’s leading sectors is agriculture, supporting the livelihoods of millions and making a significant contribution to Indonesia’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP). From rice paddies to coffee plantations, this diverse range of crops reflects the country’s unique geography and climate, making it a powerhouse in the global agricultural market.
View moreAgriculture
Indonesia, with its archipelago of volcanic soil and plentiful rainfall, offers a natural abundance that sustains the nation and plays a crucial role in its economic prosperity. One of the country’s leading sectors is agriculture, supporting the livelihoods of millions and making a significant contribution to Indonesia’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP). From rice paddies to coffee plantations, this diverse range of crops reflects the country’s unique geography and climate, making it a powerhouse in the global agricultural market.
In 2022, Indonesia’s agricultural sector generated approximately Rp2.4 quadrillion in GDP. This sector alone accounts for 12.4 percent of the country’s GDP, underlining its importance to the national economy. The following year, the country experienced a steady growth rate of 1.3 percent in this sector.
Agriculture serves as a key sector for the national economy in various Indonesian provinces, including Aceh, North Sumatra, West Sumatra, Riau, Jambi, Bengkulu, and South Sumatra. Additionally, the provinces of Lampung, Bangka Belitung, West Java, Central Java, East Java, and West Kalimantan, among others, also consider agriculture as a key sector.
This sector offers a rich variety of commodities, including paddy, corn, soybean, sweet potato, and cassava – all staple commodities that play a vital role in sustaining Indonesia’s food supply. Additionally, crops such as cocoa, coconut, coffee, and palm oil are essential for export income and providing job opportunities. In terms of employment, the agriculture sector employs nearly 28 percent of the country’s workforce.
The country’s agricultural sector has also attracted significant foreign investment in 2023, with roughly US$2 billion in direct contributions. With this sector helping sustain Indonesia’s food supply, the country’s paddy production statistics that same year indicate that roughly 10.2 million hectares of land were harvested, yielding an estimated 56.63 million tons of dried unhusked rice (GKG). Once processed for consumption, this translates to approximately 30.9 million tons of rice available for the population.
In a move to strengthen its agricultural foothold within Southeast Asia, Indonesia seeks to expand cooperation with Vietnam in both agriculture and aquaculture. Indonesia and Vietnam are forging a partnership to modernize their agriculture and aquaculture industries. This collaboration will leverage digitalization for improved efficiency and invest in research and development to enhance the quality and global competitiveness of their agricultural and fishery products.
Latest News
Indonesia and Australia are moving toward clinching a new, stronger defense treaty that could potentially affect the Indo-Pacific security landscape, particularly in the South China Sea, where tension has been building in recent years due to overlapping territorial claims between China and several Southeast Asian countries.
Security dominated the discussion between Australian Prime Minister Antony Albanese and President Prabowo Subianto during his first state visit to the southern neighbor. In their joint press conference aboard the Royal Australian Navy's flagship HMAS Canberra on Nov. 12 in Sydney, the two leaders announced that, following what Albanese described as substantive negotiations, they were ready to sign an enhanced bilateral security treaty between their countries.
The signing of the treaty, which builds on the 2006 Lombok Treaty and the defense cooperation agreement Prabowo signed in 2024 when he was defense minister, is scheduled for Albanese's upcoming visit to Jakarta in January 2026.
Details of the treaty have not been released, but Albanese said it would entail regular consultations at the head of state and ministerial levels, including when the security of either country was under threat. He also mentioned exploring joint and individual measures to deal with such threats.
This marks a new achievement for Prabowo, a retired Army general with a strong grasp of geopolitical and security challenges who has taken a keen interest in foreign policy since he took office in October 2024, making a flurry of overseas tours immediately afterward to cut deals. With Australia, the focus was on security.
The revamped Indonesia-Australia defense treaty could bridge the gap between the different ways each approaches the security situation in the Indo-Pacific.
Australia has formed various alliances, including a bilateral one with the United States (US), the trilateral group known as AUKUS with the US and the United Kingdom, and the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (Quad) with the US, Japan, and India. Their common objective is to counter the emergence of China as a global superpower.
Indonesia, under its foreign policy principle of non-alignment, relies primarily on diplomacy and maintains national security via defense cooperation agreements with just about every notable country, including China, its biggest trading partner. But it has far more defense and security cooperation, and conducts more joint military exercises, with the US and Australia.
There is a good reason for that. Indonesia's sole external security threat is likely to come from China due to ongoing tensions in the Natuna Sea, the southern part of the South China Sea in Riau Islands Province which China claims as a traditional fishing ground. The area has seen skirmishes between Indonesian Navy patrols and Chinese Coast Guard vessels escorting Chinese fishing boats, although not to the same extent as confrontations between China and the Philippines.
Although neither the joint press statement nor any documents that emerged from Prabowo and Albanese's meeting in Sydney mentions China, it is obvious that both had China in mind when discussing regional security. The goal for Australia, as well as the US, is to protect the South China Sea as a critical maritime trade route.
Indonesia and Australia have intensive bilateral security arrangements, and the two countries also participate in many multinational military drills in the region. They also conduct the "2+2" defense and foreign ministers’ meetings and an annual leadership meeting, which Albanese hosted in May 2025.
Their relationship is not without its ups and downs, often over security matters.
In 1999, president B.J. Habibie tore up the 1995 defense treaty with Australia over disputes related to Indonesian-occupied Timor Leste. In 2013, Indonesia learned that Australian intelligence had been tapping the telephone calls of Indonesian leaders, including Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono (2004-2009; 2009-2014).
President Prabowo jokingly alluded to this espionage scandal during the Sydney press conference, saying to Albanese: "I think your intelligence is very good. You know that I like bagpipes, so I am received by bagpipes."
