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
President Prabowo Subianto may be projecting himself globally and at home as a leader who is tough on corruption, not just in words but also in actions, with several high-profile corruption cases in his first year in office. But the business community is not impressed, and has even given the thumbs down to his overall anti-graft campaign.
This could have serious repercussions on Indonesia as an investment destination, especially compared with some of it Southeast Asian neighbors.
Indonesia’s 2025 Corruption Perception Index (CPI) showed a significant decline, with the score dropping to 34 out 100, down from 37 in 2024. Indonesia ranked 109th out of 180 countries surveyed, down 10 places. It is behind Singapore, Malaysia, Timor-Leste and Vietnam but scored better than Thailand, the Philippines and Cambodia.
The CPI asks mostly business executives but also country experts and analysts about their assessment on various aspects of public sector corruption including bribery, kickbacks, embezzlement of public funds, effectiveness of anti-corruption efforts and transparency and accountability of government.
Experts cite narrowing public space, weakening enforcement and the erosion of judicial independence as key factors for Indonesia’s decline.
The 2025 CPI report, published by Transparency International this month, is in sharp contrast to a survey by Indikator Politik that says Prabowo continues to enjoy a high approval rating of 80 percent, thanks mainly to his social programs, including his signature program of providing free lunch to millions of school children nationwide.
Prabowo has repeatedly vowed to get tough on corruptors, getting to the roots of the problem and pledging he would hunt them down all the way to Antarctica.
In his speech at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, last month, he said he would not make compromises with corruptors, citing as examples the recent crackdown on companies for illegal logging blamed for the massive flood disaster in Sumatra before the end of the year.
The year 2025 also saw some high-profile corruption cases, including one against Riza Khalid, a long-time contractor/supplier to state oil and gas company Pertamina, who is a fugitive, but his son Muhammad Kerry Adiranto is currently facing an 18-year jail term.
The Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) and the Attorney General Office have also claimed to have saved the country trillions of rupiah from the corruption cases they handled.
As if this was not enough, in a speech on Indonesia’s economic outlook in Jakarta last week, the president hinted at the need to resort to an iron hand in dealing with corruptions. Responding to accusations that he had turned his back on democracy, the former Army general said: "But if you ask the people, maybe you also need a little authoritarianism [...] to fight those corruptors."
His predecessor Joko “Jokowi” Widodo weighed in on the anti-corruption drive this week suggesting that KPK should be governed by the old law when it had more power and independent. An irony, given that the change in the law happened in 2019 under his watch.
Even more irony because the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P) supported Jokowi’s proposal to go back to the old KPK law. Although they now have parted ways, PDI-P was the main party in Jokowi’s coalition government that enabled the change in the law in the House of Representatives.
The change meant that since 2019, KPK reports to the president. It also lost some of the powers to support its work, including conducting wiretapping on corruption suspects, and it also changed the status of their staffers into civil servants.
It’s no coincidence that Indonesia’s CPI turned for the worse following the change. Indonesia scored the highest then at 40, and ranked 85 out of 180 countries surveyed.
The KPK had been on the frontline in the anti-graft campaigns during Jokowi’s first term in office in 2014-2019. In his second term in 2019-2024, he turned the agency, governed by the new law, into a powerful political tool to serve his interests, going after many of his political nemesis. All five current commissioners are his, rather than Prabowo’s, appointees.
Prabowo’s office has said the government is not entertaining the idea of going back to the old KPK law.
