Pandemic wipes out years of progress on Asian poverty, from Indonesia to the Philippines and Thailand
- Millions of Indonesians have been left struggling by the pandemic, with the country on track to record one of its highest poverty rates in over a decade
- And it’s not the only Southeast Asian nation suffering the pandemic’s adverse economic effects – poverty is on the increase across the region
She is now the sole breadwinner, and must provide for both herself, her husband and their two children on a single garment factory worker’s wage – which has forced some difficult choices.
“We are really struggling to get by, we used to have two incomes … not that much but enough to fulfil our daily needs,” Lasmi said. “Our finances have been badly hit by the pandemic, we’ve had to adjust everything, even what we eat … like substituting chicken with egg.”
The 4.2 million rupiah (US$298) Lasmi earns working at the factory each month is not enough to cover the family’s expenses, and a cash handout of 2.4 million rupiah from the government went straight to buying baby milk formula, nappies and other essentials for her one-year-old daughter, she said.
So she borrowed 10 million rupiah from a bank and another four million from a loan shark, who charges so much interest that Lasmi fears she might never pay the money back.
“It’s like digging a hole to fill a hole. It’s hard to pay them back because our expenses are bigger than our income,” the 36 year-old said. “I can afford not to eat, but my kids cannot.”
Even in the best-case scenario, the Jakarta-based SMERU Research Institute predicts the pandemic will force some 1.3 million Indonesians into poverty this year, with the country’s poverty rate projected to rise to 9.7 per cent from last September’s 9.2 per cent.
Under its worst-case projections, however, the poverty rate will increase to 16.6 per cent by the end of the year – higher than it has been at any point since 2007.
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“Before the pandemic, Indonesia was on track to achieve its sustainable development goals,” said Asep Suryahadi, a researcher at SMERU. “Now the situation has changed for the worse, so we can predict that there will be some delays in achieving the goals, not only for poverty but also for other goals such as gender and income equality, and improving education, health, and employment.”
Indonesia plunged into a recession this year for the first time since the Asian financial crisis of 1997-98, after recording economic contractions of 5.32 per cent and 3.49 per cent in the second and third quarters, respectively.
WIDESPREAD HURT
It is labourers like Lasmi who will be among the hardest hit by the downturn, especially with the freeze on minimum wage increases that has been put in place by 29 of Indonesia’s 34 provinces, at the central government’s request.
“Labourers don’t go from middle class to poor, but we go from poor to poorer in this pandemic,” said Dian Septi from local workers’ rights group Marsinah FM. “Many labourers are now indebted to loan sharks … [and] are also at risk of losing their rented houses because they can’t pay rent.”
As of August, 2.67 million Indonesians had lost their jobs amid the pandemic, according to data from the country’s statistics agency, pushing the country’s unemployment rate above 7 per cent – a level not seen since 2011.
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For 26-year-old Siti Nurrahmah, who quit her job as a flight attendant last summer while still pregnant with her first child, this has meant watching her husband lose his position at a “big-name production house” as her own prospects of finding work again have withered.
“Before I resigned, our joint income was 20 million rupiah per month. Now? It’s nothing,” she said.
To try and make ends meet, the couple cleared out their savings and sold the family car, but even with the money Siti makes from an online clothes shop she launched this year, they still do not have enough to cover their daily expenses.
“My greatest worry is that there will be no job for me [in future]. I don’t view my prospects of working as a flight attendant again too brightly, to be honest,” Siti said. It is not just Indonesia suffering the adverse economic effects of coronavirus, with poverty rates expected to rise elsewhere in Southeast Asia, too.
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Overall, as many as 38 million additional people are expected to be living below the poverty line across the Asia-Pacific region by the end of this year, according to the World Bank. That is 33 million more than there would have been had the pandemic had never happened, bringing the total number of people living in poverty across the region to 517 million.
Worldwide, the organisation projects up to 115 million people will be pushed into extreme poverty this year, reversing around three years’ worth of global progress.
CORRUPTION CONCERNS
To help Indonesia’s poor and vulnerable amid the pandemic, the central government allocated some 234.3 trillion rupiah (US$16.6 billion) for social protection programmes such as food distribution and direct cash assistance, with even more to come from next year’s 408 trillion-rupiah budget, Indonesian Finance Minister Sri Mulyani has said.
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“I’m wondering whether the current administration is occupied by thieves, who take advantage of the pandemic to steal, either to enrich themselves or the political parties they belong to,” said Dian of workers’ rights group Marsinah FM.
Lasmi, the garment factory worker in Jakarta, holds out little hope of getting more cash from the government, so has started selling grilled sausages from her home in a bid to boost her family’s finances.
“I hope the government will continue their cash assistance because I’m not the only one feeling the pinch,” she said. “My husband has been applying for jobs many times but they aren’t hiring at the moment. I hope the pandemic will be over soon so we can bounce back like before.”