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Indonesia
This Week in AsiaEconomics

Indonesia taps Japan, India, China expertise for free school meals as Prabowo battles cost concerns

  • Scheme to provide free lunches for 83 million children aimed at tackling malnourishment but it could push up country’s budget deficit

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Indonesia’s Defence Minister and president-elect Prabowo Subianto speaks at the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore on June 1. Photo: Reuters
Amy Sood

Indonesian president-elect Prabowo Subianto’s ambitious plan to introduce free school meals nationwide to tackle child malnourishment has sparked concerns about its potential drag on the country’s finances.

Prabowo’s team is hoping to address these concerns by looking to countries such as Japan, China and India, which have implemented and spent prudently on such programmes.

Analysts warn that Indonesia faces multiple economic and logistical challenges that would make it difficult for Prabowo to adopt the regional models.

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The free school meal programme was one of the key election campaign promises of Prabowo, who will take over from President Joko Widodo in October.

The 72-year-old defence minister has said the scheme offering school students free lunches and milk was a “necessity” to curb child malnourishment in the country.

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Data from the country’s health ministry shows 21.6 per cent of Indonesian children under the age of five experienced stunting – stunted growth and other developmental problems caused by malnutrition.

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