In recent developments, public attention is focused on the government's steps to reform Fiscal policies and the legal framework to attract Investment while closing state revenue gaps. The Ministry of Finance (Kemenkeu) states that various Trade Agreements have suppressed Fiscal revenue, while the planned implementation of a Carbon Tax has the potential to raise electricity and fuel prices. On the other hand, the government is considering adopting the Common Law system, similar to Singapore, to attract conglomerate funds, and is restructuring the 0.5% MSME Tax scheme to be permanent. The commodity sector is also under the spotlight with the commencement of a Coal Export Duty.
The government is adjusting Fiscal and legal policies to optimize state revenue amidst global pressure. The Ministry of Finance (Kemenkeu) acknowledges that international Trade Agreements erode State Revenue. This acknowledgement indicates the fiscal cost arising from free trade commitments. In response, Coal is subject to an Export Duty. This policy shows the government's effort to optimize State Revenue from export commodities.
Efforts to optimize revenue and enhance investment attractiveness are also carried out through structural reforms. The Carbon Tax could trigger an increase in electricity and fuel prices. Indonesia demands foreign support to reduce emissions, which indicates the potential inflationary impact of the environmental policy. On the other hand, the Indonesian Government will adopt the Common Law system, replicating Singapore. This adoption aims to attract conglomerate funds and increase investor confidence through better legal certainty.
Meanwhile, the Micro, Small, and Medium Enterprises (MSME) sector is provided with legal certainty. Finance Minister Purbaya restructures the 0.5% MSME Tax to apply permanently. This policy aims to provide legal certainty and sustainability for MSME actors.
Kemenkeu's decision to make the 0.5% MSME Tax permanent provides certainty in the Real Sector. Meanwhile, the implementation of the Coal Export Duty and the imposition of the Carbon Tax show a focus on State Revenue Optimization, although the Carbon Tax potentially causes inflation. On the Investment side, the adoption of Common Law is a major step to boost foreign investor confidence. The acknowledgment that Trade Agreements erode revenue highlights the dilemma between free trade and domestic fiscal needs.
The latest developments show that the government is aggressively pushing Fiscal reform—ranging from the Carbon Tax to the Coal Export Duty—and restructuring the legal framework through the discourse of Common Law adoption. The next challenge is to mitigate the potential inflation from the Carbon Tax and ensure that the permanent MSME Tax policy is truly effective in supporting small businesses.