The global and domestic economic situation at the beginning of December 2025 shows several challenges that warrant close attention, especially concerning the potential rise in global interest rates in the coming years, which could increase the burden of debt financing. Although November inflation began to decline, export performance experienced another weakening. On the monetary side, Bank Indonesia (BI) is responding to global digitalization trends by conducting a crucial Digital Rupiah experiment as part of the national financial system transformation. This narrative describes the external pressures, changing trade dynamics, and BI's innovation strategy in facing the new economic landscape.
The Government and Bank Indonesia (BI) are urged to be vigilant in facing global interest rate pressures that are predicted to increase during the 2026–2027 period. This vigilance is crucial because high global interest rate pressures potentially increase the risk to Indonesia's debt costs, which could significantly inflate and burden the State Budget (APBN).
Amidst these external threats, Indonesia's export performance was recorded to weaken in October 2025. This weakening raises concerns about the future trade outlook, necessitating a diversification strategy to maintain the trade balance surplus. Meanwhile, inflation in November 2025 was recorded to decline compared to the previous month, but gold jewelry became the largest contributor to inflation that month, indicating a change in consumption patterns and market anxiety that encourages safe haven buying.
In response to financial technology developments, Bank Indonesia (BI) is conducting an important experiment related to the issuance of the Digital Rupiah. This step aims to strengthen the sovereignty of the Rupiah in the digital era, while also serving as a response to global financial technology trends.
Today's developments have direct implications for monetary, fiscal, and trade policies. The threat of global interest rates in 2026–2027 creates an urgency for the Government and BI to manage debt and exchange rate risks carefully. Increased debt costs potentially shift APBN allocation from productive spending to interest payments. Meanwhile, weakening exports signal a challenge in maintaining the growth engine, which requires non-monetary stimulus. On the other hand, the Digital Rupiah experiment promises modernization of the payment system and helps maintain transaction efficiency. Lastly, although inflation is declining, the large contribution of gold jewelry signals underlying uncertainty that prompts the public to invest in safe haven assets.
Overall, Indonesia's economic authorities are facing a dual challenge: an external threat from global interest rate pressure that could inflate debt costs, and a domestic challenge in the form of weakening export performance. The Government and BI must tighten coordination to ensure fiscal and monetary stability while continuously maintaining trade momentum. BI's proactive step through the Digital Rupiah experiment shows readiness to adapt to the digital era to strengthen the Rupiah's sovereignty amidst uncertainty.