Indonesia Wants to Be on Cambodia’s Level for Tax-to-GDP Ratio

Indonesia is hoping to be on Cambodia’s level when it comes to its tax ratio, according to President Prabowo Subianto’s younger brother Hashim Djojohadikusumo.

Despite being Southeast Asia’s largest economy, Indonesia’s tax revenue-to-gross domestic product (GDP) ratio is significantly underwhelming compared to its ASEAN neighbors.

Hashim, who boasted that he was privy to government programs, claimed that plans were underway to catapult Indonesia’s tax-to-GDP ratio to at least be on par with Cambodia. This ratio gauges a country’s tax revenue relative to the size of its economy.

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“Indonesia has one of the world’s lowest tax ratio. … The government will soon undertake some programs to increase the tax revenue ratio,” Hashim told the Indonesia Economic Summit in Jakarta on Wednesday.

Hashim said: “Our target is to reach Cambodia’s level [whose tax ratio] is at 18 percent, while ours is between 12.1 and 12.2 percent. … And eventually, we will [reach] Vietnam’s level of around 23 percent.”

According to OECD’s latest data, Cambodia’s tax ratio stood at 14.7 percent as of 2022, while Vietnam was at 19 percent.

Past media reports had shown that Indonesia had set a goal to raise the tax ratio from the usual 10 percent to 12.3 percent in 2025. Finance Minister Sri Mulyani even told the country’s lawmakers that the national tax ratio only stood at 10.02 percent of GDP as of end-October 2024.

Hashim also told the forum that his brother wanted to boost tax collection from the so-called “shadow economy”. This term refers to economic activities that do not get reported to the government and hence untaxed such as the informal sector.

Source: Jakarta Globe

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