Imperatives for post COVID-19 recovery of Indonesia’s education, labor, and SME sectors

The article assesses the impact of COVID-19 pandemic on the Indonesian economy and the influence that repercussions from the pandemic have had on the country’s long-term development goals and objectives. The article used backcasting approach to link expected development objectives and targets with c...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Muyanja Ssenyonga
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2021-01-01
Series:Cogent Economics & Finance
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23322039.2021.1911439
id doaj-ac760c631449482b810a334fb54dea1d
record_format Article
spelling doaj-ac760c631449482b810a334fb54dea1d2021-05-06T16:05:17ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Economics & Finance2332-20392021-01-019110.1080/23322039.2021.19114391911439Imperatives for post COVID-19 recovery of Indonesia’s education, labor, and SME sectorsMuyanja Ssenyonga0Gadjah Mada UniversityThe article assesses the impact of COVID-19 pandemic on the Indonesian economy and the influence that repercussions from the pandemic have had on the country’s long-term development goals and objectives. The article used backcasting approach to link expected development objectives and targets with current state of social and economic conditions. Results demonstrated a gap between long-term and current economic performance, attributable largely to the impact of COVID-19 pandemic on the economy and society. A drastic decline in aggregate demand due to contraction in household and corporate expenditure, investment, and exports sparked a surge in open unemployment and underemployment. While swift and wide-ranging government response helped to attenuate the impact of the crisis on the economy and vulnerable sections of society, COVID-19 pandemic impact compounded existing fundamental problems facing the Indonesian economy including de-industrialization, wide urban–rural, East–West, inter-regional digital divide; unemployment and underemployment; weak human resource development; low participation in global value chains; and low education effectiveness. Policy recommendations to nudge the economy and society back to its long-term development trajectory include initiatives to enhance emergency response program effectiveness and tackling structural problems. The initiatives include strengthening and widening the coverage of government programs that support business and society in education, labor and employment, and SME and trade. The thrust of the pathways stresses the need for accelerating the implementation of the national information highway and the ASEAN connectivity initiative. Achieving will support efforts to mainstream the adoption and deployment of digitalization in the economy, government, and transboundary trade.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23322039.2021.1911439covid-19 pandemicgvcssmeseconomic zonesindustrial parksflipped classroomproduct complexitylabor relations
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Muyanja Ssenyonga
spellingShingle Muyanja Ssenyonga
Imperatives for post COVID-19 recovery of Indonesia’s education, labor, and SME sectors
Cogent Economics & Finance
covid-19 pandemic
gvcs
smes
economic zones
industrial parks
flipped classroom
product complexity
labor relations
author_facet Muyanja Ssenyonga
author_sort Muyanja Ssenyonga
title Imperatives for post COVID-19 recovery of Indonesia’s education, labor, and SME sectors
title_short Imperatives for post COVID-19 recovery of Indonesia’s education, labor, and SME sectors
title_full Imperatives for post COVID-19 recovery of Indonesia’s education, labor, and SME sectors
title_fullStr Imperatives for post COVID-19 recovery of Indonesia’s education, labor, and SME sectors
title_full_unstemmed Imperatives for post COVID-19 recovery of Indonesia’s education, labor, and SME sectors
title_sort imperatives for post covid-19 recovery of indonesia’s education, labor, and sme sectors
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Cogent Economics & Finance
issn 2332-2039
publishDate 2021-01-01
description The article assesses the impact of COVID-19 pandemic on the Indonesian economy and the influence that repercussions from the pandemic have had on the country’s long-term development goals and objectives. The article used backcasting approach to link expected development objectives and targets with current state of social and economic conditions. Results demonstrated a gap between long-term and current economic performance, attributable largely to the impact of COVID-19 pandemic on the economy and society. A drastic decline in aggregate demand due to contraction in household and corporate expenditure, investment, and exports sparked a surge in open unemployment and underemployment. While swift and wide-ranging government response helped to attenuate the impact of the crisis on the economy and vulnerable sections of society, COVID-19 pandemic impact compounded existing fundamental problems facing the Indonesian economy including de-industrialization, wide urban–rural, East–West, inter-regional digital divide; unemployment and underemployment; weak human resource development; low participation in global value chains; and low education effectiveness. Policy recommendations to nudge the economy and society back to its long-term development trajectory include initiatives to enhance emergency response program effectiveness and tackling structural problems. The initiatives include strengthening and widening the coverage of government programs that support business and society in education, labor and employment, and SME and trade. The thrust of the pathways stresses the need for accelerating the implementation of the national information highway and the ASEAN connectivity initiative. Achieving will support efforts to mainstream the adoption and deployment of digitalization in the economy, government, and transboundary trade.
topic covid-19 pandemic
gvcs
smes
economic zones
industrial parks
flipped classroom
product complexity
labor relations
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23322039.2021.1911439
work_keys_str_mv AT muyanjassenyonga imperativesforpostcovid19recoveryofindonesiaseducationlaborandsmesectors
_version_ 1721456417911603200