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Demonstrators tussle
with police during a
protest against the impending oil price
increase in
Surabaya city in eastern
Java island on June 21, 2013.
|
Demonstrators
tussle with police during a protest against the impending oil price increase in
Surabaya city in eastern Java island on June 21, 2013. Indonesia on Friday
announced the first hike in fuel prices since 2008 despite violent protests
against the unpopular measure, as Southeast Asia's top economy seeks to reduce
crippling subsidies.
Energy
Minister Jero Wacik said the price of fuel would go up more than 30 percent on
average from Saturday, in a bid to slash handouts which gobble up a huge chunk
of the national budget and have caused concern among investors.
"This
is a very difficult decision and the government made this choice as a last
resort," Hatta Rajasa, coordinating minister for the economy, said in a
televised address to the nation.
"The
global crisis has impacted our economic growth... We need to take steps to
improve the health of our economy."
The move to
cut one of the few government handouts in Indonesia has already sparked anger,
with thousands fighting running battles with police outside parliament Monday
as lawmakers voted on measures paving the way for an increase.
In the
hours leading up to the hike, long lines formed at petrol stations as car and
motorbike owners sought to fill up with subsidised fuel before the price
rocketed. Police were standing guard at many stations.
Police were
out in force in major cities across the country as the announcement was made,
but protests were small and largely peaceful.
The price
of a litre of petrol will go up 44 percent from 4,500 rupiah ($0.46) a litre,
one of the cheapest in Asia, to 6,500 rupiah. For a litre of diesel, the price
will rise 22 percent to 5,500 rupiah.
Following a
marathon parliamentary session on Monday, lawmakers agreed on a revised budget
that included a package of measures to compensate the millions of poor people
likely to be hit hardest.
Poor
households will receive $15 a month each for the next four months to offset the
impact of the fuel hike, which is expected to cause the cost of everyday goods
to go up as they will be more expensive to transport.
President
Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono had insisted on the measures before any fuel hike,
which comes at a sensitive time as parties gear up for elections in 2014.
"The
government is aware that the policy will result in inflation which will affect
the purchasing power of those on low incomes," Rajasa admitted on Friday,
but added that the government was providing "social protection".
Yudhoyono
has been seeking to lower the huge subsidies for some time and last year came
close. But parliament rejected the measure in the face of huge protests, which
were far bigger and more violent than this year's.
Concern has
been growing among international investors about the failure to cut the
subsidies which are blamed for a widening current account deficit, as demand
for fuel increases and the government is hit with ever bigger bills.
The urgency
for action increased last week after the rupiah, which had already lost value
due to the ballooning deficit, plunged to four-year lows after a sell-off on
emerging markets that hit Indonesia hard.
However,
the price hike could lead to economic pain in the short term, analysts have
warned.
Credit-Suisse
said in note the hike "will likely hit already weakening investment
growth, dragging down GDP growth further".
Indonesia's
economy grew at 6.02 percent in the first quarter, the slowest pace in more
than two years.

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