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recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-106362021-04-23T14:02:51Z Reviving the Handicraft Sector in Bali : Reviving the Handicraft Sector in Bali Dagenhart, Carl ARTISANS BOOKKEEPING BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT SERVICE BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT BUSINESS SERVICE BUSINESS SERVICE PROVIDERS BUSINESS SERVICES BUSINESS SKILLS BUSINESSES BUYERS CAPABILITY CAPACITY BUILDING CAPACITY-BUILDING COMPANY COMPETITIVENESS E-COMMERCE EMPLOYMENT ENTREPRENEUR EXPORT MARKETS EXPORT PROMOTION FINANCIAL RESOURCES HANDICRAFT HANDICRAFT PRODUCTS INTERNATIONAL MARKETS JOB CREATION NECESSARY SKILLS NEW MARKETS PRODUCT DESIGN RESULT RESULTS SALES SERVICE PROVIDER SME SME CLIENTS SME DEVELOPMENT SUPERVISION SUPPLIERS The International Finance Corporation (IFC) Program for Eastern Indonesian Small and Medium Enterprise (SME) Development (IFC-PENSA) launched its Handicraft Export Promotion Program in January 2005. The program ran for 2.5 years, and its ambition was to revive the handicraft industry in Bali with a demonstration effect filtering through to other handicraft regions of Indonesia. The handicraft sector in Indonesia employs over 3 million poor and disadvantaged people, including approximately 400,000 in Bali. It is among the five top-priority sectors for the Indonesian government. Handicraft manufacture in Bali is predominantly a cottage industry, and a paucity of medium local or foreign-owned businesses deprives the sector of the scale and financial resources vital for competing against countries such as China, Vietnam, or Thailand in export markets. In the late 1990s, the country was the second-largest handicraft exporter in the world. After the turn of the century, however, Indonesia had lost its competitive edge, mainly due to the Bali bombing and much stronger competition from other Asian countries. As a result, the value of handicraft exports dropped from some $2 billion a year in 1998 to $400 million in 2002. 2012-08-13T12:30:51Z 2012-08-13T12:30:51Z 2007-11 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2007/11/9953777/reviving-handicraft-sector-bali-reviving-handicraft-sector-bali http://hdl.handle.net/10986/10636 English IFC Smart Lessons Brief CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Brief Publications & Research East Asia and Pacific Indonesia
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic ARTISANS
BOOKKEEPING
BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT
BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT SERVICE
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
BUSINESS SERVICE
BUSINESS SERVICE PROVIDERS
BUSINESS SERVICES
BUSINESS SKILLS
BUSINESSES
BUYERS
CAPABILITY
CAPACITY BUILDING
CAPACITY-BUILDING
COMPANY
COMPETITIVENESS
E-COMMERCE
EMPLOYMENT
ENTREPRENEUR
EXPORT MARKETS
EXPORT PROMOTION
FINANCIAL RESOURCES
HANDICRAFT
HANDICRAFT PRODUCTS
INTERNATIONAL MARKETS
JOB CREATION
NECESSARY SKILLS
NEW MARKETS
PRODUCT DESIGN
RESULT
RESULTS
SALES
SERVICE PROVIDER
SME
SME CLIENTS
SME DEVELOPMENT
SUPERVISION
SUPPLIERS
spellingShingle ARTISANS
BOOKKEEPING
BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT
BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT SERVICE
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
BUSINESS SERVICE
BUSINESS SERVICE PROVIDERS
BUSINESS SERVICES
BUSINESS SKILLS
BUSINESSES
BUYERS
CAPABILITY
CAPACITY BUILDING
CAPACITY-BUILDING
COMPANY
COMPETITIVENESS
E-COMMERCE
EMPLOYMENT
ENTREPRENEUR
EXPORT MARKETS
EXPORT PROMOTION
FINANCIAL RESOURCES
HANDICRAFT
HANDICRAFT PRODUCTS
INTERNATIONAL MARKETS
JOB CREATION
NECESSARY SKILLS
NEW MARKETS
PRODUCT DESIGN
RESULT
RESULTS
SALES
SERVICE PROVIDER
SME
SME CLIENTS
SME DEVELOPMENT
SUPERVISION
SUPPLIERS
Dagenhart, Carl
Reviving the Handicraft Sector in Bali : Reviving the Handicraft Sector in Bali
geographic_facet East Asia and Pacific
Indonesia
relation IFC Smart Lessons Brief
description The International Finance Corporation (IFC) Program for Eastern Indonesian Small and Medium Enterprise (SME) Development (IFC-PENSA) launched its Handicraft Export Promotion Program in January 2005. The program ran for 2.5 years, and its ambition was to revive the handicraft industry in Bali with a demonstration effect filtering through to other handicraft regions of Indonesia. The handicraft sector in Indonesia employs over 3 million poor and disadvantaged people, including approximately 400,000 in Bali. It is among the five top-priority sectors for the Indonesian government. Handicraft manufacture in Bali is predominantly a cottage industry, and a paucity of medium local or foreign-owned businesses deprives the sector of the scale and financial resources vital for competing against countries such as China, Vietnam, or Thailand in export markets. In the late 1990s, the country was the second-largest handicraft exporter in the world. After the turn of the century, however, Indonesia had lost its competitive edge, mainly due to the Bali bombing and much stronger competition from other Asian countries. As a result, the value of handicraft exports dropped from some $2 billion a year in 1998 to $400 million in 2002.
format Publications & Research :: Brief
author Dagenhart, Carl
author_facet Dagenhart, Carl
author_sort Dagenhart, Carl
title Reviving the Handicraft Sector in Bali : Reviving the Handicraft Sector in Bali
title_short Reviving the Handicraft Sector in Bali : Reviving the Handicraft Sector in Bali
title_full Reviving the Handicraft Sector in Bali : Reviving the Handicraft Sector in Bali
title_fullStr Reviving the Handicraft Sector in Bali : Reviving the Handicraft Sector in Bali
title_full_unstemmed Reviving the Handicraft Sector in Bali : Reviving the Handicraft Sector in Bali
title_sort reviving the handicraft sector in bali : reviving the handicraft sector in bali
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2012
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2007/11/9953777/reviving-handicraft-sector-bali-reviving-handicraft-sector-bali
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/10636
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