Maximizing Opportunities from Global Supply Chains : An Agenda for Reform
The pattern of global trade in goods has changed substantially over the last two decades with a rapid increase in trade in intermediate inputs, such as parts and components, and a significant increase in the role of services inputs. Indonesia can b...
Main Author: | |
---|---|
Format: | Report |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
World Bank, Jakarta
2015
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/12/19787611/maximizing-opportunities-global-supply-chains-agenda-reform-policy-note-iv http://hdl.handle.net/10986/23510 |
id |
okr-10986-23510 |
---|---|
recordtype |
oai_dc |
spelling |
okr-10986-235102021-04-23T14:04:15Z Maximizing Opportunities from Global Supply Chains : An Agenda for Reform Soejachmoen, Moekti P. TAX INCENTIVES AUCTION INTERNATIONAL COMPANIES SUPERVISION EQUIPMENT LOW TARIFFS PROTOTYPE PRODUCTION LAGS TELECOMMUNICATION GLOBAL MARKETS MATERIALS BUYER MARKET OPPORTUNITY GOVERNMENT FUNDING CAPABILITY MEDIUM ENTERPRISES VALUE CHAIN CONSUMER GOODS INFORMATION EXPORTS JOINT VENTURE POLITICAL ECONOMY COPYRIGHT INCENTIVES INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT INPUTS JOINT VENTURES OWNERSHIP BANKRUPTCY MARKET ACCESS PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT TRENDS PRODUCTION PROCESS DEVELOPMENT COMMUNICATIONS MACROECONOMIC STABILITY HUMAN RESOURCE LINK HUMAN RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT GLOBAL ECONOMY ELECTRONICS INDUSTRY COSTS TELECOMMUNICATIONS ECONOMIC COOPERATION APPLICATION OF INFORMATION CUSTOMS TARGETS PRODUCTIVITY INDUSTRIALIZATION GLOBALIZATION PRODUCT DESIGN DEBT BUYERS MARKETING PRIVATE INVESTMENT LINKS MATERIAL CONSUMER PREFERENCES TRADE POLICY RADIO TRADE POLICIES AUTOMOBILES TRANSACTIONS MANUFACTURING PHONE CONNECTIONS PHONE TECHNOLOGY RD COMMUNICATIONS INFRASTRUCTURE HUMAN CAPITAL VALUE ADDED GROSS MARGIN PROCUREMENT WAGES INTERNATIONAL TRADE INTERNATIONAL INVESTMENT TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT RESULTS VALUE COMPETITIVENESS REGULATORY ENVIRONMENT FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT FOREIGN INVESTMENT DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGES CUSTOM NETWORKS FAX GLOBAL SUPPLY CHAIN GLOBAL SUPPLY CHAINS CONSUMERS AGRICULTURE TARIFF BARRIERS TRADE FACILITATION PRIVATE SECTOR TRADE LIBERALIZATION SUPPLY CHAIN ADMINISTRATION COMPARATIVE ECONOMICS CONSUMER MARKET TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENT RESULT ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT TRADE ICT GDP WWW GOODS THEORY SUPPLY CHAINS SECURITY ECONOMIES OF SCALE TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER BUSINESS INVESTMENT NETWORK TRADITIONAL MARKETS HUMAN RESOURCES COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE PERFORMANCE BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT LOW TARIFF SUPPLY INNOVATION CONSUMER ELECTRONICS COMMUNICATION CUSTOMERS DATABASE CAPITAL INVESTMENT COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY TECHNOLOGIES COMMODITY LESS DEVELOPED COUNTRIES OUTSOURCING TARGET PRICES PRODUCTION COSTS INNOVATIONS ONE-STOP SERVICE PRODUCTION PROCESSES SERVICE PROVIDERS The pattern of global trade in goods has changed substantially over the last two decades with a rapid increase in trade in intermediate inputs, such as parts and components, and a significant increase in the role of services inputs. Indonesia can benefit greatly from increasing its participation in global supply chains. With GDP expected to grow 5-6 percent annually, Indonesia will by 2030 have an additional 90 million middle class consumers, while 70 percent of the population will be of working age. At present, Indonesia is not reaping gains from economic globalization to the fullest extent due to weak integration into global supply chains. Better integration would allow Indonesia to further diversify its economy. To do so, however, Indonesia needs to improve its infrastructure, the business environment and education levels in order to better participate in, and reap the benefits from, global supply chains. 2015-12-23T15:54:48Z 2015-12-23T15:54:48Z 2015-04 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/12/19787611/maximizing-opportunities-global-supply-chains-agenda-reform-policy-note-iv http://hdl.handle.net/10986/23510 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Jakarta Economic & Sector Work :: Policy Note Economic & Sector Work 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 en_US |
topic |
TAX INCENTIVES AUCTION INTERNATIONAL COMPANIES SUPERVISION EQUIPMENT LOW TARIFFS PROTOTYPE PRODUCTION LAGS TELECOMMUNICATION GLOBAL MARKETS MATERIALS BUYER MARKET OPPORTUNITY GOVERNMENT FUNDING CAPABILITY MEDIUM ENTERPRISES VALUE CHAIN CONSUMER GOODS INFORMATION EXPORTS JOINT VENTURE POLITICAL ECONOMY COPYRIGHT INCENTIVES INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT INPUTS JOINT VENTURES OWNERSHIP BANKRUPTCY MARKET ACCESS PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT TRENDS PRODUCTION PROCESS DEVELOPMENT COMMUNICATIONS MACROECONOMIC STABILITY HUMAN RESOURCE LINK HUMAN RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT GLOBAL ECONOMY ELECTRONICS INDUSTRY COSTS TELECOMMUNICATIONS ECONOMIC COOPERATION APPLICATION OF INFORMATION CUSTOMS TARGETS PRODUCTIVITY INDUSTRIALIZATION GLOBALIZATION PRODUCT DESIGN DEBT BUYERS MARKETING PRIVATE INVESTMENT LINKS MATERIAL CONSUMER PREFERENCES TRADE POLICY RADIO TRADE POLICIES AUTOMOBILES TRANSACTIONS MANUFACTURING PHONE CONNECTIONS PHONE TECHNOLOGY RD COMMUNICATIONS INFRASTRUCTURE HUMAN CAPITAL VALUE ADDED GROSS MARGIN PROCUREMENT WAGES INTERNATIONAL TRADE INTERNATIONAL INVESTMENT TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT RESULTS VALUE COMPETITIVENESS REGULATORY ENVIRONMENT FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT FOREIGN INVESTMENT DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGES CUSTOM NETWORKS FAX GLOBAL SUPPLY CHAIN GLOBAL SUPPLY CHAINS CONSUMERS AGRICULTURE TARIFF BARRIERS TRADE FACILITATION PRIVATE SECTOR TRADE LIBERALIZATION SUPPLY CHAIN ADMINISTRATION COMPARATIVE ECONOMICS CONSUMER MARKET TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENT RESULT ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT TRADE ICT GDP WWW GOODS THEORY SUPPLY CHAINS SECURITY ECONOMIES OF SCALE TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER BUSINESS INVESTMENT NETWORK TRADITIONAL MARKETS HUMAN RESOURCES COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE PERFORMANCE BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT LOW TARIFF SUPPLY INNOVATION CONSUMER ELECTRONICS COMMUNICATION CUSTOMERS DATABASE CAPITAL INVESTMENT COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY TECHNOLOGIES COMMODITY LESS DEVELOPED COUNTRIES OUTSOURCING TARGET PRICES PRODUCTION COSTS INNOVATIONS ONE-STOP SERVICE PRODUCTION PROCESSES SERVICE PROVIDERS |
spellingShingle |
TAX INCENTIVES AUCTION INTERNATIONAL COMPANIES SUPERVISION EQUIPMENT LOW TARIFFS PROTOTYPE PRODUCTION LAGS TELECOMMUNICATION GLOBAL MARKETS MATERIALS BUYER MARKET OPPORTUNITY GOVERNMENT FUNDING CAPABILITY MEDIUM ENTERPRISES VALUE CHAIN CONSUMER GOODS INFORMATION EXPORTS JOINT VENTURE POLITICAL ECONOMY COPYRIGHT INCENTIVES INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT INPUTS JOINT VENTURES OWNERSHIP BANKRUPTCY MARKET ACCESS PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT TRENDS PRODUCTION PROCESS DEVELOPMENT COMMUNICATIONS MACROECONOMIC STABILITY HUMAN RESOURCE LINK HUMAN RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT GLOBAL ECONOMY ELECTRONICS INDUSTRY COSTS TELECOMMUNICATIONS ECONOMIC COOPERATION APPLICATION OF INFORMATION CUSTOMS TARGETS PRODUCTIVITY INDUSTRIALIZATION GLOBALIZATION PRODUCT DESIGN DEBT BUYERS MARKETING PRIVATE INVESTMENT LINKS MATERIAL CONSUMER PREFERENCES TRADE POLICY RADIO TRADE POLICIES AUTOMOBILES TRANSACTIONS MANUFACTURING PHONE CONNECTIONS PHONE TECHNOLOGY RD COMMUNICATIONS INFRASTRUCTURE HUMAN CAPITAL VALUE ADDED GROSS MARGIN PROCUREMENT WAGES INTERNATIONAL TRADE INTERNATIONAL INVESTMENT TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT RESULTS VALUE COMPETITIVENESS REGULATORY ENVIRONMENT FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT FOREIGN INVESTMENT DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGES CUSTOM NETWORKS FAX GLOBAL SUPPLY CHAIN GLOBAL SUPPLY CHAINS CONSUMERS AGRICULTURE TARIFF BARRIERS TRADE FACILITATION PRIVATE SECTOR TRADE LIBERALIZATION SUPPLY CHAIN ADMINISTRATION COMPARATIVE ECONOMICS CONSUMER MARKET TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENT RESULT ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT TRADE ICT GDP WWW GOODS THEORY SUPPLY CHAINS SECURITY ECONOMIES OF SCALE TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER BUSINESS INVESTMENT NETWORK TRADITIONAL MARKETS HUMAN RESOURCES COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE PERFORMANCE BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT LOW TARIFF SUPPLY INNOVATION CONSUMER ELECTRONICS COMMUNICATION CUSTOMERS DATABASE CAPITAL INVESTMENT COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY TECHNOLOGIES COMMODITY LESS DEVELOPED COUNTRIES OUTSOURCING TARGET PRICES PRODUCTION COSTS INNOVATIONS ONE-STOP SERVICE PRODUCTION PROCESSES SERVICE PROVIDERS Soejachmoen, Moekti P. Maximizing Opportunities from Global Supply Chains : An Agenda for Reform |
geographic_facet |
East Asia and Pacific Indonesia |
description |
The pattern of global trade in goods has
changed substantially over the last two decades with a rapid
increase in trade in intermediate inputs, such as parts and
components, and a significant increase in the role of
services inputs. Indonesia can benefit greatly from
increasing its participation in global supply chains. With
GDP expected to grow 5-6 percent annually, Indonesia will by
2030 have an additional 90 million middle class consumers,
while 70 percent of the population will be of working age.
At present, Indonesia is not reaping gains from economic
globalization to the fullest extent due to weak integration
into global supply chains. Better integration would allow
Indonesia to further diversify its economy. To do so,
however, Indonesia needs to improve its infrastructure, the
business environment and education levels in order to better
participate in, and reap the benefits from, global supply chains. |
format |
Report |
author |
Soejachmoen, Moekti P. |
author_facet |
Soejachmoen, Moekti P. |
author_sort |
Soejachmoen, Moekti P. |
title |
Maximizing Opportunities from Global Supply Chains : An Agenda for Reform |
title_short |
Maximizing Opportunities from Global Supply Chains : An Agenda for Reform |
title_full |
Maximizing Opportunities from Global Supply Chains : An Agenda for Reform |
title_fullStr |
Maximizing Opportunities from Global Supply Chains : An Agenda for Reform |
title_full_unstemmed |
Maximizing Opportunities from Global Supply Chains : An Agenda for Reform |
title_sort |
maximizing opportunities from global supply chains : an agenda for reform |
publisher |
World Bank, Jakarta |
publishDate |
2015 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/12/19787611/maximizing-opportunities-global-supply-chains-agenda-reform-policy-note-iv http://hdl.handle.net/10986/23510 |
_version_ |
1764454035658637312 |