[eBook]Batam After Covid: Cross-Border Business as Usual?

[eBook]Batam After Covid: Cross-Border Business as Usual?

Siwage Dharma Negara ; Francis E Hutchinson

Format: eBook-DRM

ISBN: 9789815361315

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  • Originally established to capture investment spillovers from Singapore, the neighbouring island of Batam has grown into one of Indonesia’s key manufacturing-for-export hubs.
  • Over the past thirty years, Batam’s economy has undergone a structural transformation, and it now houses clusters of electrical and electronics firms, large-scale shipyards, and a wide array of tourism and business travel operators. • Involvement by the central government in Batam’s economic management has undeniably aided this rapid development. But it has also entailed some complications, such as frequent leadership changes, overlapping incentive regimes, and competition between central and local government agencies.
  • The last few years have tested Batam’s economic model. Its electronics and shipbuilding sectors have been through deep slumps, and the Covid pandemic eviscerated its tourism industry. These challenges coincided with a period of rapid leadership changes in key agencies, but little attention was being paid to the island’s underlying challenges.
  • Of late, Batam’s economy has recovered its élan. This is the result of rekindled interest from investors in the machinery and electronics sector; burgeoning investment from Singapore-based firms; a new inflow of capital from China; and an unprecedented surge in domestic investment, particularly in the real estate and industrial park sectors.
  • In recent years, policymakers have acted decisively to tackle pending issues. Bureaucratic overlap has been reduced, the island’s port facilities have been upgraded, and special economic zones have been developed that promote new sectors such as healthcare and digital services.
  • Nonetheless, challenges remain. Investors into the island are walled off from selling on Indonesia’s large domestic market, and logistics linkages between Batam and major local ports are limited. Furthermore, some reforms in the pipeline could generate short-term pain. And, despite Indonesia’s large population, skilled labour remains in short supply.
  • Although it is kicking into higher gear, uncertainty arising from the ever-changing tariff landscape as well as competition from the newly launched Johor-Singapore Special Economic Zone mean that Batam’s outward-focussed model will continue to be tested.
This book is on the press and will be available for purchase from 22 December 2025.

Format: Ebook

Number of Pages: 52

Publication Date: 02/12/2025

Imprint: ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute

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