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Indonesia to offer tax holiday to companies investing in new capital

    • A flag-raising ceremony at ground zero of Indonesia's future capital in Sepaku, Penajam Paser Utara, East Kalimantan on Aug 17, 2022, on the country's 77th Independence Day.
    • A flag-raising ceremony at ground zero of Indonesia's future capital in Sepaku, Penajam Paser Utara, East Kalimantan on Aug 17, 2022, on the country's 77th Independence Day. PHOTO: AFP
    Published Wed, Oct 19, 2022 · 10:37 AM

    INDONESIA will offer generous incentives, including a 30-year tax break, for companies investing in a US$32 billion project to build a new capital city Nusantara, said a government official late on Tuesday (Oct 18).

    Bambang Susantono, head of the Nusantara National Capital Authority, made the comments at a gathering with hundreds of local and foreign investors in the current capital Jakarta.

    Construction of a dam and roads has started at the site of the new capital, he said, currently an underdeveloped area fringed by Borneo’s vast rainforest.

    As many as 100,000 construction workers will accelerate work next year in an effort to get the site ready by Aug 17, 2024, when President Joko Widodo hopes to celebrate Indonesia’s independence day at a new presidential palace, said Susantono.

    He asked those present at the gathering to consider investing in areas such as healthcare, education and entertainment in the new capital, promising that regulations on fiscal incentives would be released soon.

    The incentives include an a tax holiday of up to 30 years and a 350 per cent “super-tax deduction” for research and development. These are more generous tax concessions than for investments in other Indonesian cities, he said.

    “This is a lifetime opportunity...to build this city,” he said, adding the government will form a business entity to speed up deal-making with the private sector. At the gathering, which was also attended by Widodo, an executive with Indonesian hospital operator PT Medikaloka Hermina pledged to invest in Nusantara. In his speech, the president, better known as Jokowi, sought to ease concerns about the future of Nusantara after his second term ends in 2024. Jokowi is constitutionally barred from seeking a third term in office and there have been questions about whether his successor will back the project, which some have criticised as profligate spending during difficult economic times. “Everything has been approved by 93 per cent of parties in parliament. If any one of you is still unsure, what else is missing? There’s no need to question anymore,” Jokowi told investors. A June survey of 170 experts by the Indonesian Centre for Strategic and International Studies found that nearly 59 per cent were unsure the Nusantara project would materialise, citing uncertainties over funding and management. REUTERS

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