29th December 2013, 16:34
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Banned
Join Date: Jun 2013
Posts: 2,503
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The Economist: Jokowi Sosok Tepat untuk Bangkitkan Indonesia
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The Economist: Jokowi Sosok Tepat untuk Bangkitkan Indonesia
SINGAPURA, Majalah ternama The Economist memberikan prediksi dan gambaran politik dan ekonomi dunia tahun 2014. Nama Gubernur DKI Jakarta Joko Widodo digadang-gadang sebagai sosok yang akan memimpin Indonesia tahun depan.
The Economist menuliskan Joko Widodo sebagai front-runner. Ia dikatakan mungkin akan mendeklarasikan pencapresannya pada Mei 2014. Jokowi diyakini dapat membangkitkan kembali Indonesia sekaligus mengejar target yang gagal dicapai pemerintahan Presiden Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono.
The Economist menjelaskan rekam jejaknya yang sukses sebagai Wali Kota Solo dan Gubernur DKI Jakarta. Ia disebut memiliki kepemimpinan yang tegas, kebijakan inovatif, dan transparansi pemerintahan. Jokowi juga dinilai mewakili generasi kepemimpinan yang baru, tidak terikat dengan Orde Baru, militer, maupun dinasti politik.
Berusia relatif muda (52 tahun), pencinta musik metal ini juga sangat populer di kalangan generasi muda yang mewakili 106 dari 180 juta pemilih. Pertanyaan besar adalah apakah Ketua Umum PDI Perjuangan Megawati Soekarnoputri dapat dibujuk untuk mengizinkan pencapresan Jokowi. Jika jawabannya iya, akan menjadi kejutan jika Joko Widodo tidak disumpah sebagai presiden pada 20 Oktober 2014.
Kritik Pemerintahan SBY
Perekonomian Indonesia menikmati stabilitas dalam beberapa tahun terakhir. Presiden Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono membawa Indonesia melewati krisis ekonomi global 2008. Angka pertumbuhan GDP stabil di atas 6 persen. Ekonomi bergairah didorong permintaan yang tinggi akan minyak, batubara, mineral dari China dan India.
Namun, semua berubah di tahun 2013. Nilai kurs Rupiah terperosok hingga Rp 12.000 per dollar AS. Indeks saham Bursa Efek Jakarta anjlok drastis. Inflasi meroket ditambah dengan defisit anggaran. Target pertumbuhan ekonomi 6,3 persen yang dicanangkan hampir pasti tidak akan terpenuhi.
The Economist menguraikan, hal yang paling disesalkan dari pemerintahan SBY adalah kegagalan mengatasi persoalan klasik mendasar. Infrastruktur tetap bermasalah. Korupsi merajalela di mana-mana. Mentalitas birokrat yang suka bermalas-malasan tidak kunjung berubah. Tidak ketinggalan, desentralisasi yang semrawut di daerah. Investor cemas ekonomi Indonesia akan kesulitan bangkit kembali.
SUMBER.....
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Media asing memberikan tanggapan kalo Jokowi tokoh yang pantas memimpin Indonesia 5 tahun mendatang, dan dapat membawa Indonesia ke arah yang lebih baik, ok!!!!!
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29th December 2013, 16:48
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Banned
Join Date: Nov 2013
Location: Indonesia
Posts: 178
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Amankan JOKOWI untuk tetap jadi gubernur di JAKARTA!
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29th December 2013, 17:20
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Registered Member
Join Date: Dec 2013
Posts: 55
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jangan jangan pernyataan seseid yang bilang ada pemodal besar dibalik jokowi ada benarnya. ini ngapain the economist pake ikutan kipas kipas segala? emang udah ada bukti keberhasilan jokowi dibidang ekonomi
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29th December 2013, 17:22
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Banned
Join Date: Dec 2013
Posts: 62
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The Economist menuliskan Joko Widodo sebagai front-runner. Ia dikatakan mungkin akan mendeklarasikan pencapresannya pada Mei 2014. Jokowi diyakini dapat membangkitkan kembali Indonesia sekaligus mengejar target yang gagal dicapai pemerintahan Presiden Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono.
xem sex
The Economist menjelaskan rekam jejaknya yang sukses sebagai Wali Kota Solo dan Gubernur DKI Jakarta. Ia disebut memiliki kepemimpinan yang tegas, kebijakan inovatif, dan transparansi pemerintahan. Jokowi juga dinilai mewakili generasi kepemimpinan yang baru, tidak terikat dengan Orde Baru, militer, maupun dinasti politik. xem sex
Berusia relatif muda (52 tahun), pencinta musik metal ini juga sangat populer di kalangan generasi muda yang mewakili 106 dari 180 juta pemilih. Pertanyaan besar adalah apakah Ketua Umum PDI Perjuangan Megawati Soekarnoputri dapat dibujuk untuk mengizinkan pencapresan Jokowi. Jika jawabannya iya, akan menjadi kejutan jika Joko Widodo tidak disumpah sebagai presiden pada 20 Oktober 2014.
sms nam moi
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29th December 2013, 17:45
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Banned
Join Date: Nov 2007
Posts: 13,214
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ns1tbx
The Economist menuliskan Joko Widodo sebagai front-runner. Ia dikatakan mungkin akan mendeklarasikan pencapresannya pada Mei 2014. Jokowi diyakini dapat membangkitkan kembali Indonesia sekaligus mengejar target yang gagal dicapai pemerintahan Presiden Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono.
xem sex
The Economist menjelaskan rekam jejaknya yang sukses sebagai Wali Kota Solo dan Gubernur DKI Jakarta. Ia disebut memiliki kepemimpinan yang tegas, kebijakan inovatif, dan transparansi pemerintahan. Jokowi juga dinilai mewakili generasi kepemimpinan yang baru, tidak terikat dengan Orde Baru, militer, maupun dinasti politik. xem sex
Berusia relatif muda (52 tahun), pencinta musik metal ini juga sangat populer di kalangan generasi muda yang mewakili 106 dari 180 juta pemilih. Pertanyaan besar adalah apakah Ketua Umum PDI Perjuangan Megawati Soekarnoputri dapat dibujuk untuk mengizinkan pencapresan Jokowi. Jika jawabannya iya, akan menjadi kejutan jika Joko Widodo tidak disumpah sebagai presiden pada 20 Oktober 2014.
sms nam moi
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Indonesia di bawah presiden Jokowi akan banyak memecahkan masalah-masalah yang selama ini mengambang saja.
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29th December 2013, 18:41
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Banned
Join Date: Nov 2007
Posts: 13,214
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Quote:
Originally Posted by nobartv.com
Amankan JOKOWI untuk tetap jadi gubernur di JAKARTA!
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Lebih penting Indonesia daripd hanya Jakarta doang !
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29th December 2013, 19:02
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Addict Member
Join Date: Oct 2013
Posts: 689
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Buweeeuuuh. The Economist, loh, yang bilang. THE ECONOMIST. Bukan media sampah macem Daily Mail.
Quote:
Indonesia’s 2014 elections
Let the games begin
As parties search for a presidential candidate, ordinary Indonesians think only Jokowi (pictured) has the right stuff
Sep 7th 2013 | JAKARTA | From the print edition
THESE days few Indonesians pay much attention to Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono. The president cuts a forlorn figure: he still has just over a year left in office, but steady underachievement during his two terms has so diminished him that politicians long ago turned to the more exciting matter of his successor. Next year the presidential election takes place in July, after parliamentary elections in April. After months of shadow-boxing, the contest to succeed Mr Yudhoyono is set to become more lively.
Some parties have already nominated their presidential candidate. The nominations of the two most prominent candidates, Prabowo Subianto and Aburizal Bakrie, were foregone conclusions. Mr Subianto, after all, heads the party he founded, Gerindra; Mr Bakrie, a dominant businessman, is both chairman of the Golkar party and a chief financier of it. Both are well-known. Mr Subianto is a former special-forces commander who contested the vice-presidency in 2009.
By contrast, Mr Yudhoyono’s ruling Democrat Party (DP) says it will spice up the race by using a novel process to choose its candidate: throwing the choice open to the public. The party’s “high council”, chaired by the outgoing president, has selected ten-odd candidates, many of them senior party members and ministers. But the DP has also set up another committee, made up entirely of non-party members, among them an academic and a former head of the anti-corruption agency. Its job is to find other possible contenders from outside the party. Their names will be added to those from the high council in mid-September, after which each candidate’s suitability will be tested in opinion polls over eight months. The winner will be named after the parliamentary elections.
An inside job?
It sounds good, but for all the appearance of consultation, some claim that Mr Yudhoyono has already stitched up the nomination, just as the other parties do. He has parachuted the recently retired head of the army, Pramono Edhie Wibowo, into the top echelons of the DP and put him on the list of the high council’s candidates. Mr Wibowo happens to be the brother-in-law of the president, who presumably favours him. In recent days several who were invited to join the list of possible independent candidates, including a former chief justice of the constitutional court, have withdrawn. They cite doubts about the integrity of the process.
Effendi Gazali, an academic and anti-corruption activist and one of those on the independent committee, insists that the DP’s new process is “competitive and open” and “good for Indonesia’s political education”. Certainly, it cannot harm the party. After a string of corruption scandals involving party officials and ministers, its level of support in opinion polls has fallen to single digits.
One person who has already rejected the DP’s overtures to put his name in its hat is Joko Widodo, usually known by his nickname Jokowi. In polls Jokowi, the 52-year-old governor since last year of Jakarta, the capital, is by a wide margin the favourite choice as the next president. Younger Indonesians in particular like his more informal style.
Compared with the staid old ways of carrying on politics, exemplified by Mr Subianto and Mr Bakrie, Jokowi offers a fresh approach. He has a good record from a seven-year stint as mayor of the city of Solo, in central Java. Mr Yudhoyono’s government has abjectly failed to deal with many of the country’s problems, especially its endemic corruption and lousy infrastructure. Jokowi, the argument goes, could be just the man to inject much-needed drive and clarity into Indonesia’s lumbering governmental system.
One problem, however, is that he is not a formal candidate. He insists that he needs to concentrate on running Jakarta, a big enough job in itself. Yet pressure on him to run will mount, not least from within his own party, the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle, led by Megawati Sukarnoputri, the daughter of Indonesia’s first president and herself president from 2001 to 2004. Though she may have abiding ambitions to take the presidency again, Jokowi’s popularity means that she is likely to give way to him. And since coalitions are usual, her party may yet team up with the DP. That is for the future, but it is exactly the sort of speculation that will shove Mr Yudhoyono deeper into the shade in the coming months.
From the print edition: Asia
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Sumber: http://www.economist.com/news/asia/2...okowi-pictured
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Asia
Jokowi’s the man
A new president, representing a new generation, could reinvigorate Indonesia
Nov 18th 2013 | JAKARTA | From The World In 2014 print edition
Yes he can
By any standard, South-East Asia’s biggest country has enjoyed a great run. With GDP growth at over 6% a year since 2007—apart from a small dip in 2009—Indonesia’s economy has purred along, fuelled by the voracious appetite of China and India for the country’s reserves of oil, coal, copper and other minerals, as well as a consumer boom. The country barely paused for breath after the 2007-08 world financial crash. The only question anyone seemed to ask was why Indonesia, a country of 250m people, was never included as a second “I” in the BRICs.
In 2013, however, the shine came off. The stock-market tumbled (by over 20% just between June and August), the currency slipped, inflation rose and after years of surplus a yawning current-account deficit opened up. The government’s 2013 growth target of 6.3% will be missed.
In part, investors have been getting out of Indonesia for the same reason that they have been fleeing other emerging markets: in anticipation of an easing of the United States Federal Reserve’s programme of quantitative easing. But Indonesia is also being punished for reasons that are specific to the country. President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, who will end his second term in 2014, has lamentably failed to grapple with all the old problems of awful infrastructure, foot-dragging bureaucrats, rampant corruption and ill-organised political decentralisation. When the going was good, such negligence seemed not to matter. Now, with a fall in commodity prices and the prospect of an end to cheap money, Indonesia’s failure to revamp its economy is laid bare. Investors have little confidence that it can find new sources of growth.
Indonesians have an opportunity to reboot the country
But in 2014 the Indonesians have an opportunity to reboot their country. Parliamentary elections are due in April, followed by a presidential election in July. Most of the likely presidential candidates inspire little confidence, at home or abroad. They are throwbacks to the era of President Suharto, deposed in a popular uprising in 1998, and they all have strong ties (often familial) to the ruling elites. Prabowo Subianto, leader of his own party, Gerindra, for example, headed the army special forces under Suharto and was married to the president’s daughter. The clear front-runner, however, is unlikely to declare himself until May, or even June: Joko Widodo, since 2012 the governor of the capital, Jakarta.
2014 IN BRIEF: South Korea’s government completes its move from Seoul to Sejong, a new administrative capital city
Mr Joko, known to all by his nickname Jokowi, could be the man to give Indonesia a new sense of purpose after the years of drift and missed opportunities under the dithering Mr Yudhoyono. Jokowi, by contrast, has been lauded for his “decisiveness” in his running of the central Javanese city of Solo, during which he pushed through innovative policies. And in a land of often pompous, corrupt politicians, Jokowi has an open style—posting recordings of his meetings with city officials and residents on YouTube, for instance.
He also represents a clear break from the Suharto generation. He is relatively young (52), and he doesn’t come from the army or a political dynasty. All this makes him popular with younger voters, who are the bulk of the electorate. If only the leader of Jokowi’s party, Megawati Sukarnoputri, a former president herself from 2001 to 2004 but then twice defeated by Mr Yudhoyono, could be persuaded to step aside and give Jokowi a clear run, it would be his race to lose.
Richard Cockett: South-East Asia correspondent, The Economist
From The World In 2014 print edition
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Sumber: http://www.economist.com/news/215891...ia-jokowis-man
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Last edited by jeungnoir; 29th December 2013 at 19:07..
Reason: Formatting standar innernesyenel, biar rapi kayak The Economist versi cetak. PAHAM?!
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29th December 2013, 19:06
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Addict Member
Join Date: Sep 2013
Posts: 504
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Quote:
Originally Posted by nobartv.com
Amankan JOKOWI untuk tetap jadi gubernur di JAKARTA!
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Kalau saya membacanya, isolasi Jokowi di Jakarta, jadi dinasti-dinasti di daerah dan senayan tetap aman sentosa 5 tahun lagi...
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29th December 2013, 20:12
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Banned
Join Date: Jun 2013
Posts: 2,503
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Quote:
Originally Posted by nobartv.com
Amankan JOKOWI untuk tetap jadi gubernur di JAKARTA!
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jadi jokowi enggak boleh nyapres!!!!
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29th December 2013, 20:14
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Addict Member
Join Date: Dec 2013
Posts: 244
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Quote:
Originally Posted by LindangAdi
Lebih penting Indonesia daripd hanya Jakarta doang !
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Masalah di Jakarta sama rencana yg digadang2 Jokowi loh, belum kelar semua, kok tiba2 jadi Presiden
Solo ditinggal, apa Jakarta juga iya?
Quote:
Originally Posted by eliseba
jangan jangan pernyataan seseid yang bilang ada pemodal besar dibalik jokowi ada benarnya. ini ngapain the economist pake ikutan kipas kipas segala? emang udah ada bukti keberhasilan jokowi dibidang ekonomi
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kagak tahu dah itu berita asli ato brita bayaran positif thinking aja
tapi, setiap hal punya waktunya, kalo salah waktu, pasti gagal
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detikNews
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