• Owais Parray
    Owais Parray
    Mr. Owais Parray is the Chief Technical Advisor & Senior Economist currently working for the International Labour Organization (ILO) in Jakarta. Mr. Parray brings over 23 years of experience in international development. He has worked in the former Soviet Union, Africa, and Asia. He has been with the UN System for over 14 years. Before coming to Indonesia, in his last posting, he was the Senior Economic Advisor to the Prime Minister of Timor-Leste. In Indonesia, he worked for over 12 years between 1999 and 2009 and more recently from 2016. His technical expertise includes development economics, employment, and public…
Papers

Road to Industry 4: Policy options for Indonesia in the age of digitalization

2018

Abstraksi

The world is witnessing rapid technological changes affecting the production process and consumption patterns which will determine the future course of economic growth, development, and social welfare. The Fourth Industrial Revolution, a phenomenon that is seeing an interface of technologies will be more disruptive compared to the previous technological developments in the industrial production. In Indonesia the debate on Industry 4 and its impact on future growth and jobs is finally entering the policy discourse. While figures vary, in the race between digitalization and human labour, increasingly low and mid-level skills jobs will be lost . In Indonesia it is estimated that in some sectors more than 60 percent of jobs may be at risk. The paper argues that Indonesia cannot afford to be left behind, and resisting technological change is not the answer. Moving forward the government needs to have clear policy objectives with a single-minded focus on policy execution to turn aspirations into concrete action. Public financing needs to be deployed in a manner that it enables the country to harness technology and laying the foundation for future structural transformation. The paper will draw from a range of resources including literature review and data sets from the national accounts, labour force surveys, and business surveys to understand Indonesia’s challenge to ensure employment gains, its readiness to embrace technology, and then provide a set of policy choices for consideration.

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