Lupa Kata Sandi? Klik di Sini

atau Masuk melalui

Belum Memiliki Akun Daftar di Sini


atau Daftar melalui

Sudah Memiliki Akun Masuk di Sini

Konfirmasi Email

Kami telah mengirimkan link aktivasi melalui email ke rudihamdani@gmail.com.

Klik link aktivasi dan dapatkan akses membaca 2 artikel gratis non Laput di koran dan Majalah Tempo

Jika Anda tidak menerima email,
Kirimkan Lagi Sekarang

Poor Regulations and the Collapse of the Textile Industry

Translator

TEMPO

Editor

Laila Afifa

19 July 2024 07:09 WIB

TEMPO.CO, JakartaThere is another wave of layoffs in the textile industry. This is the result of poor coordination between ministries when drawing up regulations.

THE collapse in the domestic textile industry resulting in a wave of layoffs is the result of disarray in government regulations. Without comprehensive improvements, other industry sectors could suffer the same fate.

These mass layoffs have occurred in the textile industry as well as in its derivative products sector. According to the Nusantara Confederation of Labor Unions, 50,000 people have been laid off in the textile industry. Most recently, 11,000 workers from six companies were made redundant. Constant changes to import policies are blamed for these job losses.

Case in point, the Trade Ministry Regulation on Import Policy has been changed three times. Initially, it was Regulation No. 36/3023, then No. 3/3024, then No. 7/3024, and finally No. 8/3024. These changes happened at intervals of only three months. This is a sign of the lack of coordination between ministries, the failure to accommodate the aspirations of the people and the government’s inability to determine priorities.

Trade Ministry Regulation No. 36/2023 was changed because it was opposed by many industries as it caused problems obtaining raw chemical materials. Regulation No. 3/2024 then appeared to accommodate this, but in turn triggered protests from people returning from overseas as well as migrant workers. Then Regulation No. 7/2024 met with more protests from importers because it made it difficult to import goods. Now, Ministry Regulation No. 8/2024 has been condemned by the textile and derivative products sectors because it has led to a flood of imported clothes.

One fatal article in Regulation No. 8/2024 is the removal of technical considerations for clothing imports. Importers are now free to import ready-made clothes from overseas by simply providing an import plan for one year. There are no longer any requirements relating to warehouse capacity, sales, or capital.

The lack of clarity in this regulation has led to a decline in operational activities in factories. According to the Indonesia Textile Association, utilization of textile and clothing factories is now down to less than 60 percent of capacity. Worst affected is the demand for yarn, which is down to only 40 percent.

Given this state of affairs, the government should have sounded the alarm bell. There is something amiss with our textile industry. If other countries such as China can export garments using dumping practices, the government should have anticipated this by imposing anti-dumping import duties and security measures. It turns out that the anti-dumping duty regulation for fabric has not been extended, even though this was requested by the industry back in 2022.

The government can't make everybody happy when drawing up policy. But the government could minimize the pain by prioritizing particular industry sectors that employ large numbers of labor. For example, the textile and textile products industry—along with the food and beverage sector—employs 3.6 million full-time workers.

Jokowi’s government has to start making improvements to these chaotic import regulations. Without swift action, the government will be creating a time bomb that could wreck the national economy.

Read the Complete Story in Tempo English Magazine



The General's Role in Tin Corruption

1 hari lalu

The General's Role in Tin Corruption

The name of Brig. Gen. Mukti Juharsa is implicated in the tin corruption case. The Attorney General's Office must not be soft and slow.


Police Brutality Against Demonstrators

3 hari lalu

Police Brutality Against Demonstrators

The police continue to resort to brutality to silence demonstrators. This is a violation of human rights.


Returning Politics to the People

4 hari lalu

Returning Politics to the People

The Constitutional Court returns politics to the people. But voters will once again be spectators of a banal political circus.


The Inevitable Transition to Nuclear Energy

8 hari lalu

The Inevitable Transition to Nuclear Energy

The transition to nuclear energy must be accelerated to meet the ever-increasing demand for electricity. It is more environmentally friendly.


The Last Dance from Jokowi

10 hari lalu

The Last Dance from Jokowi

Jokowi reshuffles his cabinet two months before the end of his administration. This is only to serve his own political interests.


Hope in Prabowo's 2025 State Budget

11 hari lalu

Hope in Prabowo's 2025 State Budget

The 2025 State Budget's Financial Note illustrates Prabowo Subianto's financial policies. There is hope for economic improvements.


The Meaning of M.H. Thamrin's Resistance

18 hari lalu

The Meaning of M.H. Thamrin's Resistance

Mohammad Hoesni Thamrin put the interests of the people above everything. He fought hard for our independence.


Paying Off Our Mangrove

23 hari lalu

Paying Off Our Mangrove

The working period of the Peatland and Mangrove Rehabilitation Agency should be extended to rehabilitate the severely damaged mangrove forests.


Clueless Online Gambling Task Force

23 hari lalu

Clueless Online Gambling Task Force

The work and strategies of the Online Gambling Task Force lack clear direction. It should be focusing on the gambling bosses.


Blocking Anies Baswedan in the Jakarta Election

24 hari lalu

Blocking Anies Baswedan in the Jakarta Election

The opportunity for Anies Baswedan to contest the Jakarta gubernatorial election is slipping away after the coalition of parties supporting him fell a