President Prabowo calls for inclusive economic model to address inequality

  • Published on 24/06/2025 GMT+7

  • Reading time 3 minutes

  • Author: Julian Isaac

  • Editor: Imanuddin Razak

President Prabowo Subianto has shed light on the root causes of Indonesia's current economic disparity, emphasizing the urgent need for state intervention to ensure more equitable distribution of national wealth.

Addressing the Saint Petersburg International Economic Forum (SPIEF) 2025 in Russia, Prabowo cited that the country’s wealth remains concentrated in the hands of a small elite − less than 1 percent of the population.

He underscored the crucial role of the government in combating poverty, hunger, and safeguarding vulnerable communities. According to Prabowo, proactive state involvement is essential to prevent what he described as "state capture," a condition in which public policies serve only the interests of powerful political and economic actors.

“In developing countries like Indonesia, there is a danger of state capture − collusion between large capital owners, government officials, and political elites. In the end, this collusion does not result in real benefits for poverty eradication or the expansion of the middle class,” Prabowo said in his speech, as broadcast on the Presidential Secretariat’s YouTube channel on Saturday, June 21, 2025.

He reiterated that eradicating corruption within the government is key to advancing development and insisted that the state must prioritize the welfare of the wider population.

“Therefore, we have chosen a philosophy that can be simply summarized in one sentence: the greatest welfare for the greatest number of people. That is our philosophy,” he affirmed.

Prabowo also attributed the nation’s ongoing economic inequality to the adoption of neoliberal and free-market capitalist ideologies by Indonesian elites over the past three decades. He criticized the laissez-faire approach, which minimizes government interference in the economy, as being misaligned with Indonesia’s socio-cultural context.

“One of the major mistakes made by Southeast Asian countries, including Indonesia, was following the laissez-faire philosophy without examining its compatibility with our own character,” he remarked.

He said that while Indonesia has experienced consistent economic growth − averaging 5 percent annually over the past seven years, totaling 35 percent − this growth has not translated into broad-based prosperity.

“As a result, even though we’ve achieved consistent 5 percent growth over the past seven years, we have not succeeded in creating what is known as the trickle-down effect,” he noted.

Prabowo emphasized the need for an economic philosophy rooted in each country's unique culture and history. Indonesia, he cited, is committed to a path that blends the strengths of both socialism and capitalism. While critical of pure capitalism for perpetuating inequality, he acknowledged that values such as innovation, creativity, and initiative − key tenets of capitalism − remain essential to drive economic progress.

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