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Indonesia's new capital: mapping a development boom

Indonesia is building a new capital on Borneo's east coast. The construction of Nusantara aims to spearhead development in the archipelago nation's less developed Kalimantan provinces and relocate the administrative apparatus from the congested megacity of Jakarta. The first civil servants will have moved by the end of this year, four years after the project's inception.

To visualize the scope of this project, we've tapped our granular, sub-regional data to examine investment across Kalimantan.

Nusantara is being built adjacent to Balikpapan, an oil-industry hub that is already Kalimantan's most economically important city; to capture the investment boom, Balikpapan's figures are the ones to watch.

As our graphic shows, Balikpapan's most recent 12-month domestic realized investment figure (that is, spending that has been implemented, not just planned or approved) surpassed IDR 7 trillion (the equivalent of about USD 412 million). That's more than three times the level for second-place Samarinda, also in East Kalimantan. Investment for both cities dwarfs the major settlements for North, West and South Kalimantan respectively (Tarakan, Pontianak and Banjarbaru), which we've also labeled on our map.

Balikpapan Borneos investment hotspot reflects building boom for the new Indonesian capital of Nusantara

We've also added West Java, which includes Jakarta, to give a relative sense of this spending versus Indonesia's traditional economic engine.

We've specified domestic investment in our map because foreign investment on Kalimantan trails behind Java and Sumatra (Sumatera) so far. Our second chart combines the two streams to compare the major islands (again, on a realized investment basis). The economy of Sumatera, the nation's biggest island region by area, benefits from its proximity to major shipping lanes.

Indonesias major islands Even with Jakarta set to lose capital status Java continues to get the lions share of investment

We conclude with two more map views of domestic and foreign investment by province. As we have written before, Central Sulawesi's nickel processing-driven boom stands out in FDI terms; North Maluku has also seen an influx of nickel-driven overseas investment.

 Domestic investment East Kalimantan home to new capital stands out amid weakness elsewhere in Borneo

Foreign investment Kalimantan provinces lag well behind Jakarta West Java and Sulawesis nickel boom

If you are a CEIC user, access the story here.

 If you are not a CEIC client, explore how we can assist you in generating alpha by registering for a trial of our product: https://hubs.la/Q02f5lQh0 

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