Vision
The realization of an Indonesia that is prosperous, democratic, and just.
Mission
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To continue with the development towards a prosperous Indonesia.
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To strengthen the pillars of democracy.
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To strengthen the justice dimension in all fields.
The vision and mission of the 2009-2014 government are formulated and elaborated more operationally into a number of priority action programmes, in order to make them easier to implement and quantify the level of success achieved. The following Eleven Programme of Action is deemed capable of answering a number of challenges faced by the nation and state in the future.
1st Priority: Programme of Action in the Education Sector
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To continue and make effective the school building rehabilitation programmes that have been initiated in the period of 2004-2009, so that adequate and qualified facilities could be built by improving and augmenting the physical infrastructure of schools, as well as the use of informatics technology in the teaching process that will support learning and teaching processes to be more effective and qualified.
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The utilization of the budget allocation of at least 20 percent of the state budget to ensure the consolidation of free and affordable education for the nine-year basic education, and that will be gradually followed at a higher level of education at the high school level.
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The improvement, in a fundamental manner, of the curriculum quality and of the provision of good quality books to enhance the intelligence of the students and shape their character to become beings who are faithful, knowledgeable, creative, innovative, honest, dedicated, responsible, and hardworking.
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To continue enhancing the quality of teachers, lecturers and researchers in order to become pillars of education who are able to sharpen the intelligence of the nation, capable of creating an innovative environment, and able to transmit an intellectual mindset that is of high degree, qualified, and ever growing to their students.
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To revise the remuneration of teachers and continue efforts to improve the income of teachers, lecturers and researchers.
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To widen the areas of application of the progress in Information and Communication Technology (ICT) in order to support the performance in the conduct of development in the field of education.
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To encourage community participation (especially the parents of students) in making policies and in the implementation of quality education and in accordance with the aspirations and challenges of the current era and in the future.
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To reduce gaps in access to education and quality education, both for low income households and disadvantaged regions.
2nd Priority: Programme of Action in the Health Sector
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To refine and strengthen the administering of the public health insurance programme both in terms of the quality of service, access to services, accountability of budgets, and transparent and clean administrative arrangements.
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To encourage efforts to manufacture affordable drugs and other pharmaceutical products without sacrificing the quality and safety aspects of the drugs as carried out during the last three years.
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To facilitate the construction of clinics or hospitals of international quality either through the professionalisation of the management of public hospitals as well as by encouraging the growth of private hospitals.
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To improve the quality of services for mothers and children under the age of five years by strengthening existing programs such as the Integrated Service Posts (Posyandu) that enable the immunization and mass vaccination such as against Diphteria, Pertussis, and Tetanus to be administered effectively.
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To reduce maternal mortality rates, and prevent the spread of communicable diseases like HIV / AIDS, malaria, and tuberculosis.
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To reduce the malnutrition prevalence rate to below 15 percent in 2014 from the latest level of approximately 18 percent.
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The revitalization of the family planning program, which was restarted in the 2005 - 2009 period, will be continued and strengthened.
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The efforts to make progress in the health sector cannot be achieved if the welfare and incentive system for medical and paramedical personnel, especially those assigned to remote areas, are not adequate.
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To improve the mastery of science and technology in the health sector, particularly those aimed at reducing dependence on imported raw materials in the process of drug production.
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To improve the quality of services and practice of medicine in accordance with the ethics and to safeguard the interests, and protection, of the ordinary people from the malpractices of physicians and irresponsible hospitals.
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To develop early warning systems for disseminating information on the outbreak of diseases and how to avoid them in order to prevent panic and casualties.
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The evacuation, treatment, and medication of the population at the natural disaster affected areas.
3rd Priority: Programme of Action for Poverty Reduction
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To continue, improve and perfect the implementation of the National Programme for Community Empowerment (PNPM) Mandiri as the core of the poverty reduction programs, which have been initiated since 2007, by expanding the number of districts covered in the PNPM and by continuously increasing the fund allocation for each district in accordance with its performance.
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To continue the mainstreaming of all existing programs for poverty reduction in the ministries and agencies as PNPM supporting programs.
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The improvement of the Direct Cash Assistance Programme (BLT) by updating the target household data. The target household data will be integrated into all the affirmation and subsidy programs so that various duplications or leakages can be avoided.
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The provision of cheap rice for poor families to ensure food security.
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The development of multilayered programmes for the poor people that are conducted intensively, among others: the Public Health Insurance/Jamkesmas, School Operational Support/BOS, Aspiring Family Program/PKH, Direct Cash Assistance/BLT, National Program for Community Empowerment/PNPM, and Rice for the Poor People/Raskin programs.
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Advocation to Small and Medium Enterprises and Cooperatives, among others, by granting the People's Business Credit to provide capital access for low-income communities.
4th Priority: Programme of Action in Employment Creation
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The enhancement of the quality of workers either from the perspective of the received wages, or the productivity and standard of qualification in order to be able to heighten the increase of opportunities in the formal sector, and reduce the number of open youth unemployment.
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The increase of investment through improved investment climate both at the central and regional levels, so that new employment opportunities can be created.
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To conduct reforms at the micro-economic level, among others the improvement of the business climate and the advocation to the improvement of business opportunities for the small and medium business sector as a pillar of Indonesian labor absorber, conducted through sectoral policies and cooperation with local governments.
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Building the physical infrastructure that can facilitate the traffic flow of goods and information, and to encourage industrialization programmes that could attract spin-off industries (Domestic Investment, FDI, and global companies) to invest in Indonesia.
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To expand domestic demand outside the consumer goods, and also exploit the regional market.
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To expand and enhance the creative and tourism industries as very large potential sources of Indonesia's economy.
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The development of special economic zones such as in Batam, Bintan, Karimun, Suramadu, Sabang and various other special zones.
5th Priority: Programme of Action on Basic Infrastructure Development
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To continue the implementation of the dual track strategy in infrastructure development, which is expanding the opportunity for the public (both national and foreign private sectors) to participate in a transparent, fair, free from group interests, clean, and competitive manner in the construction and operation of infrastructure activities.
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To ensure public access to services in infrastructure activities, the government shall maintain a fair regulatory function for every actor and consumer.
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In order to support the participation of the private sector and state-owned enterprises in infrastructure development, the government can issue the risk guarantee policy on a selective manner based on objective, sound, measured, transparent, fair and accountable criteria.
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The provision of services and access to clean water at affordable prices to all the society, especially low-income people.
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To unbundle infrastructure development in which the government shall bear the construction of basic infrastructure, while business entities shall bear the construction of commercial ones for various critical infrastructures in the regions.
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To increase budget allocation for infrastructure development which usage will be prioritized for the development of basic infrastructure that are non-commercial in nature.
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To improve broadband telecommunications development in order to shorten the physical distance mindful of Indonesia's condition as an archipelagic state.
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In order to overcome the natural disasters of floods in various areas, the management of rivers and water catchment areas will continue to be carried out, inter alia through the development of the Bengawan Solo River Basin, and the Jakarta Flood Canal.
6th Priority: Programme of Action in Food Security
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To improve agricultural infrastructure by increasing the budget in the apportionment for the construction and rehabilitation of irrigation, drainage, highways, railways, and ports that connect food production areas to market destinations.
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To improve the quality of inputs either with the support of research and development of top-grade seeds, and counseling on the precise and accurate use of seeds with manageable risks.
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To improve the supply and fertilizer subsidy policies, in order to avoid shortages, smuggling, and use of subsidized fertilizers by unintended parties.
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Improvement of the distribution and logistics systems, including warehousing, in an integrated manner, taking into account the supply chain in order to reduce price volatility and seasonal supply of the main food commodities.
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To strengthen and empower farmers, fishermen, fish pond farmers, and maintain the purchasing power and exchange rates of farmers by maintaining the stability of commodity prices that could provide benefits to the farmers but not burden low-income consumers.
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To improve the mastery of science and technology to enhance the bargaining power and competitive advantage of the agricultural sector in regional and world markets, especially in predominant and largest commodities in Asia and the world such as CPO, cinnamon, and others.
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Implement policies on the development of downstream agricultural industries through the creation of a conducive investment climate and if necessary provide fiscal incentives for their development.
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Provision of transparent information about market prices of crops that accurate and up to date for farmers and fishermen, the price and availability of fertilizer, weather and the outbreak early warning so that farmers can be more intelligent in determining actions.
7th Priority: Resistance and Energy Independence
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Encourage diversification of domestic energy usage to natural gas and coal. This program will reduce the additional pressure on the demand for petroleum energy sources.
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Action programs increase energy independence will be conducted between the mastery of integrative energy technology, infrastructure development, pricing policies, and incentives in it.
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Increase the attractiveness and investment certainty for exploration and production in mining and energy to increase production and productivity of the energy sector.
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Improve transparency, governance, and eliminate corruption and inefficiency costs in the upstream energy sector.
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Enhance fair competition and transparency in the downstream energy sector, in order to achieve good service and prices are reasonable and affordable for the public.
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Implement development policies and the use of renewable energy (renewable energy) that is consistent and in accordance with the participation and responsibility of Indonesia in the global agenda to prevent deterioration of the world's climate (climate change) and strengthen the resilience of national energy.
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Increasing research activities of energy sector to generate new sources of non-conventional energy, improve energy efficiency and decrease carbon emissions.
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Increasing energy efficiency to boost the economy, peningakatan welfare and improve competitiveness.
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Increased diversification, distribution and access to energy so that each of the Indonesian people are able to obtain energy according to the needs and capabilities of purchasing power.
8th Priority: Improvement and Implementation of Good Governance
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Continuing reform of the bureaucracy in government institutions gradually, measured and maintained the quality of its performance and public accountability.
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Regulatory improvement program involving recruitment, career development in a transparent, accountable and based on merit (merit based), and the rules of discipline and dismissal of civil servants.
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Improving performance by improving work procedures (business process), the use of technology to increase speed and accuracy of services, and reorganize the organizational structure to more efficiently and effectively in fulfilling its public service, regulation, supervision and enforcement of rules.
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Fix the remuneration that reflects the growing risks, responsibilities, workloads are realistic and balanced.
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Improve the system and retirement benefits to reflect the benefits of human achievement but still can be met by the ability of the budget.
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Supervise the performance and impact of reforms, including combating corruption and implementing strict discipline and punishment for violation of oath of office, rules, discipline and work ethics bureaucracy.
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Increasing transparency and accountability of government services with the formulation of minimum service standards and monitoring their implementation known to the community by the community.
9th Priority: Enforcement Pillars of Democracy
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Reorganize the executive and legislative relations so that they can perform the function of legislation, oversight and budgetary functions of an effective and balanced and formed a system which can be launched in a dignified purpose of the state.
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Improving regulations and Up Election and Election, in order to achieve an honest election, fair, and can prevent citizens who lost the right to participate in elections.
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Improve the administration, budgeting, transparency and accountability in the implementation of elections in order to create certainty and efficiency of institutions administering the election without sacrificing the quality of elections.
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Developing the substance of democracy, namely the essential values such as freedom, law enforcement, justice and sense of responsibility.
10th Priority: Law Enforcement Corruption
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Improving law enforcement.
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Strengthen the performance and supervision of police and prosecutors through the police and judiciary reform, improved police performance and prosecutors in the region, both through the program a quick win or a thorough and comprehensive structural repairs to the police and judiciary.
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Review and improve regulations concerning law enforcement, including
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Setting the rights of the police, reporting regulations, and rules of law enforcement services.
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Support the improvement of administration and budget in the Supreme Court and courts below.
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Prevention and repression of corruption consistently and without selective logging.
11th Priority: Inclusive and Equitable Development
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Strengthening the micro, small and medium enterprises to expand credit access for SMEs, including and especially through the People's Business Credit (KUR), the creation and education for entrepreneurs (entrepreneurs) in the rate of new small and medium enterprises in rural areas, supporting innovation and creativity of the community and employers in creating a product, package, market and maintain continuity in healthy competition.
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Reduce regional disparities by conducting continuous improvement of the regions of the budget transfer policy through the General Allocation Fund (DAU), Profit Sharing Fund (DBH), the Special Allocation Fund (DAK), and the Special Autonomy Fund (autonomy).
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Accelerating the development of lagging regions and the outer border and remote areas with adequate budgetary provision for infrastructure development and the outermost checkpoint.
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Reducing the gender gap by improving the policy bias to women and gender mainstreaming in development strategies.
12th Priority: Field Environment Sector
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Fix the damaged environment and prevent natural disasters by conducting afforestation, reforestation, and watershed improvement.
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Develop environment-friendly development strategies and sustainable (sustainable) in accordance with the purpose to reduce the threat and impact of global climate change.
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Invites the entire community, households and businesses to actively protecting the environment to ensure sustainable economic growth.
13th Priority: Cultural Development
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Maintaining an atmosphere of creative freedom in the arts and sciences.
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Providing infrastructure to support cultural and scientific activities of non-commercial.
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Provide incentives to the arts and sciences to develop the quality of art and culture and preserving the local culture and national heritage, modern and traditional.