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Indonesia and Australia sign long-awaited trade deal

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JAKARTA: Indonesia and Australia on Monday signed a long-awaited trade deal after months of diplomatic tension.


Indonesian trade minister Enggartiasto Lukita and his Australian counterpart Simon Birmingham wrapped up the multi-billion-dollar agreement in Jakarta, some nine years after negotiations first started.


The pact will include improved access for Australian cattle and sheep farmers to Indonesia’s 260 million people, while Australian universities, health providers and miners will also benefit from easier entry to Southeast Asia’s biggest economy.


Greater access to the Australian market is expected to spur Indonesia’s automotive and textile industries, and boost exports of timber, electronics and medicinal goods.


Bilateral trade was worth $11.7 billion in 2017, but Indonesia is only Australia’s 13th-largest trading partner and the economic relationship has been viewed as underdone.


Both ministers touted the deal as indicative of deepening ties between the two countries, which have occasionally butted heads on foreign policy issues, including Australia’s hardline policy on asylum seekers.


Birmingham said the deal marked a “new chapter of cooperation” between the two neighbours.


“The signing of the Indonesia-Australia Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement brings our two nations closer together than ever before,” Birmingham told reporters.


Lukita said the signing had the potential to transform the economy of both countries.


“Today is definitely the brightest moment of the Indonesia-Australia relationship,” he said.


The agreement will eventually see the elimination of all Australian trade tariffs, while 94 per cent of Indonesian duties will be gradually eliminated.


Australian investment in Indonesia totalled $597 million in 2018, but that is expected to increase under the new deal, which also included provisions for greater protection of foreign direct investment.


“Indonesia is a good market for Australia because of the large population (and) the increasing movement of the middle class,” economist Kresnayana Yahya, from Surabaya’s ITS university, said.


The less developed eastern reaches of Indonesia could significantly benefit from Australian investment, he added.


The trade deal also comes just ahead of national polls in which Indonesian President Joko Widodo is pushing his economic record in the battle for re-election. — AFP


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