Research Briefing | Sep 30, 2021

Indonesia | Recovering demand to power credit growth in 2022

Ipad Frame (69)

Private bank credit contracted 2.7% in 2020 in Indonesia and continued to decline on a year-on-year basis through most of H1 this year. The credit crunch has occurred despite a 150bps reduction in the policy rate since the onset of the pandemic and a liquidity injection of around 4.5% of GDP by Bank Indonesia.
What you will learn:

  • Lending conditions are easing in Indonesia, but demand weakness continues to hold back credit growth. As the economy continues to recover, we expect credit demand to rise, which should feed GDP growth in 2022-2023. Monetary policy is likely to remain accommodative next year, and we forecast private credit will grow 12.6% over 2022-2023 on average.
  • Early signs that credit is recovering include the pick-up in the pace of consumer lending in recent months. And considering corporate liabilities and household debt are relatively low at less than 20% of GDP, we see plenty of space for more credit growth.
  • But the credit outlook is not without risks. Consumer sentiment will likely be volatile in the near term given the uncertainty over the path of the pandemic. And despite generally low private debt levels, some sectors may find their capacity to take on loans constrained by their low debt service capacities.
Back to Resource Hub

Related Services

US bill next to calculator which says recession

Post

US-China relations improve, yet industrial recession remains likely

For the first time this year, our global industrial production outlook for 2025 has been upgraded. However, we still anticipate an industrial recession in Q2 and Q3.

Find Out More
Industry is performing worse than the broader economy globally

Post

Positive tariff news does little to dispel overall uncertainty

We've nudged up our world GDP growth forecasts for 2025 and 2026 by 0.1ppt to 2.4%, in part to reflect the temporary but substantial reduction in tariffs between the US and China.

Find Out More