Minggu, 18 Januari 2009

Re: [Alumni-PIKA] Indonesia Performance

Selamat sukses untuk Indra karena bakal tinggal di Semarang tapi gaji Singapore.
Apakah TKW itu konotasinya tidak baik ? Padahal Endang di Jerman itu juga TKW lho.
 
Salam dari TKI,
PDS
 
----- Original Message -----
From: Ventura AT
Sent: Monday, January 19, 2009 10:06 AM
Subject: Re: [Alumni-PIKA] Indonesia Performance

saya disini pakai bahasanya Niksau ( filmnya crazy safary ) yg cuman bunyi " cetakcetukcetakcetuk.........",

He e Frans , ning kene campor adok seka india kasta sudra sampai brahma, melayu, eropa, amerika , jepang, cina, nyanmar, pinoy, thailand, dll,dlll,...dan tentunya Indonesia.

tapi disini jenis seperti saya langka ( ras jowo ireng ), ada banyak tapi TKW , kalau ketemu kalau sabtu pas ngeterke anaku sekolah, makane istriku sering di kira pembantu ,.....
pas ning gereja tanya sama org Indonesia ras Cino tentang alamat jalur bis " jawabane sitik , omonge larang....." trus aku cekak ati....

Sama tetangga sebelah aja ndak kenal ( lawange tutupan kabeh )....malah kenal sama tukang sapu MRT,......nek liburan mung nonton DVD "side A side B side A side B abababaaaaaa......"

ITU yang membuat saya pindah semarang....padahal aku sudah ditawarin gaji naik......rumah condominium dekat kantor.....ini itu..., Tapi itu tak tergantikan kehidupan di Semarang, aku pengine ya kerja ya nikmati urip.......

temanmu
indra


--- On Sun, 1/18/09, frans prabawa <frans_prabawa@yahoo.com> wrote:
From: frans prabawa <frans_prabawa@yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: [Alumni-PIKA] Indonesia Performance
To: Alumni-PIKA@yahoogroups.com
Date: Sunday, January 18, 2009, 10:20 PM

Huahahaha... ..
Pak Indra di Singapore tapi bisanya bahasa Jowo. Makanya salah sambung terus. Di Singapore iku aslinya pake bahasa Sansekerta, cuma gara2 kakean pendatang dan pelancong dari mana2 termasuk Pak Indra, maka diubah ke bahasa Singapore (wis ben ngawur sisan).


From: Christian Prabawa <mebel-int@indosat. net.id>
To: Alumni-PIKA@ yahoogroups. com
Sent: Saturday, January 17, 2009 5:18:26 PM
Subject: Re: [Alumni-PIKA] Indonesia Performance

Lho.... Anda di Singapore pake bahasa apa dlm keseharian?
 
Salam komunikasi,
Chris
----- Original Message -----
From: Indra
Sent: Saturday, January 17, 2009 2:23 PM
Subject: Re: [Alumni-PIKA] Indonesia Performance

O,gitu...... . Thanks pak Chris, maklum dulu bhs ingris saya selalu dapet 6, malah di LPDI, bhs Indonesia dapat 5,5 ( akhirnya disuruh mengulang sendiri sama pak Gani )

Temanmu
Indra
Sent from my iPhone

On Jan 17, 2009, at 12:07 PM, "Christian Prabawa" <mebel-int@indosat. net.id> wrote:

Dear Indra,
 
Maksud'e seperti yg terbaca di alinea pertama.
Bahwa Indonesia berhassil mengatasi Global Resesi ini dgn baik dibanding negara2 lain. Berterima kasih lah kpd Sri Mulyani - Menteri keuangan dan pemangku jabatan Menko.
 
Dari temanmu juga,
Chris
 
----- Original Message -----
From: Indra
Sent: Friday, January 16, 2009 6:05 PM
Subject: Re: [Alumni-PIKA] Indonesia Performance

Iki maksute piye pak ? ( rangkumane / conclusion'e )

Temanmu
Indra
Sent from my iPhone

On Jan 16, 2009, at 9:58 AM, "Ongparama" <ongparama_na@ yahoo.com > wrote:

Sedikit angin segar yang di saat krisis… He….

Source: http://www.newsweek .com/id/178817

--article
begins---

'As Good As It Gets'
Indonesia is managing the
global recession better than most, thanks to its tough finance minister.

By Solenn Honorine and George Wehrfritz | NEWSWEEK
Published
Jan 10, 2009
From the magazine issue dated Jan 19, 2009

Last month a financial tidal wave washed over Indonesia, but not
the one
kicked up by the global credit crisis. Money flooded into
government coffers
from individuals and corporations eager to avail
themselves of Jakarta's
"sunset policy" on tax
delinquency, which forgave past evasions in exchange
for good
behavior going forward. The exact size of the surge isn't yet
known,
but economists estimate that tax receipts were up more than 50
percent for the year. "We saw quite a big jump" in revenue in
December from
"taxpayers who never existed [on the tax rolls]
or want to correct mistakes
made in the past," says the plan's
creator, Finance Minister Sri Mulyani
Indrawati. Indonesians, she
adds, are honoring their tax obligations "in a
much more
accurate way."

The influx marks a major triumph for
Indonesia's current government and, in
particular, for the woman who
put Jakarta's financial house in order. Over
the past four years,
Mulyani has helped dismantle the financial architecture
of the crony
capitalism built by strongman Suharto before his 32-year reign
ended
in 1998. She has pressed hard to slash debt, both public and private;
pushed through a rollback of budget-busting fuel subsidies; and overseen

sweeping reforms of the customs and tax
authorities&mdash;positioning Indonesia to
post the world's best (or
at least the least bad) emerging-market growth
story in 2009.
Unnoticed until recently, Jakarta's conservatism is now the
envy of
the developing world, and Mulyani is being hailed as a model
regulator. "She could be the finance minister anywhere in the
world," says
James Castle, founder of the consultancy
CastleAsia. "She's that good."

Largely to Mulyani's
credit, the country's balance sheet is now among the
most
conservative in the world; government debt now sits at just 30 percent
of GDP, down from more than 100 percent a decade ago, while Indonesia
Inc.
is far less leveraged than its peers elsewhere in Asia. Despite
that
relative austerity, growth is being driven both by
commodities&mdash;Indonesia' s
traditional mainstay&mdash;and by
strong domestic consumption from a population
approaching 240
million. And neither the commodity bust (which has also
driven down
the price of the imported energy on which Indonesia depends) nor
tighter global credit looks set to hobble a country that, from the
household
to the boardroom and cabinet chambers, is all but
debt-free.

Indeed, Indonesia is one of just three major
emerging economies forecast to
grow faster than 4 percent in 2009.
The other two&mdash;China and India&mdash;have
decelerated more
rapidly in recent months and face tougher policy
challenges. Mulyani
says Indonesia could expand by as much as 5.5 percent
this year,
which is barely slower than the 6 percent it clocked in 2008, and
perhaps enough to pip one of its two Asian counterparts in this year's

growth race. Not bad, considering that the country's economy
collapsed in
1998, shrinking 18 percent in a single year. Wolfgang
Fengler, a senior
economist at the World Bank, says Jakarta's
macroeconomic management is now
"as good as it gets."

Indonesia owes its turnaround to an ensemble cast. President
Susilo Bambang
Yudhoyono has provided the political stability and
pro-globalization vision
that underpin today's successes. Boediono
(who goes by one name) was a deft
coordinating minister for
economics until he handed the brief to Mulyani
last May to head
Indonesia's central bank, and Trade Minister Mari Pangestu
deserves
plaudits for kick-starting Indonesia's export economy. Yet Mulyani
stands out for her toughness. She says her staff had to "swallow a
lot of
very bitter reality" during her first six months on the
job. After landing
there, for example, she confronted senior staff:
"How can you send your
daughter or your son to study abroad
when you earn only this kind of salary?
Where did you get the
money?" To which she added: "You have to admit: we are
all
committing this crime." Her staffers still work evenings and weekends
to
meet her expectations, and she's been known to tangle with
colleagues. Last
year she lobbied intensively to ram through a
deeply unpopular reduction in
fuel subsidies that President
Yudhoyono initially opposed. "She got her way
because she is
capable of playing politics," says Anton Gunawan, chief
economist at Bank Danamon in Jakarta.

Yet by raising pay for
bureaucrats, and not demonizing those who previously
took payoffs to
make ends meet, she has raised standards and steeled a
reputation as
an incorruptible reformer. Her message to her staff is simple
and
positive: "I only have one goal: I want the Indonesian people to
trust
us, this department, because this country will go nowhere if
the people
don't start to trust their own government." Though
nobody would yet describe
Indonesia as a model of transparency, the
changes in its taxation and
customs administrations have been
profound, and in turn have enhanced
Indonesia's growth potential to
the point that "the world needs to update
the way it thinks
about the country," wrote Nicholas Cashmore, CLSA
investment
bank's Indonesia analyst, in mid-2008, declaring: "Southeast
Asia's largest economy is in great shape."

And thanks
to Mulyani, Indonesia is garnering more respect by the day.

--article ends---

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