JAKARTA- Indonesia’s trade surplus narrowed more than expected in December to $1.02 billion, the lowest in 20 months, as a surge in exports driven by commodities slowed and imports hit a record high, official data showed on Monday.
Southeast Asia’s largest economy has been reporting a trade surplus every month since May, 2020, as the coronavirus pandemic supressed local demand while exports rode a boom in prices of commodities like coal, palm oil, copper, tin, steel and rubber.
The December surplus was about a third of the $3.13 billion forecast by economists polled by Reuters and was also much smaller than the $3.51 billion recorded in November.
December imports hit a record high of $21.36 billion, up 47.93 percent on a yearly basis and beating the poll’s forecast for 39.40 percent growth, as overseas purchases of everything from consumer goods to raw materials for the manufacturing industry jumped.
“This shows that economic activity is improving … including consumption,” Margo Yuwono, the head of Statistics Indonesia, told a news conference.
Meanwhile, export growth was 35.30 percent on a yearly basis compared with the poll’s expectation of 40.40 percent growth, with shipments of coal to China slowing as Beijing ramped up domestic output of the fuel.
The resource-rich country’s total shipments in December were worth $22.38 billion, the second highest on record for monthly data after November’s $22.84 billion.
Economists have warned that a ban on coal exports, implemented since Jan. 1 to avoid widespread domestic power outages, could shift Indonesia’s trade balance to a deficit. Coal exports make up about 14 percent of Indonesia’s overall exports.
The ban has been eased for big miners that have met domestic sales requirements, but is still affecting smaller miners whose output accounts for up to 40 percent of Indonesia’s total.