Thursday, April 21, 2011

Oxford University mission to save a language spoken by three people

A team of academics from Oxford University have been sent to a remote area of Indonesia in order to save a language spoken by only three people.


The trio are the last people to speak Dusner, an ancient language spoken in a remote fishing village deep in the jungles of Papua, an Indonesian island.
The scientists were nearly too late as recent earthquakes and flooding nearly finished off the community – which still uses the language in ceremonies like marriage – for good.
Researchers from university’s Faculty of Linguistics, Philology and Phonetics uncovered the language, and Dr Suriel Mofu set off for Indonesia in October to record and document the language.
But days after he left, flooding hit Indonesia’s easternmost Papua province and the Oxford team could not determine whether or not the Dusner speakers – two woman aged 60, and a man in his 70s – had survived.
Now Dr Mofu has made contact with the Dusner speakers and the 14-month project to record the vocabulary and grammar of the speakers.
Professor Mary Dalrymple, the project’s leader, said: "The flood in Indonesia has been a real tragedy for the inhabitants of this wonderful island and it’s been a nervous few months waiting to hear whether or not our speakers survived.
"But this illustrates why our project is so important – we only found out that this language existed last year, and if we don’t document the language before it dies out, it will be lost forever."
The reason the language has dwindled is that many locals now teach their children Malay as they consider it more useful to get jobs.
But Dusner is still used in ceremonies.
"Our project to record and document this language of Dusner has an urgency about it, because one of its speakers died last year," said Prof Dalrymple.
"The language of Dusner has died out as parents realised that their children have a better chance of going to university or getting a job if they speak Malay, which is Indonesia’s main tongue.
"The remaining Dusner speakers have children of their own, but have not taught them Dusner and so the language will die with them.
"Our project is important to non-Dusner speaking inhabitants of Papua, who want to use Dusner in their sacred wedding and funerary rituals."
It is estimated that half of the 6,000 recorded languages spoken in the world will vanish in the next 50 years.
According to the academics the level of enthusiasm among the Dusner people and the head of the village of Dusner for preserving their language is very high.
The community still perform traditional activities - such as marriage proposals, dowry payment, marriage ceremonies - only the Dusner speakers can use the Dusner language for these occasions.
There is great fear in the community that the people will lose the language when these speakers die.
Since Dusner has never been written, traditional stories and experiences have been passed from onegeneration to another orally.

Source: here

Foreign Investment Climbs Nearly 12%

Amid a bumper day of positive economic news for the country, the Investment Coordinating Board announced that foreign direct investment in Indonesia rose 11.6 percent in the first quarter from a year earlier.

News of the increase from the board, also known as the BKPM, complemented a standout day on the Jakarta Composite Index. The JCI rose 62.11 points, or 1.7 percent, to a record close of 3,794.76.

Sustained confidence in Indonesia’s economy showed as foreign direct investment rose to Rp 39.5 trillion ($4.6 billion) from Rp 35.4 trillion a year earlier, while domestic investment jumped to Rp 14.1 trillion from Rp 6.7 trillion a year earlier.

“Investors’ level of confidence can be seen here, especially after the central bank showed all the necessary statistics to support it and with rating agencies backing it up with improved ratings for Indonesia,” said Azhar Lubis, deputy chairman of investment controlling and implementation at BKPM.

Total realized investment grew 27.3 percent to Rp 53.6 trillion. Azhar said total investment is projected at Rp 240 trillion this year, with foreign investment accounting for Rp 170.4 trillion of that amount.

Private consumption accounts for about two-thirds of Indonesia’s economy, while investment makes up about 15 percent. The economy is projected to expand by 6.5 percent this year, up from 6.1 percent growth last year.

Azhar said the growth in investment was triggered by growing confidence in Indonesia’s business environment, as well as concrete steps from the government to improve the investment climate.

Destry Damayanti, an economist at Mandiri Sekuritas, said the news from BKPM showed Indonesia’s rising stature among foreign investors.

“This is clearly a positive sign. The talk about it being a good time to invest in Indonesia is finally starting to materialize,” Destri said on Wednesday. “The BKPM is targeting a 15 percent increase in foreign investment, so I think the first-quarter progress is on track and on schedule.

“The investment trend in the near future is also good. One of the drivers is the improvement in Indonesia’s rating, which indicates lower investment risk, better investment climate and good prospects for [economic] development.”

In January, Moody’s Investor Service upgraded Indonesia’s rating to one level below investment grade at Ba1. In February, Fitch Ratings upgraded Indonesia to BB+, while Standard & Poor’s did likewise in March.

Singapore is still Indonesia’s top foreign investor with $1.14 billion in 142 projects. Azhar pointed out that investors from Singapore are actually multinational companies that are not necessarily based in Singapore, but the subsidiaries in Singapore are the ones investing in Indonesia.

The United States was second after Singapore with 24 projects worth $359.1 million, while Japan followed in third place with $345.2 million.

The mining sector was the favorite among foreign investors, receiving $1.02 billion in 79 projects. Infrastructure projects, such as power plants, received $606.7 million, while transportation and communications received $593.1 million.

“We want more investment, but we also know which sectors need more attention than others,” Azhar said.

He also said the fate of a discussed tax holiday would be determined “around August.” The tax holiday would be directed toward investments considered a pioneer in their field or those in infrastructure.

Source: here

Indonesia to invest $10 million in Korea's fighter project

By Lee Tae-hoon

Indonesia has offered to pay $10 million toward a feasibility assessment of an indigenous Korean fighter jet development program, a defense official said Wednesday. 

“Korea’s Agency for Defense Development signed a contract with Indonesia’s state-run weapons agency, Balitbang, on the exploratory development of the KF-X project,” said Chung Jae-yoon, spokesman of the Defense Acquisition Program Administration (DAPA). 

The KF-X project refers to Korea’s multirole fighter development program that was initially announced in 2001, but then stalled for 10 years. 

Under the agreement, Chung said Indonesia will pay 20 percent of the initial study costs for the KF-X project in exchange for allowing 30 of its researchers to participate in the project here over the next two years. 

In July last year, Indonesia signed a memorandum of understanding with Korea to invest in the project in return for acquiring around 50 KF-X fighters. 

"With the formal agreement with Indonesia, our plan to jointly develop the fighters with international partners is expected to go smoothly," the official said. 

Korea's Air Force has been pursuing the KF-X project to help replace its aging F-4/5 fighters. 

DAPA plans to select a prototype by late 2012.

Wednesday's deal came less than two weeks after Indonesia selected South Korea as a preferred bidder for its project to buy trainer jets.

The two sides have yet to complete negotiations on price and other details. If a final deal is sealed, it will allow South Korea to export its T-50 Golden Eagle supersonic trainer jet for the first time.


Source: here

Monday, April 18, 2011

Samsung C&T to invest US$150 mln in Indonesian solar power


Samsung C&T of South Korea plans to invest US$150-200 million in Indonesia’s solar power plant with a capacity of 50 MW.
“The Samsung C&T president has expressed commitment that the company is very serious about developing solar energy in Indonesia,” Coordinating Minister for Economic Affairs Hatta Rajasa said following a meeting with Samsung C&T President and CEO Shin Kim here on Friday.
To develop the project, Samsung C&T was expected to sign a memorandum of understanding with Indonesia’s PT Land and state electricity company PT PLN in Bali in May 2011 on the occasion of South Korea-Indonesia ministers meeting, he said.
Amir Sambodo, special assistant to the coordinating minister for economic affairs said Samsung C&T was planning to invest US$150-200 million in a solar power plant on the assumption the project would cost US$3 million per megawatt.
To that end, the company had applied for a permit to conduct a feasibility study on the grounds the solar power plants developed by PLN in 10 different places in Indonesia now had a maximum capacity of 1 megawatt, he said.
Amir said Samsung was exploring the possibility of developing a special area for solar power plant in Java, Bali or other islands having the capacity to develop a power plant with a capacity of 50 MW, he said.
The Korean company was in the process of applying for a permit to the Coordinating Ministry for Economic Affairs, the Industry Ministry, the Energy and Mineral Resources Ministry and the Investment Coordinating Board, he said.

SOurce: here

Steel giant plans expansion into E. Indonesia

Steel giant plans expansion into E. Indonesia

Esther Samboh, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Mon, 04/18/2011 10:01 PM | Business
A | A | A |
Luxembourg-based Tenaris says it will boost its investment in eastern Indonesia in a move that will support the government’s economic master plan, according to a minister.

The world’s top producer of seamless steel pipes for the oil and gas industry was interested in establishing a logistical base for its oil business with an estimated investment of “hundreds of millions of dollars”, Coordinating Minister for the Economy Hatta Rajasa said on Friday.

“Tenaris wants to realize the investment this year, as soon as possible. They want to invest in eastern Indonesia, because they see the growing development of gas in the area. I offered Kalimantan,” Hatta told reporters after a meeting with Tenaris executives at his office in Jakarta.

Kalimantan is one of six economic corridors to be developed under the government’s ambitious economic master plan to become one of the world’s 10 biggest economies by 2025. 

Other corridors include Sumatra, which will be developed as an energy power house; Java which will be developed as an industry and services special zone; Kalimantan, which will be developed as mining zone and Sulawesi-North Maluku, which will be developed as agriculture, forestry and fishery zones.

The plan also calls for developing Bali-Nusa Tenggara as a tourism and food zone and Papua-Maluku as a natural and human resources zone.

“I told [Tenaris] that we are currently developing economic corridors. We need ports to support the plan. I said they could invest in the Papua corridor or the Kalimantan corridor. They are very interested and asked to be included in the development process,” Hatta said.

Indonesia needs Rp 4 trillion (US$460 million) in investment in the first phase of the master plan before 2014, during which the nation’s economy is expected to grow from 7 to 8 percent. 

Tenaris, the heaviest weighted stock on Argentina’s benchmark stock index, is also listed on the New York Stock Exchange and is the majority shareholder of PT Seamless Pipe Indonesia Jaya (SPIJ).

SPIJ — which was acquired from Bakrie & Brothers, Green Pipe International and Cakrawala Baru in 2009 — operates in the OCTG (oil country tubular goods) processing business, producing pipe and tube products used in the petroleum industry, such as drill pipe and pipe casings, and has heat treatment and premium connection threading facilities in Cilegon and Batam.

Source: here

Investment opportunities on our doorstep


Investing in Indonesia is starting to look just as attractive as China and India, writes John Collett.
While everyone knows about the merits of investing in China and India, Indonesia barely rates a mention. But fund managers who specialise in Asian shares say the archipelago presents investment opportunities every bit as good as China and India over the long term.
With more than 240 million people, Indonesia is the world's fourth-most populous country. Like India and China, it has a rapidly growing middle class. Its economy may only be half the size of Australia's but it is growing at almost 7 per cent a year.
It rivals Australia as a commodities exporter and Indonesian companies are the most profitable in Asia. It's a far cry from 1997, when the Indonesian government was forced to nationalise the banks after the country was among the most badly hit by the east Asian financial crisis.
As a developing country, Indonesia faces huge challenges but it is enjoying political stability, its sharemarket is attractive and there's a good selection of quality stocks in the resources sector, banking and consumer stocks.
Since his election as president in 2004, "SBY" (Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono) has changed the investment landscape, according to the Asia portfolio manager at fund manager Five Oceans Asset Management, Rob Nunley.
"He has done a very good job of turning things around in the economy," Nunley says. "Those positives we see in India and China - the middle-class income growth, the positive demographics and urbanisation - exist in Indonesia."
Tens of millions of low-income Indonesians are expected to join the middle class in the next 10 years, which puts Indonesia behind only India and China in terms of the size of the growing consumer market. The youthfulness of its population puts it behind only India and Vietnam in the Asian region.
"The long-term prospects for Indonesia are extremely good," says Kerry Series, the chief investment officer at Eight Investment Partners, which runs the 8IP Asia Pacific Partners Fund. "There are a number of really interesting companies in Indonesia and some of the consumer stocks, in particular, are really good-quality companies."
An example is Ace Hardware, which is listed in Indonesia and is a franchise of a US company. Ace Hardware sells everything from outdoor furniture to power tools. Series says the "return on equity" (a measure of profitability favoured by fund managers) of the companies that make up Indonesia's sharemarket index is more than 20 per cent. No other country in Asia has such high profitability, he says.
Robin Parbrook, who manages the Schroder Asia Pacific Fund from Hong Kong, prefers Indonesia to China and India. "Even though Indonesia has slower economic growth than China, it has a much better stockmarket," he says.
Many Chinese companies are majority government-owned and there is a lot of investor money chasing Chinese stocks.
Parbrook says the current worries with India include the high valuations of Indian shares, rising inflation and a "lot of hot money" that went into India last year.
There is no doubt that Indonesian shares are more expensive than their historical averages following that sharemarket's massive gains over the past two years. In 2009, the Indonesian sharemarket rose more than 85 per cent, in US dollar terms, after it fell sharply during the GFC. In 2010, it rose more than 45 per cent but it has been trading sideways since the start of this year.
Parbrook says Indonesian shares are not that expensive. The sharemarket has historically traded at big discounts to the region because of corruption and after the country experienced the problem of the east Asian financial crisis.
"Indonesia has a lot of potential and it is one of our key overweights in the fund," says Ragu Sivanesarajah, who helps run AMP Capital Investors' Asia Equity Growth Fund. The fund has about 6 per cent of its money invested in Indonesian-listed shares - large relative to the small size of its sharemarket.
Sivanesarajah, a senior portfolio manager with the Asian equities team, says there is no reason why Indonesia's good economic growth rates should not continue.
Eng-Teck Tan, the investment manager of the TAAM New Asia Fund, based in Singapore, says his fund sold all its Indonesian shares - to take profits - in October last year. "There is no doubt that it is very easy to fall in love with Indonesia," he says. "There's its huge population and it is resources rich but the market has run ahead of itself in the short term."
Consumer stocks are expensive, he says. And the stocks that are cheap are the ones that Tan would not want to own. He can find cheaper stocks in Thailand, China and India. Like most emerging economies, Indonesia has its fair share of challenges. Corruption and inefficiency remain significant problems. Many of the leading companies have families as majority owners and corporate government standards can be low.
Some fund managers prefer to hold exposure to Indonesia to companies that are listed on other stock exchanges in Asia, such as Singapore, and have significant business operations in Indonesia.
One of Indonesia's biggest challenges is putting in place the infrastructure, such as roads, ports and rail, so that its enormous commodities-producing potential can be realised.
Investing in emerging markets is always risky. For small investors, the way to gain exposure to Indonesia is through a fund that invests in Asia, says the editorial and communications manager at investment researcher Morningstar, Phillip Gray. He says choosing specialist funds such as those that invest in Asia offers many growth opportunities. However, specialist funds have their own particular risks and should be used as part of a well-diversified portfolio.

Northern exposure

Five Oceans' Rob Nunley has holdings in Bank Mandiri, Indonesia's largest bank, which has restructured its balance sheet and is "very well run".
For exposure to Indonesia's rapidly growing coal sector, Five Oceans is invested in Banpu, which is listed in the Thai sharemarket and owns a large Indonesian coal miner. Banpu recently bought Australian miner Centennial Coal.
Five Oceans also holds shares in the Singapore-listed Jardine Matheson, a "blue chip" company that majority owns the Indonesian conglomerate Astra International, which among other things, makes and distributes motorcycles and cars. The fund manager also owns the Indonesian-listed Indocement.
Kerry Series of Eight Investment Partners holds shares in the Indonesian-listed Adaro Energy and Straits Asia Resources, which is listed in Singapore and owns mines in Indonesia. He is invested directly in Astra International rather than through the parent, Jardine Matheson.
Schroder Asia Pacific Fund is invested in Jardine Matheson, which is the fund's third-largest holding. Schroders' Robin Parbrook favours the Indonesian consumer sector. He says the banks are "good, long-term growth stories" but a "bit too expensive" at the moment. "We will look to buy Indonesian stocks on the dips [in share prices] but the long-term story is good," he says.


Read more: http://www.watoday.com.au/money/investing/investment-opportunities-on-our-doorstep-20110418-1dkxd.html#ixzz1Jqis7ERj
















































































































































































































































































































































































Source: http://www.watoday.com.au/money/investing/investment-opportunities-on-our-doorstep-20110418-1dkxd.html#ixzz1JqiJwEAV