Specific Data on Labor in Indonesia 2015-2019 (Profile of Construction Workers and Foreign Workers by Country) released the second week of September 2019 displays specific data, labor profiles, segmentation of employment, employment trends, composition of labor education, comparison of labor wages, and others. This specific data is expected to be a guide and reference for investors, corporations, researchers, and various stakeholders at large.
This specific data begins by displaying the highlights of the Indonesian economy, starting from the trend of economic growth, inflation, poverty rates, gini ratios, as well as the percentage of unemployed in the 2011-2018 period (page 2). Followed by a discussion of infrastructure development that remains a priority of the government (page 3). Then, the creative economy becomes the source of a new economy (pages 4 and 5).
On pages 6 and 7 shown improvements in the quality of Indonesia’s competitiveness seen from the infrastructure competitiveness index and the Global Competitiveness Index (GCI). Continued with the current outlook for the Indonesian economy and outlook for 2030 when it becomes the seventh largest economy in the world with a number of consumer classes predicted to reach 135 million on pages 8 and 9.
Entering into the main discussion, on page 10 a profile of the labor force in Indonesia is displayed. On page 11, specific data on employment trends from 2014 to 2018 are displayed. The data is divided into labor force, number of workers, open unemployment. Data on employment opportunity trends for the period 2015 to 2018 are shown on page 12, including the number of job creation in 2016 reaching 3.59 million. Then, the data on the number of unemployed per province in Indonesia is displayed on page 13. The profile of 4 provinces with the highest open unemployment rates in Indonesia is on page 14.
Continues on page 15 displayed unemployment data by city and village area for the period 2014 to 2018 on page 15. Trends in the segmentation of employment in agriculture, industry and services in 2014 to 2018 are displayed on page 16. Followed then a discussion of the composition of formal and informal workers at period 2014 to 2018 on page 17. The definition of half the unemployed spelled out on page 18 is reinforced by data trends in the 2014 to 2018 period.
Switching to the discussion on the segmentation of workforce education, which is divided into elementary, junior high, high school, vocational, diploma, and university categories from 2014 to 2018 on pages 19 and 20. Following this is the discussion of gender segmentation in the workforce on pages 21 and 22. Graduates’ profiles Vocational High Schools in terms of numbers and areas of expertise are presented on pages 24 and 25. Followed by the discussion of the number of students and the number of college graduates from 2014 to 2018 on pages 25 and 26.
The main classification of labor, the challenges of Indonesian workers’ HR, to the challenges of HR related to the era of the industrial revolution 4.0 are described on pages 27 to 30. While related to foreign labor (TKA) in Indonesia is displayed exclusively on pages 31 to 36, starting from the comparison of the number of TKA in 11 countries. In addition, it is also related to the number of foreign workers in Indonesia from 2007 to 2017, based on the type of business, the level of position (from technicians, supervisors, managers, directors, to advisors), and based on the country of origin of the foreign worker.
Entering into the following discussion, on pages 38 to 45 the construction sector labor force data in Indonesia is displayed. On page 39 a projection of construction workforce needs is displayed that is adjusted to the government’s infrastructure budget ceiling. The construction workforce profile is displayed comprehensively on page 40, showing the proportion of the construction workforce based on education and certified workforce. Followed by a mapping profile of the construction service community with around 154,000 experts.
Data for construction expert certificate holders per province is displayed in the graphic on page 43, while data for construction skilled certificate holders per region is shown on page 44.
Specific Data on Labor in Indonesia 2015-2019 (Profile of Construction Workers and Foreign Workers by Country) contains 46 pages and 5.48 MB in size. This specific data is derived from the results of the duniaindustri.com team with the support of data from BPS, relevant technical ministries, industry associations, and other government agencies. Industrial data index is the latest feature in duniaindustri.com which displays dozens of selected data according to users’ needs. All data is presented in pdf format so that it is easily downloaded after users process according to the procedure, namely click purchase, click checkout, and fill out the form. Duniaindustri.com prioritizes the validity and validity of the data sources presented.(*)
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This specific data begins by displaying the highlights of the Indonesian economy, starting from the trend of economic growth, inflation, poverty rates, gini ratios, as well as the percentage of unemployed in the 2011-2018 period (page 2). Followed by a discussion of infrastructure development that remains a priority of the government (page 3). Then, the creative economy becomes the source of a new economy (pages 4 and 5).
On pages 6 and 7 shown improvements in the quality of Indonesia’s competitiveness seen from the infrastructure competitiveness index and the Global Competitiveness Index (GCI). Continued with the current outlook for the Indonesian economy and outlook for 2030 when it becomes the seventh largest economy in the world with a number of consumer classes predicted to reach 135 million on pages 8 and 9.
Entering into the main discussion, on page 10 a profile of the labor force in Indonesia is displayed. On page 11, specific data on employment trends from 2014 to 2018 are displayed. The data is divided into labor force, number of workers, open unemployment. Data on employment opportunity trends for the period 2015 to 2018 are shown on page 12, including the number of job creation in 2016 reaching 3.59 million. Then, the data on the number of unemployed per province in Indonesia is displayed on page 13. The profile of 4 provinces with the highest open unemployment rates in Indonesia is on page 14.
Continues on page 15 displayed unemployment data by city and village area for the period 2014 to 2018 on page 15. Trends in the segmentation of employment in agriculture, industry and services in 2014 to 2018 are displayed on page 16. Followed then a discussion of the composition of formal and informal workers at period 2014 to 2018 on page 17. The definition of half the unemployed spelled out on page 18 is reinforced by data trends in the 2014 to 2018 period.
Switching to the discussion on the segmentation of workforce education, which is divided into elementary, junior high, high school, vocational, diploma, and university categories from 2014 to 2018 on pages 19 and 20. Following this is the discussion of gender segmentation in the workforce on pages 21 and 22. Graduates’ profiles Vocational High Schools in terms of numbers and areas of expertise are presented on pages 24 and 25. Followed by the discussion of the number of students and the number of college graduates from 2014 to 2018 on pages 25 and 26.
The main classification of labor, the challenges of Indonesian workers’ HR, to the challenges of HR related to the era of the industrial revolution 4.0 are described on pages 27 to 30. While related to foreign labor (TKA) in Indonesia is displayed exclusively on pages 31 to 36, starting from the comparison of the number of TKA in 11 countries. In addition, it is also related to the number of foreign workers in Indonesia from 2007 to 2017, based on the type of business, the level of position (from technicians, supervisors, managers, directors, to advisors), and based on the country of origin of the foreign worker.
Entering into the following discussion, on pages 38 to 45 the construction sector labor force data in Indonesia is displayed. On page 39 a projection of construction workforce needs is displayed that is adjusted to the government’s infrastructure budget ceiling. The construction workforce profile is displayed comprehensively on page 40, showing the proportion of the construction workforce based on education and certified workforce. Followed by a mapping profile of the construction service community with around 154,000 experts.
Data for construction expert certificate holders per province is displayed in the graphic on page 43, while data for construction skilled certificate holders per region is shown on page 44.
Specific Data on Labor in Indonesia 2015-2019 (Profile of Construction Workers and Foreign Workers by Country) contains 46 pages and 5.48 MB in size. This specific data is derived from the results of the duniaindustri.com team with the support of data from BPS, relevant technical ministries, industry associations, and other government agencies. Industrial data index is the latest feature in duniaindustri.com which displays dozens of selected data according to users’ needs. All data is presented in pdf format so that it is easily downloaded after users process according to the procedure, namely click purchase, click checkout, and fill out the form. Duniaindustri.com prioritizes the validity and validity of the data sources presented.(*)
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