- Days before deadline, plastic treaty draft highlights disagreement
- Crypto boss eats banana art he bought for $6.2 million
- Teen news boss criticises Australian social media ban
- Taiwan detects 41 Chinese military aircraft, ships ahead of Lai US stopover
- Spain urged to 'build differently' after deadly floods
- WTO chief faces heavy task as Trump threat looms
- Herbert takes control at Australian Open as Smith tanks
- Israel PM again warns Iran after top diplomat talks of revising nuclear doctrine
- Brilliant Brook's 132 puts England on top against sloppy New Zealand
- Brilliant Brook's 132 puts England on top against New Zealand
- US landmine offer to Ukraine throws global treaty into 'crisis': campaign group
- Singapore hangs 4th person in three weeks
- Five things to know about NewJeans' shock split from agency
- Waste pickers battle for recognition at plastic treaty talks
- Ireland votes in closely fought general election
- Top UN court to open unprecedented climate hearings
- European countries that allow assisted dying
- British MPs to debate contentious assisted dying law
- Schmidt not expecting hero's welcome on Ireland return
- PSG stuck between domestic dominance and Champions League woes
- 'Hot fight' as unbeaten Bayern visit Dortmund fortress
- Bordeaux-Begles' Samu 'not finished yet' with Wallabies
- Brook and Pope half-centuries haul England to 174-4 against NZ
- Yen rallies on rate hike bets as equity markets swing
- Ukraine superstar Mahuchikh brings 'good vibes' to her war-torn country
- PlayStation at 30: How Sony's grey box conquered gaming
- Saudi Arabia hosts UN talks on drought, desertification
- PlayStation: Fun facts to know as Sony's console turns 30
- Nepal's first transgender candidates run for local office
- Father of PlayStation says 'everyone told us we would fail'
- Ireland seek to overcome former coach Schmidt's Wallabies
- Detroit survive Bears comeback to make it 10 wins in a row
- Mexican actor Silvia Pinal dead at 93
- 'Black Friday' deals target inflation-weary US consumers
- Liverpool look to deepen Man City crisis, Amorim seeks first Premier League win
- Police fire rubber bullets, tear gas at Georgia protesters after PM delays EU bid
- England lose three quick wickets in reply to New Zealand's 348
- Social media companies slam Australia's under-16 ban
- Police fire tear gas at Georgia protesters after PM delays EU bid
- Canada watchdog sues Google over 'anti-competitive' ad tech
- Hojlund gives Amorim winning Old Trafford bow, Roma hold Spurs
- Amorim wins first Man Utd home game after rollercoaster ride
- France arrests 26 as South Asian migrant trafficking ring smashed
- At least 15 dead, 113 missing, in Uganda landslides
- Netanyahu threatens 'intensive war' if Hezbollah breaches fragile truce
- Bilbao join Lazio at Europa League summit, Chelsea cruise in Conference League
- In Lebanon's Tyre returning residents find no water, little power
- Protests in Georgia after PM delays EU bid to 2028
- Biden slams Trump tariff threats as 'counterproductive'
- TikTok tactics shake up politics in Romania
Indonesia's Prabowo targets growth spurt with big projects
Indonesian President Joko Widodo leaves office Sunday with high approval ratings thanks to strong economic growth, but his successor Prabowo Subianto has bigger ambitions, including an eye-catching $28 billion free meal plan for students.
While the country regularly enjoys about five percent annual expansion, the former general has pledged to capitalise on his predecessor's policies to reach eight percent by tapping the nation's huge human resources.
"From prosperity, we can bring justice to all Indonesian people. We must unite to eliminate poverty and eliminate hunger, and eliminate suffering from our people," Prabowo said in his victory speech in March.
To do that, he is banking on big national projects, the archipelago's vast natural resources and attempts to lower a poverty rate of more than nine percent.
He has pledged to largely carry on the popular economic programme of Widodo, better known as Jokowi, but he has also signalled a more direct attempt to alleviate poverty in the nation of around 280 million.
His big campaign pledge is a $28 billion plan to supply tens of millions of schoolchildren and pregnant women nationwide with free meals.
He says the scheme -- to be rolled out in January -- will halt stunted growth in a country where more than a fifth of children up to five years old are affected and create several million more jobs.
Yet the plan has faced criticism over logistical and cost issues, with some wondering how he can pull off the plan and keep spending within the annual fiscal deficit limit of three percent of GDP, which is mandated by law.
Jokowi focussed on large infrastructure projects including roads, bridges and airports aimed at better connecting the archipelago.
But experts say Prabowo will deviate from that in his bid to realise a campaign promise to turn Indonesia, a G20 member, into an "advanced and developed" economy.
"He won't be blindly following Jokowi's footsteps, but he also won't completely abandon or neglect everything, so he will be somewhat in the middle," said Yose Rizal Damuri, an economist at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies.
"It seems like he has a slightly different approach from Jokowi. The priority is no longer infrastructure development, but more to human capital development."
His agenda will also focus on agriculture, observers say, with a food estate programme aimed at achieving food self-sufficiency, land clearing for bioethanol projects in the restive eastern region of Papua, and a green fund selling carbon emission credits.
- Capital crunch -
At the same time, Prabowo is inheriting Jokowi's legacy project -- a $32 billion move of the capital from traffic-clogged and sinking Jakarta to Nusantara, a planned green city in eastern Borneo where construction is under way.
The city will not be ready until 2045, but its rapid construction is already eating into state coffers.
Prabowo has pledged to continue the project despite speculation he would put it on hold or keep Jakarta as the capital.
He has also supported Jokowi's resource nationalism, particularly in the nickel sector, where Jakarta has imposed export restrictions in a bid to become a key player in the electric vehicle supply chain.
Indonesia is one of the world's biggest fossil fuel polluters and Prabowo has backed gradually reducing the country's reliance on them. But his family retains ties to the coal industry, and processing vast sums of nickel requires coal-fired power plants.
China's Southeast Asian investments last year were the biggest in Indonesia, and Prabowo met President Xi Jinping in his first foreign meeting after winning the election.
It signalled the importance he has placed on continuing to attract Beijing's money, which has proven crucial to Indonesia's economic growth.
On top of his early trips abroad, Prabowo's cabinet choices and his first budget after inauguration will also give a better indication as to his economic plans.
Current finance minister Sri Mulyani said this week that she had been asked to retain her role in the next government, which experts say is a signal to markets that there will be continuity.
"With Sri Mulyani joining his cabinet, it shows that Prabowo will be very careful in terms of fiscal issues," said Bhima Yudhistira Adhinegara, an economist from the Center of Economic and Law Studies.
"That's why Jokowi's people are now hired again, it shows that Prabowo will be disciplined."
H.Seidel--BTB