World Bank2023-12-132023-12-132023-12-13https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/40729Indonesia has been successful in navigating the macroeconomic fallout from asynchronous global shocks. Gross domestic product (GDP) growth remains strong though the economy is yet to fully recover to its pre-pandemic trajectory. This is consistent with labor market trends, which show a recovery in labor force participation and employment but a possible deterioration in jobs quality. Inflation has been brought under control following the effects of the energy price shocks in 2022, though new pressures are emerging from food supply risks and renewed oil price rises. External pressures have risen due to tight global financing conditions, which have triggered capital outflows and currency pressures across emerging markets including Indonesia. With resilient macroeconomic underpinnings and the end of the post-COVID recovery cycle, the policy focus turns again to the growth agenda.enCC BY-NC 3.0 IGOCLIMATE CHANGEDECARBONIZATIONCLIMATE POLICY FRAMEWORKCLIMATE RESILIENCECLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENTECONOMIC OUTLOOKECONOMIC POLICYIndonesia Economic Prospects, December 2023ReportWorld BankClimate Action for Development10.1596/40729