Business Opportunities in Agriculture: 150 Field Interviews (Book)

Indonesia Agribusiness Report

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The Indonesia Agribusiness Report features Business Monitor International's market assessment and independent 5-year forecasts covering the supply and demand outlook for the livestock, dairy, grains, rice, sugar, edible oils, coffee and cocoa sectors. ( Indonesia Agribusiness Report - Business Market Reports )

Business Monitor International's Agribusiness service also provides proprietary medium term price forecasts for key commodities, including corn, wheat, rice, sugar, cocoa, coffee, soy and milk; in addition to newly-researched competitive intelligence on leading agribusiness producers, traders and suppliers; in-depth analysis of latest industry developments; and essential industry context, such as the background macroeconomic outlook and the downstream supply chain.

Key Benefits
Use BMI's independent 5-Year industry forecasts to test other views - a key input for successful planning in dynamic agribusiness markets.

Apply BMI's medium term commodity price forecasts to assist with budgetary planning and the identification of investment opportunities and potential risks

Exploit latest competitive intelligence on your competitors and peers in Asia, Europe, Latin America, the Middle East and Africa through our company rankings and analysis.

Executive Summary

The year just past will be remembered as a proud year for Indonesian agriculture. In 2008, the country achieved self-sufficiency in the production of rice and corn. These were long-held goals for Indonesia's leaders and were given extra significance by the turbulence in the world markets for agricultural products over 2008.

Becoming a net exporter of rice, the staple food, is a particularly significant accomplishment that has been achieved only once before in the country's recent history. The heady forecasts of up to 2mn tonnes of rice exports in 2009 have now come down to a more realistic 100,000 tonnes, but another large harvest this year could see that figure increase in 2010.

While the government was glad to crow about the achievement, especially so close to an election, many small farmers found 2008 to be a less happy year. Rice production in Indonesia is still dominated by small-scale farms on tiny plots of land. More than half of Indonesia's farmers own less than 0.5 hectares (ha) of land. Much of the extra revenue from high prices and large crops was eaten up by increased input costs leaving farmers little better off. Farmers are supposed to have access to subsidised fertiliser from the government. However, the task of getting the reduced-price product to its intended recipient across the vast Indonesian archipelago is often too much. Indonesia's slow-moving and oft corrupt bureaucracy means that some of the fertiliser is never sent out and some disappears along the way. In 2009, things look to be little improved as by the beginning of March only just over half of Indonesia's rice-growing districts had submitted their requests for subsidised fertiliser according to reports in the local press.

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Business Opportunities in Agriculture: 150 Field Interviews (Book)

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