Indonesia’s Forex Reserves Rose To 157 Billion USD In March

Indonesia’s Forex Reserves Rose To 157 Billion USD In March

JAKARTA, Apr 15 (NNN-ANTARA) – Indonesia’s foreign exchange reserves rose to 157.1 billion U.S. dollars, at the end of March, up from 154.5 billion dollars the previous month, the central bank announced, yesterday.

Ramdan Denny Prakoso, executive director of Bank Indonesia’s Communication Department, noted that, the growth was driven by tax and service revenues, as well as, government foreign loan withdrawals.

“The rise in foreign exchange reserves occurred amid Bank Indonesia’s efforts to stabilise the Rupiah exchange rate, in response to persistently high global financial market uncertainty,” said Ramdan.

Foreign exchange reserves at the end of March were equivalent to 6.7 months of imports, or 6.5 months of imports plus government external debt payments.

The level is far higher than the international adequacy standard of three months’ worth of imports, and it is deemed adequate to sustain macroeconomic and financial stability.

Looking ahead, Bank Indonesia sees the foreign exchange reserves position as adequate and continues to develop collaboration with the government, to ensure external resilience and support long-term economic growth.– NNN-ANTARA  

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