Indonesia's Prabowo nominates nephew as central bank deputy governor, sources say


Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto attends a meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin at the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia, December 10, 2025. - Photo: Reuters

JAKARTA: Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto has nominated his nephew to join the central bank's board of governors, two sources told Reuters, amid growing concern about its independence as the government seeks more support for ambitious economic targets.

Investors have worried that independent monetary policymaking in Southeast Asia's largest economy might be under pressure as Prabowo targets economic growth of 8% by 2029, from about 5% now.

Those fears grew after Bank Indonesia unveiled a new burden-sharing deal last year to fund some government programmes.

Thomas Djiwandono, a deputy finance minister who is a former businessman, will soon face a fit-and-proper test by parliament for the new job, said the two sources, who sought anonymity as they were not authorised to speak to media.

The United States-educated Djiwandono will replace current BI board member Juda Agung, one of the sources added.

Djiwandono, Agung, the central bank's spokesperson, and the chairman of a paliamentary panel overseeing assessments for top central bank leadership did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Prabowo's spokesperson declined to comment.

The bank is set to hold its next monthly monetary policy review later this week.

Each member of the bank's board, comprised of a governor and several deputy governors, has a voting right to decide key interest rate levels and determines BI's policy.

Members are usually career central bankers, economists or former executives of commercial banks appointed by the president with parliamentary approval.

Domestic media IDNFinancials also reported the appointment, citing a source who said Djiwandono was expected to take up the new post in February, barring last-minute changes.

Last year, Djiwandono attended at least one central bank monetary policy review as a representative of the finance minister, but did not have a right to vote.

The move comes as parliament discusses a bill with provisions to strengthen the central bank's role in supporting economic growth. - Reuters

 

 

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Aseanplus News

Woman arrested in South Korea after allegedly stabbing man she met via dating app
Expat who left wife, children and quit Singapore job ordered to pay S$634,000 in backdated support
Laos accelerates digital transformation for national growth
Duterte ICC case: Philippine National Police says cops free to testify, cooperate
Japan PM Takaichi calls Feb 8 election seeking mandate for spending plans, defence build-up
Brazil-China trade hits record US$171bil in 2025 as US tariffs prompt export pivot
Thai Election 2026: five parties lay out competing industrial roadmaps
Govt committed to fulfilling MA63 in line with Royal Decree, says Mustapha
Nine killed as school bus overturns near India's Chhattisgarh–Jharkhand border, safety lapses under scrutiny
MACC submits papers on Armed Forces corruption probe to prosecutor

Others Also Read