*Kalau opsir-opsirnya mikir duit bisa didapat dengan jalan tidak halal maka
tentu saja kekuatan militernya lemah syahwat. Tahun 2030 tak lama lagi,
tutup mata buka mata sudah 2030, jadi mana bisa menjadi momok gagah perkasa
di ASEAN pada waktu yang dipropagandakan bersamaan dengan Pemilu.*

http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2018/05/08/singapore-malaysia-more-powerful-than-indonesia-for-now-study.html


Singapore, Malaysia more powerful than Indonesia – for now: Study

   -

   Devina Heriyanto

   The Jakarta Post

Jakarta | Wed, May 9, 2018 | 09:30 am

All set: Personnel of the Banteng Raider Infantry Battalion (Yonif Raider)
of the 4th Regional Military Command (Kodam IV) Diponegoro in Semarang,
Central Java, attend a ceremony on Friday to mark their official dispatch
on a peacekeeping mission to Lebanon. (JP/Suherdjoko)

Indonesia is not the most powerful nation in ASEAN, according to the latest
study by the Lowy Institute, which ranks the largest Southeast Asian
country behind Singapore and Malaysia in terms of power.

But the country, the study says, may surpass its two neighbors by 2030.

The Asia Power Index 2018 ranks Indonesia as the 10th strongest among 25
countries in the Asia Pacific region after Singapore (eighth) and Malaysia
(ninth). The United States and China still dominate the region, followed by
Japan, India and Russia.

The index by the Lowy Institute measures a country’s power by eight
categories: economic resources, military capability, resilience, future
trends, diplomatic influence, economic relationships, defense networks and
cultural influence -- each having a different weight in the final scoring.
Economic resources and military capability are weighted heavier than other
categories.

View site in full screen <https://power.lowyinstitute.org/>

Indonesia scores 20.0, a far cry from the US with 85.5, China with 75.5 and
Japan with 42.1. Singapore scores 27.9 and Malaysia scores only slightly
higher with 20.6.

Although Malaysia scores less in economic resources and military capability
than Indonesia, its economic relationship and defense network is better:
showing that resources are not all that matters in terms of power. The same
applies to Singapore, which Lowy notes to have made up for its small
economic and military size with “an influential network of regional
relationships”.

Military capability, economic relationships and defense networks are three
categories where Indonesia ranks 13th, comparatively lower than other
categories. However, Indonesia’s military is currently undergoing a
modernization process to meet its minimum essential force (MEF)
requirements, expected to be completed by 2024.

Countries with scores above 70 are classified as superpowers, countries
with scores between 40.0 and 70.0 are major powers, those with higher than
10.0 are middle powers, and below 10.0 are minor powers.

The report notes Indonesia as one of the underperforming countries in its
power-gap index. Comparing a country’s actual resources with its influence,
the index categorizes countries as overachievers or underachievers. Japan
tops the power-gap index, performing much more efficiently than the US or
China. Other notable overachievers include Singapore, Australia and South
Korea.

But it is not all doom and gloom. Indonesia is predicted to leave its
Southeast Asian peers behind in 2030, ranking at fourth in the future-trend
category behind China, the US and India.

Lowy measures future trends by a country’s economic, military and
demographic resources in 2030. (ahw)
Topics :

   -

   Indonesia, <http://www.thejakartapost.com/tag/Indonesia> Malaysia,
   <http://www.thejakartapost.com/tag/Malaysia> Singapore,
   <http://www.thejakartapost.com/tag/Singapore> Lowy-Institute,
   <http://www.thejakartapost.com/tag/Lowy-Institute> study,
   <http://www.thejakartapost.com/tag/study> Asia,
   <http://www.thejakartapost.com/tag/Asia>

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