wah ini lebih bagus lagi data pringkat berdasar kan gdp,...dan wah ranking 
kita gak jelek2 amet berarti ya...hehehe

btw thnx lho pak pram...bwt link sumber gdp nya :)

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "pram" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <obrolan-bandar@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Tuesday, November 18, 2008 4:34 AM
Subject: Re: [obrolan-bandar] Indonesia's rupiah approached a seven-year low 
after the government reported the slowest economic growth in six quarters. 
Bonds declined.


Ukurannya GDP pak. Lihat list di bawah dari
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_GDP_(nominal):


Country  GDP (millions of USD)
— World 54,584,918
— European Union 16,905,620
1 United States 13,807,550
2 Japan 4,381,576
3 Germany 3,320,913
4 China (PRC) 3,280,224
5 United Kingdom 2,804,437
6 France 2,593,779
7 Italy 2,104,666
8 Spain 1,439,983
9 Canada 1,436,086
10 Brazil 1,313,590
11 Russia 1,289,535
12 India 1,100,695
13 Mexico 1,022,816
14 South Korea 969,871
15 Australia 908,990
16 Netherlands 777,241
17 Turkey 659,276
18 Sweden 454,839
19 Belgium 453,283
20 Indonesia 432,944
21 Switzerland 427,074
22 Poland 422,090
23 Norway 389,457
24 Republic of China (Taiwan) 383,347
25 Saudi Arabia 381,938
26 Austria 371,219
27 Greece 313,806
28 Denmark 312,046
29 Iran 285,304
30 South Africa 283,071
31 Ireland 261,247
32 Argentina 260,122
33 Finland 246,350
34 Thailand 245,351
35 Venezuela 227,753
36 Portugal 223,447
— Hong Kong 207,171
37 Colombia 202,630
38 United Arab Emirates 190,744
39 Malaysia 186,718
40 Czech Republic 174,999
41 Nigeria 166,985
42 Romania 165,983
43 Israel 164,103
44 Chile 163,914
45 Singapore 161,349
46 Philippines 144,062
47 Pakistan 143,766
48 Ukraine 141,644
49 Hungary 138,356
50 Algeria 134,275
51 New Zealand 128,711
52 Egypt 127,966
53 Kuwait 111,514
54 Peru 107,399
55 Kazakhstan 104,850
56 Morocco 75,116
57 Slovakia 74,988
58 Bangladesh 73,689
59 Qatar 73,256
60 Vietnam 70,943
61 Libya 69,929
62 Angola 61,334
63 Croatia 51,263
64 Luxembourg 49,531
65 Sudan 46,228
66 Slovenia 46,084
67 Ecuador 45,789
68 Belarus 44,773
69 Dominican Republic 40,988
70 Oman 40,391
71 Serbia 39,854
72 Bulgaria 39,609
73 Syria 38,970
74 Lithuania 38,886
75 Tunisia 35,010
76 Guatemala 33,694
77 Sri Lanka 32,347
78 Azerbaijan 31,240
79 Latvia 27,165
80 Kenya 27,026
81 Costa Rica 26,232
82 Turkmenistan 26,201
83 Lebanon 24,640
84 Uruguay 23,256
85 Uzbekistan 22,307
86 Yemen 21,818
87 Cyprus 21,303
88 Estonia 20,900
89 Trinidad and Tobago 20,878
90 Cameroon 20,686
91 El Salvador 20,373
92 Iceland 20,228
93 Panama 19,740
94 Côte d'Ivoire 19,824
95 Ethiopia 19,431
96 Bahrain 17,398
97 Tanzania 16,691
98 Jordan 15,833
99 Bosnia and Herzegovina 15,165
100 Ghana 15,160
101 Myanmar 13,480
102 Bolivia 13,292
103 Equatorial Guinea 12,574
104 Botswana 12,382
105 Honduras 12,279
106 Brunei 12,275
107 Paraguay 11,954
108 Uganda 11,785
109 Gabon 11,584
110 Zambia 11,411
111 Jamaica 11,266
112 Senegal 11,183
113 Albania 10,768
114 Democratic Republic of the Congo 10,423
115 Nepal 10,328
116 Georgia 10,227
117 Afghanistan 9,596
118 Armenia 9,229
119 Cambodia 8,690
120 Mozambique 8,069
121 Madagascar 7,711
122 Republic of Macedonia 7,685
123 Republic of the Congo 7,657
124 Malta 7,471
125 Namibia 7,446
126 Chad 6,965
127 Mali 6,940
128 Mauritius 6,928
129 Burkina Faso 6,751
130 The Bahamas 6,571
131 Haiti 6,031
132 Papua New Guinea 6,001
133 Nicaragua 5,724
134 Benin 5,566
135 Zimbabwe 4,723
136 Moldova 4,395
137 Niger 4,174
138 Guinea 4,157
139 Laos 4,028
140 Mongolia 3,894
141 Kyrgyzstan 3,748
142 Tajikistan 3,712
143 Malawi 3,561
144 Barbados 3,409
145 Rwanda 3,339
146 Fiji 3,324
147 Swaziland 2,890
148 Mauritania 2,819
149 Togo 2,497
150 Suriname 2,415
151 Central African Republic 1,714
152 Sierra Leone 1,665
153 Lesotho 1,598
154 Cape Verde 1,445
155 Eritrea 1,316
156 Belize 1,277
157 Bhutan 1,197
158 Antigua and Barbuda 1,088
159 Guyana 1,074
160 Maldives 1,058
161 Burundi 974
162 Saint Lucia 960
163 Djibouti 850
164 Liberia 735
165 Seychelles 712
166 The Gambia 644
167 Grenada 605
168 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 556
169 Saint Kitts and Nevis 527
170 Vanuatu 494
171 Samoa 476
172 Comoros 466
173 East Timor 459
174 Solomon Islands 377
175 Guinea-Bissau 356
176 Dominica 336
177 Tonga 246
178 São Tomé and Príncipe 145
179 Kiribati 67

On 11/18/08, meizal <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> hehehe
>
> jumlah penduduk nya yang segambreng pak ( populasi nya ) :D,mungkin gak
> dimiliki negara tetangga yang seregional sama kita,peduduk yang besar kan
> korelasi nya sama konsumen yang besar dan target pasar yang besar,target
> pasar yang besar biasa nya sejalan dengan income yang besar bagi
> industri...income dari industri yang besar biasanya berkorelasi dengan gdp
> yang besar ...gdp yang besar dan tumbuh ters berarti bagus...( ini baru 
> dari
> 1 sisi aja sih ini kita liat nya ) ..hehehe
>
> sayang nya cuman 1 konsumen nya masih tergantung dengan produk2
> impor,slogan2 selama ini sih banyak yang bilang pakelah produk dalam
> negri...eh sial nya itu produsan bahan baku nya impor semua
> lagi...hehehe...klo nilai tukar nya gak stabil trs...inflasi nya nanti 
> bisa
> jadi bergeser dari karna naik nya harga komodity jadi tinggi nya biaya 
> modal
> akibat overhead yang impor tadi...inflasi tinggi--->daya beli
> turun--->income/earning emiten di revisi lagi--->gdp turun ( alias
> pertumbuhan ekonomi nya yang jeblok..
>
> hehehe saya udah mule ngelantur nih,
> maklum otak nya baru nge-restart dan mo kembali di stanby kan pak hihihihi
>
> moga2 bisa stabil cepet ya pak Rp nya,dan pemerintah bisa cepet 
> bereaksinya
> :-)
>
>
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: abdulrahim abdulrahim
> To: obrolan-bandar@yahoogroups.com
> Sent: Tuesday, November 18, 2008 3:22 AM
> Subject: Re: [obrolan-bandar] Indonesia's rupiah approached a seven-year 
> low
> after the government reported the slowest economic growth in six quarters.
> Bonds declined.
>
>
>
>
> Nanya dunk
> Kenapa si Indonesia suka disebut sebagai SouthEast Largest Economy?
>
> Apakah karena kekayaan alamnya atau komoditinya ? Bukannya ekonomi
> Singapura, Malaysia dan Thailand lebih besar daripada ekonomi
> Indonesia?
>
> On Mon, Nov 17, 2008 at 9:18 PM, meizal <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Indonesia's GDP Expands at Slowest Pace in 6 Quarters (Update2)
> >
> >
> http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601013&sid=aozNnivhfxbQ&refer=emergingmarkets
> >
> > By Aloysius Unditu and Arijit Ghosh
> >
> > Nov. 17 (Bloomberg) -- Indonesia's economy grew at the slowest pace in 
> > six
> > quarters as declining commodity prices reduced the value of exports and
> > agricultural output slowed.
> >
> > Southeast Asia's largest economy expanded 6.1 percent in the third 
> > quarter
> > from a year earlier, after growing 6.4 percent in the preceding three
> > months, the Central Statistics Bureau said in Jakarta today. That's more
> > than the median 5.9 percent forecast of 22 economists in a Bloomberg 
> > News
> > survey.
> >
> > Exporters in Indonesia, the world's biggest producer of palm oil and the
> > second-largest maker of rubber, are reeling from a slump in commodity
> prices
> > amid recessions in the U.S. and Europe. Japan fell into its first
> recession
> > since 2001, according to a Cabinet Office report today in Tokyo, after 
> > the
> > world's second-largest economy unexpectedly shrank in the third quarter.
> >
> > ``Going forward it's going to be a tough year in 2009,'' said Destry
> > Damayanti, an economist at PT Mandiri Sekuritas in Jakarta. ``We will be
> > affected as exports and imports are expected to slow significantly.''
> >
> > The rupiah fell 2.2 percent to 11,825 against the dollar at 5 p.m. in
> > Jakarta.
> >
> > The government last month cut next year's target for Indonesia's
> > overseas-sales growth to below 11.9 percent. Frozen credit markets are
> > making it difficult for companies to obtain the letters of credit needed
> to
> > secure payment for their shipments.
> >
> > `Financial Turmoil'
> >
> > ``A few months ago I had five out of six containers already on their way
> to
> > the port returned because the client suddenly called and said he 
> > couldn't
> > secure the payment,'' said Umar Chotob, owner of CV Java Marindra Jaya,
> > which exports wooden furniture. ``The impact of the financial turmoil is
> > remarkable. It's overwhelming.''
> >
> > Exports growth slowed to 14.3 percent in the quarter from a year 
> > earlier.
> > Farm output grew 2.4 percent in the three months ended September, the
> > slowest pace in six quarters. Construction increased 7.5 percent, the
> least
> > since the quarter ended December 2005.
> >
> > Rising prices of coal, palm oil, coffee and rubber earlier this year
> > increased the income of farmers and miners. That helped boost sales of
> > motorcycles to a record 612,032 in August, after Indonesians purchased 
> > an
> > unprecedented 60,830 cars in July.
> >
> > Since then, commodity prices have tumbled. Power station coal prices at
> > Australia's Newcastle port, a benchmark for Asia, fell 6.2 percent in 
> > the
> > week to Nov. 14 amid declines in global energy prices.
> >
> > ``All export prices are down and you can't compensate that with extra
> volume
> > because demand is not there,'' said Tony D. Costa, the president of PT
> Bank
> > Rabobank International Indonesia, a unit of the world's biggest
> agricultural
> > lender. Consumer spending is slowing and ``motorcycle sales will be much
> > lower. That means the economy will slow.''
> >
> > Global Slump
> >
> > Indonesia's economic growth may ease to as low as 5 percent next year as
> the
> > world tilts toward a recession, Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati
> said
> > on Nov. 9.
> >
> > ``It will be very, very challenging for us to maintain growth under the
> > current circumstances,'' Sri Mulyani said. ``Just like other developing
> > countries, we have to be prepared for a longer period of weakening in 
> > the
> > economy.''
> >
> > Government spending rose 16.9 percent in the third quarter, the fastest
> pace
> > since the three months ended June 2006, while consumer demand grew 5.3
> > percent.
> >
> > ``Private consumption may still be able to sustain Indonesia's growth
> > trajectory amidst a deteriorating external trade position,'' said Enrico
> > Tanuwidjaja, an economist in Singapore at Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp.
> >
> > The statistics agency forecasts 2008 economic growth to be a ``minimum'' 
> > 6
> > percent and less than 6 percent next year.
> >
> > To contact the reporter on this story: Arijit Ghosh in Jakarta at
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED]; Aloysius Unditu in Jakarta at 
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED];
> >
> > Last Updated: November 17, 2008 05:30 EST
> >
> > Indonesia's Rupiah Approaches Seven-Year Low; Bonds Decline
> >
> > By Lilian Karunungan
> >
> > ________________________________
> >
> > Nov. 17 (Bloomberg) -- Indonesia's rupiah approached a seven-year low
> after
> > the government reported the slowest economic growth in six quarters. 
> > Bonds
> > declined.
> >
> >
> http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601083&sid=aJxWD3ZlC6Cw&refer=currency
> >
> >
> >
> > The currency was Asia's worst performer today versus the dollar, sliding
> in
> > tandem with regional shares, as reports confirming recessions in Hong 
> > Kong
> > and Japan prompted investors to seek safer bets than emerging-market
> assets.
> > Southeast Asia's largest economy expanded 6.1 percent in the third 
> > quarter
> > from a year earlier, beating the 5.9 percent growth predicted by
> economists
> > in a Bloomberg survey.
> >
> > ``Even though the figure came in better than expected, it doesn't have
> much
> > impact on the rupiah itself,'' said Gundy Cahyadi, an economist at
> > IDEAglobal in Singapore. ``Global growth is giving skepticism to the
> market.
> > Risk appetite is not going to change much.''
> >
> > The rupiah slumped 1.5 percent to 11,750 per dollar as of 4:29 p.m. in
> > Jakarta, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The currency touched
> > 11,988 on Nov. 13, the lowest level since April 2001.
> >
> > The MSCI Asia-Pacific Index of shares fell 0.5 percent, extending last
> > week's 4.7 percent slide. Overseas investors sold more Indonesian shares
> > than they bought on all but three of this month's trading days, 
> > according
> to
> > stock exchange data.
> >
> > Ten-year government bonds dropped for a fourth day on concern a 
> > weakening
> > rupiah is keeping overseas investors away from the securities.
> >
> > ``The negative sentiment is coming from the rupiah,'' said Handy 
> > Yunianto,
> a
> > Jakarta-based bond analyst at Mandiri Sekuritas, part of Indonesia's
> largest
> > lender. ``When the rupiah is volatile, the risk increases for foreign
> > investors.''
> >
> > The yield on the 9 percent note due September 2018 rose 18 basis points,
> or
> > 0.18 percentage point, to 16.1 percent, according to closing prices at 
> > the
> > Inter Dealer Market Association. The price fell 0.6317, or 6,317 rupiah
> per
> > 1 million rupiah face amount, to 65.5100. A basis point is 0.01 
> > percentage
> > point.
> >
> > To contact the reporter on this story: Lilian Karunungan in Jakarta at
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >
> > Last Updated: November 17, 2008 04:40 EST
>
>
>

------------------------------------

+ +
+ + + + +
Mohon saat meREPLY posting, text dari posting lama dihapus
kecuali diperlukan agar CONTEXTnya jelas.
+ + + + +
+ +Yahoo! Groups Links




------------------------------------

+ +
+ + + + +
Mohon saat meREPLY posting, text dari posting lama dihapus 
kecuali diperlukan agar CONTEXTnya jelas.
+ + + + +
+ +Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/obrolan-bandar/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/obrolan-bandar/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
    mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

Reply via email to