Hehe tapi ada prabowo jelas dia ngerti bgt.. Kan dia pengusaha juga..

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-----Original Message-----
From: "FromBuitenzorg" <frombuitenz...@yahoo.com>

Date: Sun, 24 May 2009 14:08:42 
To: <obrolan-bandar@yahoogroups.com>
Subject: Re: [ob] Pengaruh KEBIJAKAN ekonomi dan index


Kalo pilih Mega, wah dia anti ekonomi liberal termasuk saham dan akan kurang 
memperhatikan BEI, lagian gak janji tentang BEI. Padahal IDX adalah cermin 
pertumbuhan ekonomi Indonesia ...

Think again !

Rgrds


ricky.waki...@... wrote:
>
> Kok nggak sebut-sebut ekonomi gaya JK, Mbah? Sudah yakin gak bakal kepilih?
> 
> Sent from my BlackBerry®
> powered by Sinyal Kuat INDOSAT
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: "jsx_consultant" <jsx-consult...@...>
> 
> Date: Sun, 24 May 2009 13:49:56 
> To: <obrolan-bandar@yahoogroups.com>
> Subject: [ob] Pengaruh KEBIJAKAN ekonomi dan index
> 
> 
> Pengaruh KEBIJAKAN ekonomi dan index
> 
> 
> Index India naik 17% sehari ketika partai Congress yg condong
> pada OPEN/FREE MARKET ECONOMY menang pemilu pada tgl 18 Mei
> lalu.
> 
> Bagaimana dengan Ekonomi gaya pak Budiono Vs Ekonomi Kerakyatan
> Megapro ?.
> 
> Kita liat aja hasilnya bulan depan....
> 
> 
> India's Stock Surge Shows Investors See Open Economy (Update2) 
> 
> 
> By Cherian Thomas, Kartik Goyal and Shobhana Chandra
> 
> May 19 (Bloomberg) -- India's record stock-market surge yesterday after the 
> election triumph of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's Congress Party is a sign 
> of just how much investors want the next government to open Asia's 
> third-biggest economy. 
> 
> Expectations are soaring as Singh, 76, starts his second term without the 
> need for support from the communist allies who choked his market-opening 
> efforts from 2004. Investors are betting the Oxford-trained economist will 
> remove the last barriers to foreign investments in financial services and re- 
> start asset sales to help trim a widening budget deficit. 
> 
> "There's a real sense of urgency in taking this event and translating it into 
> tangible results," said Nick Chamie, global head of emerging-markets research 
> at RBC Capital Markets in Toronto. "If we don't see some positive signs on an 
> improving fiscal deficit in relatively short order, we could end up again 
> with a weaker equity market, a weaker rupee and reduced confidence in the 
> government's ability." 
> 
> The benchmark Sensitive Index, or Sensex, extended its rally today, rising 
> 2.4 percent to 14627.37 at 2:10 p.m. local time after soaring 17 percent 
> yesterday. The rupee climbed 0.9 percent against the dollar to 47.48 in 
> Mumbai. 
> 
> Indian bonds fell, paring yesterday's gains, after the government said it 
> will sell additional debt this month. The benchmark bond yield rose 9 basis 
> points to 6.40 percent. 
> 
> Mukherjee, Nath 
> 
> Pranab Mukherjee, 73, may continue as India's finance minister in the 
> incoming government, said a senior Congress party official today on condition 
> of anonymity. Mukherjee took over the finance portfolio in November after 
> Palaniappan Chidambaram was moved to the home ministry to strengthen national 
> security following the terrorist attacks in Mumbai. 
> 
> Other potential candidates for the position include Commerce Minister Kamal 
> Nath, 62, Deputy Chairman of the Planning Commission, Montek Singh Ahluwalia, 
> 65, and former central bank governor Chakravarthy Rangarajan, the Economic 
> Times reported yesterday. 
> 
> Mamata Banerjee, leader of the All India Trinamool Congress, a key ally of 
> Singh's Congress party, may seek to become the railway minister, said Partha 
> Chatterjee, a Trinamool member. 
> 
> Congress and its allies won 261 of the 543 elected lower- house seats, with 
> the party getting 206 lawmakers of its own, the most since 1991, when Singh 
> as finance minister abandoned Soviet-style state planning and introduced 
> free-market policies that have helped India's economy quadruple in size. 
> 
> Six-Month `Honeymoon' 
> 
> The immediate interest among investors is the fiscal stimulus the government 
> can provide to revive an economy growing at its weakest pace since 2003. The 
> finance minister may unveil this year's budget by July. Singh's government 
> said before the elections that the economy needs stimulus of at least another 
> 1 percent of gross domestic product. 
> 
> "They'll have a honeymoon of six to eight months," said John Praveen, chief 
> investment strategist at Pramerica International Investments Advisers, a unit 
> of Prudential Financial Inc. in Newark, New Jersey. "As long as they're 
> delivering on some of the expectations, the markets will hold the gains. They 
> have to make the right start." 
> 
> The Reserve Bank of India estimates the fiscal and monetary steps announced 
> so far are worth more than $85 billion, or almost 7 percent of GDP. 
> 
> The tax cuts and increased spending since December widened the federal budget 
> deficit to 6 percent of GDP in the year ended March 31, from a target of 2.5 
> percent. 
> 
> Window of Opportunity 
> 
> The prospect of an increased budget shortfall prompted Standard & Poor's to 
> say in February that India's spending plans were "not sustainable" and the 
> nation's credit rating may be cut to junk if finances worsen. S&P has a BBB- 
> long term credit rating on India, the lowest investment-grade level. 
> 
> S&P and Moody's Investors Service, which places India two steps below 
> investment grade, yesterday indicated the South Asian nation has a chance to 
> improve its fiscal situation after the resounding election victory. 
> 
> The poll result gives the government more "political space" to sell stakes in 
> state-run companies and improve revenue, Moody's senior analyst Aninda Mitra 
> told Bloomberg News. 
> 
> S&P's director of sovereign ratings Takahira Ogawa said "there is a 
> possibility for the government to implement various measures to reform for 
> further expansion of the economy and for the fiscal consolidation." 
> 
> Communist Impact 
> 
> Singh had to depend on the communist parties to gain a majority in parliament 
> in his first term. The communists were opposed to his plans to raise funds by 
> selling stakes in National Hydroelectric Power Corp., Oil India Ltd., Bharat 
> Heavy Electricals Ltd. and National Aluminium Co. 
> 
> "Among the key reforms will be disinvestment now - the new government will 
> focus on fiscal responsibility," said Rajeev Malik, a regional economist at 
> Macquarie Group Ltd. in Singapore. "The key issue will be for the government 
> to balance the need for additional fiscal stimulus with a credible plan for 
> fiscal consolidation." 
> 
> Communists also stalled a bill to raise the foreign- investment ceiling for 
> Prudential Plc and other insurers to 49 percent from 26 percent, and resisted 
> legislation aimed at removing a 10 percent cap on the voting rights of 
> foreign investors in non-state banks. They also blocked entry of global 
> retailers such as Wal-Mart Stores Inc. into India. 
> 
> "Now the Congress party can rule with a minimum number of coalition partners 
> and with a mandate for reform," said Rory Medcalf, an India specialist at the 
> Lowy Institute for International Policy in Sydney. "This is exceptionally 
> good news for India." 
> 
> -- With assistance from Bibhudatta Pradhan in New Delhi and Debarati Roy in 
> Mumbai. Editors: Michael Dwyer, Daniel Moss 
> 
> To contact the reporter on this story: Cherian Thomas in New Delhi at 
> cthom...@... 
> 
> Last Updated: May 19, 2009 05:12 EDT
>



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