Hehehe.... sekian puluh persen orang Indonesia yg miskin itu ga dianggap sbg 
manusia oleh si Teddy keparat ini. Dan jg oleh majikannya orang Islam.
 
 
 

From: Teddy S. <ted...@gmail.com>
>To: proletar@yahoogroups.com 
>Sent: Tuesday, March 20, 2012 5:14 AM
>Subject: [proletar] Re: Indonesia's new rich
>
>
>  
>Orang dungu ini tidak tahu bahwa PPP GNI Indonesia pada periode 2007 - 2011 
>sebesar $ 4200 merupakan yang tertinggi dari angka-angka sebelumnya. Adalah 
>suatu kenyataan bahwa Indonesia semakin makmur.
>
>--- In proletar@yahoogroups.com, item abu <itemabu@...> wrote:
>>
>> Hehehe... si Teddy ini ngoceh bhw Indonesia makin makmur krn harga makanan 
>> di kota besar di Indonesia udah hampir sama dgn di Australia. Lalu si Teddy 
>> puter2 lidah ga ngaku bhw dia itu tolol dgn bilang bhw ocehannya itu cuma 
>> berlaku unt kelompok orang makmur di Indonesia doang. 
>>  
>> Sekarang si Teddy ngefitnah gua lagi dgn bilang gua ga tau bhw orang berduit 
>> di Indonesia makin banyak.
>>  
>> Dasar anjing buduk piaraan orang Islam, si Teddy ga peduli dgn orang miskin 
>> sama sekali spt tipikal orangIslam, cuma ngeliat orang kaya doang, 
>> sementara jumlah orang miskin di Indonesia bertambah banyak dan jg tambah 
>> miskin. 
>>  
>>  
>> 
>> From: Teddy S. <teddyr@...>
>> >To: proletar@yahoogroups.com 
>> >Sent: Monday, March 19, 2012 12:38 PM
>> >Subject: [proletar] Re: Indonesia's new rich
>> >
>> >
>> >  
>> >Ada orang dogol yang tidak bisa melihat kenyataan bahwa orang-orang 
>> >Indonesia yang semakin makmur itu jumlahnya semakin banyak. Ada seorang 
>> >wanita yang jalan-jalan ke Eropa dan mampir ke Milan untuk sekedar belanja 
>> >beberapa tas Louis Vuitton untuk dia dan teman-temannya.
>> >
>> >--- In proletar@yahoogroups.com, "Sunny" <ambon@> wrote:
>> >>
>> >> http://www.asiaone.com/News/AsiaOne%2BNews/Asia/Story/A1Story20120312-332917.html
>> >> Indonesia's new rich
>> >> 
>> >> 
>> >> 
>> >> 
>> >> Pedestrians cross a street in Jakarta's modern business district on 
>> >> February 6, 2012.
>> >> By Stuart Grudgings and Andjarsari Paramaditha
>> >> Reuters
>> >> Monday, Mar 12, 2012 
>> >> JAKARTA - Fitria Yusuf is a bag lady, but you won't find her sleeping 
>> >> rough in Jakarta.
>> >> 
>> >> Her bag of choice is Hermes, a French brand so coveted in the Indonesian 
>> >> capital it can cost as much as a luxury car. Yusuf owns five of them, 
>> >> having cut down from the early days of her infatuation with the products.
>> >> 
>> >> "Back in 2006, seeing a Hermes bag was like seeing Halley's comet," said 
>> >> Yusuf, the 29-year-old co-author of "Hermes Temptation," which chronicles 
>> >> how the bag made by French luxury group Hermes International SCA has 
>> >> become "a must-have item" for Jakarta's burgeoning high society.
>> >> 
>> >> The Hermes obsession is one sign of how Indonesia's economic revival is 
>> >> set to produce the fastest-growing ranks of millionaires in Asia as the 
>> >> country enjoys a sweet spot of political stability, strong demand for its 
>> >> plentiful commodities and renewed investor interest.
>> >> 
>> >> That is also adding to economic tensions in a country with a history of 
>> >> social upheaval and where tens of millions still live a hand-to-mouth 
>> >> existence despite hefty recent falls in poverty and a rising middle class.
>> >> 
>> >> With presidential elections looming in 2014, workers have held a series 
>> >> of strikes in recent months, driven by high commodities prices and a 
>> >> growing sense that the fruits of the economic boom have not been widely 
>> >> shared.
>> >> 
>> >> As Southeast Asia's largest economy leaves its basket-case reputation 
>> >> behind with annual growth of about 6 per cent and basks in its newly won 
>> >> investment grade credit status, it is minting dollar millionaires at a 
>> >> rate of 16 a day, consulting firm Capgemini says.
>> >> 
>> >> The number of millionaires will triple to 99,000 by 2015, according to 
>> >> wealth management firm Julius Baer, the quickest pace of any Asian 
>> >> country.
>> >> 
>> >> That is making Indonesia - a country with ambitions to join Brazil, 
>> >> Russia, India and China in the BRIC group of big emerging economies - a 
>> >> must-have market for luxury firms such as Hermes and for a rapidly 
>> >> growing wealth management industry.
>> >> 
>> >> "The middle class is gaining wealth and becoming extremely rich. I would 
>> >> say that's the growth market now, a million dollars (in assets) and up," 
>> >> said Jan Richards, managing director and market manager for Southeast 
>> >> Asia at J.P. Morgan Private Bank, which manages more than $700 billion 
>> >> globally.
>> >> 
>> >> The profile of Indonesia's new rich has been heavily shaped by the surge 
>> >> in demand from China and India for the country's commodities. The world 
>> >> price for a tonne of palm oil, of which Indonesia is the largest 
>> >> producer, has more than doubled since 2006, for example. Gold, of which 
>> >> Indonesia is a major producer, has tripled in the same period.
>> >> 
>> >> Eight of the 10 wealthiest Indonesians in Forbes' annual rich list have 
>> >> substantial holdings in the commodities sector, including palm-oil 
>> >> magnate Eka Tjipta Widjaja and coal billionaire Low Tuck Kwong.
>> >> 
>> >> DBS Private Bank said its wealth management business in Indonesia is 
>> >> growing at an "exceptional" annual pace of 40 per cent, much of it 
>> >> fuelled by the mining industry in resources such as coal, gold, iron, 
>> >> nickel and bauxite.
>> >> 
>> >> "We believe there are more than 20 billionaires with interests in coal 
>> >> and mineral mines, as well as oil palm plantations in the country," said 
>> >> Chan Kwee Him, Indonesia country head for the bank.
>> >> 
>> >> GROWING WEALTH GAP 
>> >> 
>> >> The surging ranks of millionaires and the concentration of wealth in the 
>> >> commodities sector highlights how the benefits of Indonesia's revival are 
>> >> far from being evenly spread among classes and regions in the huge 
>> >> archipelago.
>> >> 
>> >> While Hermes bags change hands for up to $50,000 and buyers face a 
>> >> six-month wait for a $1 million Lamborghini super car, far-flung regions 
>> >> like Papua and Maluku struggle to provide basic public services.
>> >> 
>> >> About 100 million Indonesians - about 40 per cent of the population - 
>> >> live on less than $2 a day, the World Bank says. Average wages at $113 
>> >> are a third of China's.
>> >> 
>> >> About 60 million of Indonesia's 133 million-strong "middle class" spend 
>> >> between $2-4 a day, the World Bank says. A 1,500 rupiah ($0.17) per litre 
>> >> cut in fuel subsidies being considered by the government would push 2.4 
>> >> million people below the poverty line, a study by the University of 
>> >> Indonesia found.
>> >> 
>> >> "I don't feel middle class, I feel poor," said 21-year-old Siti Aisah, 
>> >> who runs a shack selling snacks to construction workers that is almost in 
>> >> the shadow of Yusuf's sprawling house in a Jakarta suburb. She said her 
>> >> family can afford to spend about $10 on good days - middle class by some 
>> >> measures.
>> >> 
>> >> Since the 1998 fall of President Suharto following widespread rioting in 
>> >> Jakarta, broad inequality measured by the Gini index has risen to 0.38 
>> >> from 0.32. That is still below many regional neighbours, but some 
>> >> economists question the accuracy of the surveys it is based on. A paper 
>> >> by Harvard's Kennedy School of Government estimated Indonesia's real Gini 
>> >> score at 0.45, putting it on a par with the Philippines and Cambodia.
>> >> 
>> >> Corruption-prone governance, poor infrastructure, low spending on social 
>> >> welfare and health and the business dominance of a relatively few 
>> >> families contribute to entrench inequality.
>> >> 
>> >> "Indonesia's tiny stratum of ultra-wealthy citizens continues to be 
>> >> plumped up by a process of wealth extraction from natural resources 
>> >> rather than by wealth creation through industry and production," said 
>> >> Jeffrey Winters, an associate professor at Yale University.
>> >> 
>> >> LUXURY BOOMS 
>> >> 
>> >> Consultancy firm McKinsey sees the number of households earning $7,000 a 
>> >> month rising to 25 million by 2020 from around 17 million now as 
>> >> Indonesia's broad middle class continues its expansion.
>> >> 
>> >> But sustained growth in the middle class depends on how well Indonesia 
>> >> improves its low productivity and poor infrastructure to help bridge huge 
>> >> regional differences. Just six of Indonesia's 350 cities account for 
>> >> about 30 per cent of GDP, said Arief Budiman, a partner with McKinsey in 
>> >> Jakarta.
>> >> 
>> >> There are some signs that the wealth is spreading, said Chan of DBS.
>> >> 
>> >> "While many of these billionaires are from old wealth, some are newcomers 
>> >> who are small planters or mine owners who benefited from the commodity 
>> >> boom. This segment of new wealth is also the fastest growing," Chan said.
>> >> 
>> >> While the luxury market is small compared to China or Japan, companies 
>> >> like France's LVMH and Britain's Rolls Royce Holding PLC are jockeying to 
>> >> be in place for the country's coming of age.
>> >> 
>> >> Sales of "premium" cars soared 27 per cent last year, despite clogged 
>> >> roads in Jakarta and other big cities that reduce speeds to a crawl on 
>> >> week days. At a Jaguar and Bentley showroom nestled between Louis Vuitton 
>> >> and Bulgari stores at one of Jakarta's swankiest malls, a sales manager 
>> >> said he had sold about 10 of the cars priced up to $300,000 in February.
>> >> 
>> >> At the only Jakarta store of French luxury shoe and bag maker Christian 
>> >> Louboutin, sales of the precariously high-heeled stilettos priced up to 
>> >> $7,800 are up 25 per cent over the past year. Compared to women in 
>> >> Singapore or Hong Kong who are more likely to use public transport, 
>> >> Indonesia's upper crust prefer higher heels because they get around in 
>> >> chauffeur-driven cars, said store manager Budi Santoso.
>> >> 
>> >> "The ones who can afford these don't really walk."
>> >> 
>> >> His best customers buy 20 pairs a season and he has steady mail-order 
>> >> demand from areas such as the resource-rich Kalimantan region on Borneo 
>> >> island.
>> >> 
>> >> Sales are surging despite a sales tax of up to 200 per cent on luxury 
>> >> goods that adds to the usual headaches of doing business in Indonesia. 
>> >> French group PPR's luxury division, whose brands include Gucci and 
>> >> Alexander McQueen, said such concerns were preventing it from having a 
>> >> direct presence despite "double-digit" sales growth at its franchise 
>> >> stores.
>> >> 
>> >> If Yusuf's tales from the front lines of Hermes bag obsession are any 
>> >> guide, luxury firms have a bright future in Indonesia.
>> >> 
>> >> 
>> >> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>> >>
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> 
>> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>>
>
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