JAKARTA — To prevent an excess of imported goods from inundating the domestic market, the Indonesian government is preparing a regulation on cross-border trade through e-commerce platforms.
Coordinating Economic Minister Darmin Nasution said the government had been reviewing the import trend on e-commerce platforms.
“The number is relatively small but the trend catches up fast,” Darmin said on Wednesday as quoted by kontan.co.id.
The data showed that there had been fewer goods imported through e-commerce platforms than those brought into the country through conventional means, he said, adding that the government had also observed a rising trend in goods imported through online marketplaces.
Darmin went on to say that the government had been drafting a government regulation (PP) that would rule cross-border e-commerce.
The government expected the policy to establish a discernible mechanism and bureaucratic filter regarding e-commerce imports, he said.
Darmin said the government had studied similar regulations implemented in neighboring Southeast Asian countries such as Malaysia and Thailand in drafting the new policy.
“We’d like to make sure that we’re not lax but also not overly strict compared to other countries,” he said.
Previously, the Finance Ministry’s Customs and Excise Directorate General recorded that imported products sold through e-commerce platforms stood at US$17.17 billion in 2018, 9.11 percent higher than the previous year.