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Indonesia looks to Singapore’s ‘Swiftonomics’ success to boost tourism, but can it sustain creative industry?

  • Indonesia has the potential and infrastructure to host major events, but experts say logistics and organisation are still issues that need to be ‘ironed out’
  • Industry players also urge the Indonesian government to nurture local talent for a thriving, lasting creative scene

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US singer Taylor Swift performs on stage during a concert in Sydney on February 23. Photo: AFP
Indonesia is keen to replicate the success of “Swiftonomics” in neighbouring Singapore with major investments to promote tourism, but industry experts are divided on whether it is the right strategy for the archipelago nation.
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US pop sensation Taylor Swift will perform at Singapore’s National Stadium from March 2 to 9 for six sold-out shows, which could generate hundreds of millions in tourism revenue for the country as more than 300,000 fans are expected to attend.

“Hosting mega stars like Taylor Swift may sound impressive and prestigious, but ultimately it’s not what sustains the industry, which needs a steadier stream of events, especially for a country the size of Indonesia,” Teguh Wicaksono, a music entrepreneur and co-founder of Indonesia’s digital contemporary music archival project Sounds From The Corner, told This Week in Asia.

Music entrepreneur Teguh Wicaksono. Photo: Handout
Music entrepreneur Teguh Wicaksono. Photo: Handout

Sandiaga Uno, Indonesia’s minister of tourism, told Bloomberg on February 18 that “we need what Singapore and Australia managed to pull off, which is to bring in Taylor Swift. We need Swiftonomics in Indonesia.”

To this end, Sandiaga said his ministry had launched the Indonesia Tourism Fund, with a seed fund worth 2 trillion rupiah (US$128 million). He said the fund was set up to help the country bid for “music, sports and cultural events deemed capable of generating a multiplier effect for Indonesia’s tourism”.

The Singaporean authorities reportedly agreed to pay Swift between US$2 million and US$3 million per show for her to perform exclusively in the city state and shun other Southeast Asian destinations.
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“The alleged monetary compensation offered by Singapore to bind Swift to perform exclusively there has obviously ruffled some feathers in Jakarta,” said Gancar Premananto, economist at Surabaya’s Airlangga University.

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