Indonesia: Coping with economic and political instability

dc.creatorFuglie, Keith O.
dc.creatorPiggott, Roley R.
dc.date2006
dc.date2024-11-21T09:51:12Z
dc.date2024-11-21T09:51:12Z
dc.date.accessioned2026-06-27T15:23:49Z
dc.descriptionIndonesia is a Southeast Asian archipelago consisting of some 17,500 equatorial islands (6,000 of which are inhabited) stretching in an east–west direction over 5,000 kilometers. It has a land area of 1.83 million square kilometers; in 2000 this supported a population of 203.5 million (the fourth largest in the world), which is growing at about 1.4 percent per annum. While the overall population density is about 111 persons per square kilometer, 59 percent of the population lives on the island of Java, which has a population density of 944 persons per square kilometer. The overall ratio of urban to rural population was about 40:60 in 1999 (22:78 in 1980).
dc.formatapplication/pdf
dc.identifierhttps://hdl.handle.net/10568/160577
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/123456789/103139
dc.languageen
dc.publisherInternational Food Policy Research Institute
dc.rightsOpen Access
dc.sourceFuglie, Keith O. and Piggott, Roley R. 2006. Indonesia: Coping with economic and political instability. In Agricultural R&D in the developing world: too little, too late? Pardey, Philip G.; Alston, Julian M.; Piggot, Roley R. (Eds.) Chapter 4. Pp. 65-104. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). https://doi.org/10.2499/089629756X.Ch4.
dc.subjectagricultural innovation
dc.subjectagricultural economics
dc.subjectagricultural research
dc.titleIndonesia: Coping with economic and political instability
dc.typeBook Chapter

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