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Development partnership with Indonesia

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Indonesia development cooperation – completed programs

This page contains information on past development cooperation programs in Indonesia.

Completed programs

Towards a Strong and Prosperous Indonesian Society (MAHKOTA)

$80.8 million, 2015-2021

MAHKOTA supported Indonesia's National Team for the Acceleration of Poverty Reduction (TNP2K) to help enhance the efficiency and effectiveness of existing social protection programs, and to help Indonesia advance its agenda for developing a comprehensive social protection framework.

Related documents

Name of document Year published Type
Draft Investment Summary for the next phase of social protection support in Indonesia: MAHKOTA 2015 Draft investment summary
MAHKOTA Guiding Strategy 2016 Program guiding strategy
MAHKOTA Evaluation Strategy 2018 Strategy
Indonesia's Non-Cash Social Assistance Reform: An Analysis of TNP2K's Contribution 2018 Evaluation
An inclusive child grant in Papua 2020 Report
Economic Impacts and Access to Social Protection during the COVID-19 Crisis: The Experiences of People with Disabilities in Indonesia 2020 Policy brief
An Evaluation of MAHKOTA's Contribution to National Disability Regulations and Policy 2021 Evaluation
BANGGA Papua Process Evaluation: Key Findings 2021 Evaluation
COVID-19 Impacts on People With Disabilities in Indonesia: An in-depth look 2021 Research
One year into the pandemic: Socioeconomic impacts of COVID-19 and access to social protection for people with disabilities in Indonesia 2022 Research

Related link

The National Team for the Acceleration of Poverty Reduction website

Governance for Growth (KOMPAK)

$177.8 million, 2015-2022

KOMPAK supported the Indonesian government to reduce poverty and inequality by increasing economic opportunities for the poor and by improving access to, and quality of, basic services. KOMPAK worked with both national and sub-national government agencies, together with selected non-government actors, to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of Indonesia’s decentralisation policies and practices.

Related documents

Name of document Year published Type
Governance for Growth (KOMPAK) one pager 2015 Draft investment summary
KOMPAK Work Plan 2017-2018 [external PDF] 2017 Workplan
Gender and Social Inclusion Strategy 2017 Strategy document
Joint Supervision Mission Report Implementation of KOMPAK Program In The Regions 2017 Review mission report
Independent Progress Review 2018 Review report
Management Response to Independent Progress Review 2018 Review management response
Performance Management Framework 2018-2022 2018 Framework
Program Logic and Ways of Working 2018 Program logic
Achievement Report 2015-18 2018 Report
KOMPAK Risk and Safeguard Management Plan 2018 Plan
KOMPAK Gender Equality and Social Inclusion (GESI) Strategy 2018 – 2022 2018 Strategy
KOMPAK Living Design Document 2019 Design
KOMPAK Sustainability Plan 2019 – 2022 2019 Strategy
KOMPAK Six-Monthly Report January – June 2019 2019 Report
Strengthening Gender Equality and Social Inclusion in the BANGGA Papua Program July 2021 Progress Report
BANGGA Papua Process Evaluation: Key Findings 2021 Evaluation
COVID-19 Impacts on People With Disabilities in Indonesia: An in-depth look 2021 Research

Related links

Strengthening Electoral Management

$2.95 million, 2018-2020

Responding to a request from Indonesia’s electoral management bodies, Australia funded the International Foundation for Electoral Systems (IFES) to work in partnership with local civil society organisations to strengthen electoral management and operations.

Australia-Indonesia Partnership: Knowledge Sector Initiative (KSI)

$105 million, 2012- 2022

The Knowledge Sector Initiative (KSI) contributed to more inclusive and equitable growth in Indonesia by supporting the production of high-quality public policy grounded in rigorous research, analysis and evidence.

Related documents

Name of document Year published Type
Overview of the Indonesian Knowledge Sector 2010 Report
Proposed 'Revitalising Indonesia's Knowledge Sector for Development Policy': Design Document 2012 Design document
Revitalising Indonesia's Knowledge Sector for Development: Concept Note as at October 2009 2009 Concept note
Study of Knowledge Needs and Supply Constraints for gender research in Indonesia's knowledge Sector 2011 Study
The political economy of policy-making in Indonesian – Opportunities for improving the demand and use of knowledge 2011 Study
Independent Review of Supply Side Organisations and Government Intermediaries – Knowledge Sector Pilot Supply Side 2013 Evaluation Report
Independent Review of the Knowledge Sector Supply Side Pilot (TAF Pilot) – management response 2013 Response document
Independent Review of Supply Side Organisations and Government Intermediaries – Literature Review 2013 Review
Independent Review of Supply Side Organisations and Government Intermediaries – Think Pieces 2013 Review
Australia-Indonesia Partnership for Pro-Poor Policy: The KSI: Guiding Strategy 2017 Strategy
Gender Equality and Social Inclusion Strategy 2018-2022 2018 Strategy
KSI Phase 2: Program Implementation Strategy 2018 Strategy
KSI Project Completion Report 2022 Report
Independent Strategic Review Knowledge to Policy (Knowledge Sector) Investments in Indonesia and Management Response 2022 Report and Response document
Indonesian Knowledge Sector Initiative's Support to 16 Policy Research Institutes review 2022 Review

Partnership for Knowledge-based Poverty Reduction (PKPR)

$32.7 million, 2010 – 2021

Through the World Bank-managed PKPR trust fund, we supported the Government of Indonesia to reduce poverty and inequality by helping it make evidence-based policy and program decisions.

The team's 2015 flagship report on inequality, Indonesia's Rising Divide, 2019 report on urbanisation Time to ACT: Realizing Indonesia's Urbanization Potential and 2020 report on social protection Investing in People: Social Protection for Indonesia’s 2045 Vision are examples of how PKPR informed policy priorities and forward-looking strategies on Indonesia's multi-dimensional inequality challenges and poverty reduction agenda.

Related links

Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab South East Asia Phase II (J-PAL SEA)

$18.4 million, 2012-2022

Our work under J-PAL SEA helped Indonesian policymakers address challenges to growth and poverty reduction by ensuring that social policies are informed by robust evidence. Through J-PAL SEA we built partnerships with the Indonesian Government, domestic research organisations and the private sector to evaluate programs, translate this knowledge into policy change, and expand local capacity to generate and use robust evidence.

Related documents

Name of document Year published Type
J-PAL Southeast Asia – Reflection on 10 Years 2023 Report
J-PAL SEA Phase 2 Completion Report 2023 Report

Related link

J-PAL Southeast Asia

Pulse Lab Jakarta Phase II

$12.7 million, 2015-2023

Pulse Lab Jakarta (PLJ) was a partnership project between United Nations Development Program (UNDP) and the Government of Indonesia (GOI), through its Ministry of National Development Planning (Bappenas).

The Australian Government provided core funding to UNDP for PLJ to (1) equip partners with fit-for-purpose methods and data tools needed to respond faster and more effectively to complex challenges, (2) strengthen demand for harnessing insights from non-conventional data sources, and (3) catalyse positive changes in Indonesia’s data ecosystem.

PLJ supported Indonesian policymakers to use digital data sources and technologies to identify community needs, understand the impact of policy, and apply innovative approaches to the delivery of government programs.

Related link

Pulse Lab Jakarta (PLJ)

Local Solutions to Poverty (LSP)

$191.5 million, 2008-2020

The World Bank-managed LSP trust fund provided analytical and advisory support to help the Government of Indonesia reduce poverty and inequality through improved basic service delivery. Through LSP we engaged with central and sub-national governments, village communities and frontline service providers on a wide range of projects.

Related documents

Name of document Year published Type
Indonesia's National Program for Community Empowerment – brochure 2010 Brochure
Proposed AusAID Strategy for Support to Indonesia's National Program for Community Empowerment (PNPM) 2010 Strategy
Proposal for Scale-up and Extension: National Program for Community Empowerment 2013 Strategy
PNPM Support Facility Progress Report 2014 2014 Report
15 Years of Indonesia's National Community Development Program 2015 Report
Local Solutions to Poverty Annual Report 2016 2017 Report
Local Solutions to Poverty Annual Report 2017 2018 Report
Indonesia – Long-term impact evaluation of Generasi, May 2018 2018 Report
Indonesia – Long-term impact evaluation of Generasi: DFAT management response 2018 Management response
Opening Up 10 Years of Micro-Data from Indonesia 2018 Report
Mapping Indonesia's Civil Service 2018 Report
Participation, Transparency and Accountability in Village Law Implementation: Sentinel Villages Study Baseline Findings 2018 Report
Indonesia Long-Term Generasi Qualitative Study 2018 Report

Related links

Provision of Emergency Support Packages for Indonesia

$14 million, 2020-22

The Australia Government provided packages of health support for Indonesia’s COVID-19 response, including medical equipment and supplies.

Related links

Multilateral Development Bank Infrastructure Assistance Program

$56.4 million, 2013-2021

Through the Multilateral Development Bank Infrastructure Program, we worked with the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank to help the Indonesian Government strengthen the enabling environment for infrastructure investment, including its associated policies and institutional capacity. Activities include infrastructure project preparation, feasibility studies, engineering designs and environmental impact assessments.

Related documents

Name of document Year published Type
Multilateral Development Bank Infrastructure Assistance Program (MDB-IAP) independent evaluation and management response 2018 Independent evaluation and management response

Related link

World Bank Indonesia Infrastructure Support Trust Fund Documents

Provincial Road Improvement and Maintenance Pilot Program (PRIM)

$38 million, 2013-2022

The Provincial Road Improvement and Maintenance Pilot Program was an output-based grant program through which we provided incentives for local governments to implement road maintenance and rehabilitation works. Its objective was to improve the way local governments plan, budget and implement their investments in road maintenance on a sustainable basis. Through PRIM we worked to broaden the use of the hibah (grant) mechanism in the water and sanitation sector. The project was successfully piloted in West Nusa Tenggara Province (2013 - 2019), West Lombok District (2017 - 2019), and Probolinggo District (2019 - 2022).

Related documents

Name of document Year published Type
PRIM program design document 2014 Design

Related links

Australia Awards Indonesia 2014-2022

$166 million*, 2014-2022

Australia Awards scholarships are offered to the next generation of Indonesian leaders for development. Through study and research, recipients develop the skills and knowledge to drive change and help build enduring people-to-people links with Australians.

* the figure covers activities undertaken in Indonesia.

Related documents

Name of document Year published Type
Australia Awards Indonesia (AAI) End of Program review report and management response Feb 2021 Review report and management response

Related links

Environmental Governance

$10 million, 2017-2022

The 2015 forest and land fires in Indonesia caused an economic loss of approximately USD16 billion (approximately $20 billion) and discharged over one billion tons of CO2 into the atmosphere. Forest and land fires are an annual crisis in Indonesia and a significant contributor to global greenhouse gas emissions. To support Indonesia's efforts to prevent the recurrence of fires and to reduce emissions, we initiated an environmental governance program as part of Australia's Indo-Pacific Land Action Package in 2017. The Indonesia Australia Partnership for Environmental Governance Program included four activities to respond to Indonesia’s interest in addressing forest fires and climate change.

Related documents

Name of document Year published Type
Indonesia Australia Partnership in Environmental Governance brief Feb 2020 Background brief

Water and Sanitation for Low Income Communities Project (PAMSIMAS)

$124 million, 2008-2022

PAMSIMAS was the Indonesian Government's national program for rural water supply and sanitation. The program aimed to increase the number of under-served rural, peri-urban and urban slum populations accessing sustainable water supply, sanitation and basic infrastructure services. Through PAMSIMAS we worked with communities to plan, finance, manage and maintain their water supply and sanitation systems and improve hygiene behaviour.

Cumulatively, our joint efforts with the Indonesian Government had enabled about 24.7 million people (exceeding the target of 22.1 million people) to access improved water facilities (such as piped water into homes and public taps), and 16.4 million people (exceeding the target of 14.9 million people) to access improved sanitation facilities (such as flush toilets or improved pit latrines). PAMSIMAS was co-financed by Australia and the World Bank until December 2022 and continues to be delivered by the Indonesian Ministry of Public Works and Housing wholly funded by the national budget.

Australia is now supporting the design of the follow-on program (called PAMSIMAS Next Gen) that will be funded by the national budget.

Related documents

Name of document Year published Type
Design Summary and Implementation Document – Water and Sanitation Initiative – Indonesia

2009

Design

Third Water Supply and Sanitation for Low income Communities Project Mid-Term Review Aid Memoir

2010

Review

PAMSIMAS Anti-Corruption Action Plan

2012

Plan

Third Water and Sanitation for Low Income Communities Project and the Water Supply and Sanitation Policy Formulation And Action Planning Facility – Independent Review

2013

Independent evaluation

Third Water and Sanitation for Low Income Communities Project and the Water Supply and Sanitation Policy Formulation and Action Planning Facility – Independent Review: Management Response

2013

Evaluation management response

Final Independent Evaluation of the Community-based Rural Water Supply and Sanitation (PAMSIMAS) Program

2022

Independent Evaluation and Management Response

Related links

Infrastructure Grants Municipal Sanitation (sAIIG)

$40 million, 2012-2021

The Australia Indonesia Infrastructure Grant for Municipal Sanitation (sAIIG) program aimed to stimulate Indonesian local government investment in sanitation infrastructure and to incentivise governance reforms to improve the delivery of sanitation services.

Infographic Summary of sAIIG Phase II

View text version of infographic

Related documents

Name of document Year published Type
sAIIG design document 2011 Design
sAIIG concept note 2011 Concept note

Weekly Iron Folic Acid Supplementation for Prevention and Reduction of Anaemia among School-going Adolescent Girls (MITRA Youth)

$2.1 million, 2017-2021

The Mitra Youth program was built on the success of the Micronutrient Supplementation for Reducing Mortality and Morbidity in Indonesia (MITRA) Program which was a $1.95 million program implemented between 2015-2019.

MITRA Youth supported the Government of Indonesia’s National Strategy for Accelerating Stunting Prevention by helping the local government in specific districts in East Java and East Nusa Tenggara Provinces to address iron deficiency anaemia, a major factor for poorer pregnancy outcomes. Activities focused to reach around 70 - 80 per cent of enrolled adolescent girls (15 – 18 years), providing weekly iron and folic acid supplementation, related nutrition counselling, and education for anaemia prevention.

Related documents

Name of document Year published Type
Micronutrient Supplementation for Reducing Mortality and Morbidity in Indonesia (MITRA) Activity Design Document 2017 Design
Weekly Iron Folic Acid Supplementation for Prevention and Reduction of Anaemia among School-going Adolescent Girls (MITRA Youth) Activity Design Document 2017 Design
Completion Report: MITRA Youth: Weekly Iron Folic Acid Supplementation for Prevention and Reduction of Anaemia among School-going Adolescent Girls in Selected Districts of Two Provinces – East Java & East Nusa Tenggara, Indonesia 2021 Completion Report

World Bank Trust Fund – Improving Dimensions of Teaching, Education Management, and Learning Environment (ID-TEMAN)

$9 million, 2016-2020

Between 2016-2020, Australia partnered with the World Bank through ID-TEMAN Trust Fund to support Indonesia to reach its education potential by improving teaching and learning through better policy development and implementation. Building on research and analytical work conducted by the World Bank with the Indonesian Ministry of Education and Culture over the last decade, the trust fund’s targeted technical assistance mainly worked in two key areas: effective teaching and learning processes, with a focus on teacher competencies; and improving the delivery of education for all, including school management, financial transfers and teacher deployment.

The ID-TEMAN program was dedicated to identifying key areas for system reform. Program activities aimed to strengthen the knowledge base of the Ministry of Education and Culture (now Ministry of Education, Culture, Research and Technology), the former Ministry of Research, Technology and Higher Education, the Ministry of Religious Affairs, and support the Government to improve education outcomes in line with Indonesia's Medium-Term Development Plan targets in education service delivery.

In the context of COVID-19 pandemic, ID-TEMAN’s deliverables have served as a key reference for government officials and stakeholders, as well as contributed key inputs to the World Bank’s analytic activities and operations related to COVID-19. For example, the two ID-TEMAN’s forthcoming Education Flagship report (titled The Promise of Education in Indonesia) and the Service Delivery Indicator (SDI) & Madrasah Management Study Survey report both provided a foundational basis to the World Bank’s Estimates of COVID-19 Impacts on Learning and Earning in Indonesia: How to Turn the Tide

Related documents

Name of document Year published Type
ID-TEMAN Brochure: Improving Teaching, Learning and Education Management in Indonesia [PDF] 2019 Brochure

Related links

Australia-Indonesia Partnership for Gender Equality and Women’s Empowerment (MAMPU)

$112.3 million, 2012-2020

MAMPU worked to empower women and improve gender equality in Indonesia through developing women's collective capacity and helping them to influence decision-making at multiple levels – from the village to national parliament.

At the heart of our approach were selected Indonesian civil society organisations (CSOs) that championed women's issues – the MAMPU partners. Through MAMPU we directly and indirectly supported over 100 local organisations at national and sub-national levels, working in almost 1,000 villages across 27 of Indonesia's 34 provinces. MAMPU supported these partners to act more collectively and with allies in government and parliament to influence policy changes to improve women's lives.

MAMPU partners have established more than 3,000 local community groups, with a total membership of more than 70,000 women. Through these groups, women were supported to express their views, convey their priorities publicly, and influence the allocation of state resources for wider benefit, including access to essential services. This network played a pivotal role in shaping government reforms to the benefit of women and girls.

In response to COVID-19 MAMPU worked with government and civil society partners to ensure poor and vulnerable women could access new social assistance measures and sexual and reproductive healthcare; supported alternative livelihoods for informal workers who had lost their jobs; and addressed the increased risk of violence against women because of the pandemic.

Related documents

Name of document Year published Type
Empowering Indonesian Women for Poverty Reduction Program Design Document 2012 Design
Gender, Poverty, and Well-Being in Indonesia: MAMPU Background Assessment 2012 Research
Strengthening Women's Access to Employment in North Sumatra and East Java 2012 Research
MAMPU Working with Parliamentarians: Design Framework 2013 Strategy
MAMPU Working with Parliamentarians: Situational Analysis 2013 Research
MAMPU Implementation Strategy 2014 Strategy
Stocktake on Parliamentary Strengthening Programs in Indonesia 2014 Research
MAMPU Working with Parliamentarians: Implementation Strategy 2014 Strategy
MAMPU 12 Month Workplan 2014 Work plan
MAMPU Forward Plan 2015-2020 2014 Forward plan
MAMPU Performance Story 2015 Report
MAMPU: Verification of the Performance Story and Forward Plan 2015 Management response
MAMPU: Strategic Plan 2017-2020   Strategy
MAMPU: Collective action research report 2017 Research
MAMPU: Monitoring and evaluation framework 2017 Monitoring and Evaluation Framework
MAMPU: Findings and recommendations for MAMPU Thematic Area 2 2018 Report
MAMPU Disability Inclusion Strategy 2018 Strategy
Mapping MAMPU's engagement with Women with Disabilities in Indonesia 2018  
MAMPU Monitoring and Evaluation Plan 2019 Strategy
MAMPU Performance Story 2012–2018 2019  
MAMPU Phase 2 Independent Strategic Review and management response 2019 Review and management response
Activity Completion Report: MAMPU – Phase 1 and 2 November 2020 Completion Report

Related link

MAMPU website

Support to Marginalised Groups (Peduli)

$39.4 million, 2014-2021

Peduli was an Australian-Indonesian Government partnership managed by the Asia Foundation (TAF) with broad direction and engagement from the Coordinating Ministry for Human Development and Culture (Kemenko PMK). The Program was implemented through a network of 63 Indonesian civil society organisations in 66 districts across 21 provinces.

Through Peduli we promoted social inclusion to reduce poverty among marginalised people in Indonesia. This included efforts to increase access to public services and social assistance, increase social acceptance, protect human rights and improve government policies on social inclusion. The program focused on six of Indonesia's most marginalised groups: vulnerable children and youth; remote indigenous communities reliant on natural resources; religious minorities; victims of human rights violations; male-to-female transgender (waria); and people with disabilities.

Over the years, Peduli assisted over 85,000 beneficiaries, and strengthened inclusive government through dialogue and policy reforms. The program promoted broader public awareness through specific and targeted media to help build a more positive profile of these marginalised groups that traditionally experience negative stereotyping from the mainstream media and public.

Peduli worked with civil society organisations to support marginalised groups impacted by COVID-19, including through provision of personal protective equipment (PPE), food supplies and public health messaging. Peduli also worked with the Ministry of Villages to promote new inclusive village guidance across Indonesia, which helped to ensure marginalised groups were actively considered in village-level responses to COVID-19.

Related documents

Name of document Year published Type
Peduli Program Snapshot 2016 Review
Understanding Social Exclusion in Indonesia 2016 Review
Summary of Peduli Gender Strategy 2016 Strategy
Peduli Monitoring, Evaluation and Learning (MEL) Framework 2018 Monitoring, Evaluation and Learning Framework

Related links

Australia Indonesia Partnership for Emerging Infectious Diseases (AIPEID 2) - One Health

$9.9 million, 2015-2019

AIPEID Phase 2 built on lessons learned from AIPEID Phase 1 (2010 - 2015). The goal of the program was 'to enhance Indonesia's human and animal disease prevention and response capacities to increase national, Australian and global biosecurity'. Support was provided to the World Health Organization to work with Indonesia's Ministry of Health to strengthen public health emergency preparedness and risk management. In addition, under this program the Australian Department of Agriculture and Water Resources worked with the Indonesian Ministry of Agriculture to strengthen their emergency management systems and veterinary leadership, as well as enhancing Indonesia's animal health information system.

  • supported Indonesia to comply with its international obligations under WHO's International Health Regulations (IHR) and built national human and animal disease surveillance systems and emergency response mechanisms
  • supported the Ministry of Agriculture to develop an Animal Health Information System (ISIKHNAS) which now covers 94% of districts in Indonesia and has over 3 million users, reporting various types of data including episodes of disease at the grassroots level which can then lead to improved response and control of potential outbreaks
  • collaborated with other stakeholders and the Government of Indonesia to enact a 'One Health' pandemic simulations with more than 600 participants
  • supported over 125 vets to complete the Indonesian Veterinary Leadership and Management course
  • revitalized the Field Epidemiology Training Courses alongside other stakeholders to improve the epidemiological capacity of the public health workforce.

Related documents*

Name of document Year published Type
AIPEID Human Health and Animal Health Program Investment Design Document 2015 Design
AIPEID II Strategic Review and Options Development Paper and management response 2017 Review

Related links

Evaluating a decade of Australia’s efforts to combat pandemics and emerging infectious diseases in Asia and the Pacific 2006-2015: are health systems stronger?

Australia's Education Partnership

$368 million, 2011-2017

Through Australia's Education Partnership we helped improve education service in Indonesia by increasing participation in schooling, improving the quality of education in public, private and religious schools, and improving governance in the education sector. Under the partnership we built or expended 1,155 schools, providing approximately 160,000 new school places.We also helped develop a national system to improve school management and leadership, supported up to 1,500 madrasah to improve their quality against national education standards and supported research and technical assistance to improve education programs and policy through the Analytical and Capacity Development Partnership. The Independent Completion Report for the Partnership concluded that it was a highly successful program, making a significant contribution to the Indonesian Government's efforts to deliver quality education and encourage children to stay in school.

Related documents*

Name of document Year published Type
2007 Annual Review of Indonesian Education Sector Financing 2007 Evaluation Report
2008 Annual Review of Indonesian Education Sector Financing 2008 Evaluation Report
2009 Annual Review of Indonesian Education Sector Financing 2009 Evaluation Report
Australia's Education Partnership with Indonesia – design document 2010 Design
Learning Assistance Program for Islamic Schools (LAPIS) Independent Completion Report 2010 Evaluation Report
Australia Indonesia Basic Education Program: Independent Completion Report, May 2010 2010 Evaluation Report
2010 Annual Review of Indonesian Education Sector Financing 2010 Evaluation Report
Schools Reconstruction Program in West Java and West Sumatra – Independent Completion Report – June 2011 2011 Independent evaluation
Schools Reconstruction Program in West Java and West Sumatra – Independent Completion Report Management Response – June 2011 2011 Evaluation management response
The impact of Australia's investment in Indonesia's basic education system: some preliminary studies 2011 Study
Australia's Education Partnership with Indonesia – Annual Partnership Performance Report 2012 2012 Independent evaluation report
Australia's Education Partnership with Indonesia – Frequently asked questions 2012 FAQ
2012 Annual Review of Indonesian Education Sector Financing 2012 Evaluation Report
Australia's Education Partnership with Indonesia – Management response to the Annual Partnership Performance Report 2013 Evaluation management response
2013 Indonesia Education Annual Partnership Performance Report 2013 Evaluation Report
2013 Indonesia Education Annual Partnership Performance Report Management Response 2013 Evaluation management response
2014 Indonesia Education Annual Partnership Performance Report 2014 Evaluation Report
2014 Indonesia ACDP Mid Term Review Management Response 2014 Evaluation management response
2014 Indonesia ACDP Mid Term Review 2014 Evaluation Report
2014 Indonesia Education Annual Partnership Performance Report Management Response 2014 Evaluation management response
Australia's Education Partnership with Indonesia: Annual Partnership Performance Report 2015 and management response 2015 Performance Report
Australia's Education Partnership with Indonesia: Independent Completion Report and Management Response 2016 Completion report and management response

Australia Indonesia Electoral Support Program

$22.7 million, 2011-2015

The Australia Indonesia Electoral Support Program built on Australia's support for the 1999, 2004 and 2009 elections in Indonesia. The program aimed to enhance the quality of Indonesia's elections by helping Indonesian organisations improve the management of elections, and increasing public engagement in electoral processes. The assistance contributed to the entrenchment of good democratic systems in Indonesia and Indonesia's ability to manage peaceful transitions of power. The program provided support throughout the electoral cycle, including the national elections in 2014 and the rolling program of elections for provincial governors and district heads.

Related documents*

Name of document Year published Type
Independent Completion Report – Australia Indonesia Partnership for Electoral Support – Interim Program 2011 Program
Independent Evaluation of the Australia-Indonesia Partnership for Electoral Support 2010 – Management Response 2011 Management Response
Australia Indonesia Electoral Support Program 2011-2015 Final Design Document 2012 Design

Related links

Australia-Indonesia Facility for Disaster Reduction

$67 million, 2008-2015

AIFDR was a joint initiative that used science and research to better identify areas most at risk of natural disaster. The Facility helped to reduce the impact of disasters by giving people information about how to build safer houses and public buildings. It helped shape training and planning for disaster managers across the region through partnerships with APEC, ASEAN and the United Nations. The Facility also supported Indonesia's stand-by Disaster Rapid Response Team, which deploys within hours of a disaster. While AIFDR has now closed, the Rapid Response Team will still operate, and we have established a new Disaster Management Unit.

Related documents*

Name of document Year published Type
Independent Review of AIFDR Phase 1 2015 Review
Independent Review Management Response 2015 Response
Completion Review of the Australia-Indonesia Facility for Disaster Reduction (AIFDR)'s Risk and Vulnerability Program and management response 2016 Review and management response

Australia-Indonesia Partnership for Decentralisation (AIPD)

$68 million, 2010-2015

The Australia-Indonesia Partnership for Decentralisation supported the Government of Indonesia to implement its decentralisation policies through capacity-building of public servants and through improvements to the public financial management system. The program worked with three central Indonesian ministries – the Ministry of Home Affairs, the Ministry of Finance and the National Development Planning Ministry – and across five provinces, working at the sub-national level with provincial and district authorities.

While this program has ended, the final report was undertaken when DFAT's Governance for Growth program (KOMPAK) was in its inception phase and the findings have informed KOMPAK's work.

Related documents*

Name of document Year published Type
The Australia-Indonesia Partnership for Decentralisation Independent Completion Report and management response 2015 Completion report and management response

Australia Indonesia Partnership for Economic Governance (AIPEG)

$112.1 million, 2008-2018

Through AIPEG we provided support to the Indonesian agencies responsible for economic management to achieve strong, sustainable and inclusive economic growth through increased competitiveness. We did this by providing technical assistance and capacity building to Indonesian Government agencies to strengthen economic institutions, manage public finances, and promote effective markets to underpin growth and development.

*This program has been integrated with the Government Partnership Fund (GPF) Phase II to form the Australia-Indonesia Partnership for Economic Development (PROSPERA).

Related documents*

Name of document Year published Type
Australia Indonesia Partnership for Economic Governance Facility Design document and annexes 2009 Design
Australia Indonesia Partnership for Economic Governance Independent Progress Report 2011 Independent evaluation
Independent Progress Report for the Australia Indonesia Partnership for Economic Governance – Management Response 2011 Evaluation management response

Related links

Australia Indonesia Partnership for Economic Governance

Australia Indonesia Partnership for Health Systems Strengthening (AIPHSS)

$30 million, 2012-2016

Australia supported the Indonesian Government to improve its national health system. The AIPHSS focused on health financing, human resources for health, health sector governance and primary health care. The program provided technical support for Indonesia's rollout of universal health coverage by 2019.

Related documents*

Name of document Year published Type
Indonesia Health Systems Strengthening design document 2011 Design

Australia Indonesia Partnership for HIV

$122.5 million, 2007-2016

The Australia Indonesia Partnership for HIV supported Indonesia's national goals of preventing and limiting the spread of HIV, improving the quality of life of people living with HIV, and alleviating the socio-economic impacts of the epidemic. It operated at the national level and in nine provinces: DKI Jakarta, West Java, Banten, Central Java, Yogyakarta, East Java, Bali, Papua and West Papua. The partnership also supported another five provinces through various national programs.

The program contributed to a reduction in HIV prevalence among people who inject drugs in Indonesia's major cities. Nationally, injecting drug use now accounts for only 1.6 per cent of new infections, compared to 33 per cent in 2002.There has also been an increase in antiretroviral treatment coverage in the Papuan provinces from 3 per cent of the eligible population in 2010 to 32 per cent in 2014.

Related documents*

Name of document Year published Type
Australia-Indonesia Partnership for HIV 2008-15 2007 Design
Review of Australia-Indonesia Partnership for HIV Independent Progress Report 2007 Independent evaluation
Management response to the Review of Australia-Indonesia Partnership for HIV Report 2007 Evaluation management response
Subsidiary Arrangement between Government of Australia and Government of Indonesia relating to the Australia Indonesia Partnership for HIV 2008 Agreement
Rapidly Expanding Access to Care for HIV in Tanah Papua (REACH) Design 2012 Design

Australia Indonesia Partnership for Maternal and Neonatal Health (AIPMNH)

$84.3 million, 2009-2015

AIPMNH worked with community health clinics and hospitals in Nusa Tenggara Timur, supporting improved access, quality and demand for maternal and newborn health services. We supported the province and its districts to increase the proportion of births in adequate health facilities, make maternal and newborn health higher priorities in annual district budgets and improve the management of health clinics' operational budgets and health and birth insurance.

The program also helped to build community awareness of the services available at health facilities. Key achievements included a 50 per cent drop in maternal deaths in NTT in 2014 compared to 2009. For Indonesia's 32 other provinces (not supported by the program), the mean percentage change was negligible over the same time period. The proportion of births in a facility in the 14 supported districts increased steadily from 42 per cent in 2009 to 73 per cent in 2014.

While this program has ended, the Government of Indonesia and other partners will carry forward much of the work we have done in this area.

Related documents*

Name of document Year published Type
Australia Indonesia Partnership for Maternal and Neo-Natal health – design document 2008 Design
Australia Indonesia Partnership for Maternal and Neonatal Health (AIPMNH) – Independent Progress Report 2010 Independent evaluation
Management Response to the Australia Indonesia Partnership for Maternal and Neonatal Health (AIPMNH) Independent Progress Report 2010 Evaluation management response

Australia Indonesia Partnership for Rural Economic Development Program (AIP-Rural)

$112 million, 2010-2019

AIP-Rural promoted inclusive economic growth in five provinces in eastern Indonesia, by influencing how agricultural markets work for the poor. The program helped reduce poverty, address constraints to rural income growth and improve agricultural productivity. We facilitated private sector-led investments in better agricultural practices and women's economic empowerment. By December 2018, AIP-Rural had increased incomes of more than 336,000 smallholder farming households by 256 per cent. The total additional income for smallholder households is equal to $186 million. It facilitated 180 public and private sector partnerships, leveraging co-investments of $94.2 million. The benefits of this program to farmers and the business community is shown by their willingness to co-invest. Importantly, 42 per cent of the beneficiaries of AIP-Rural were women, making it an important investment for increasing the incomes of women and improving gender equality. AIP-Rural concluded in December 2018 and PRISMA2 (Phase 2 of operations) commenced on 1 January 2019.

Related documents*

Name of document Year published Type
Promoting Rural Incomes through Strengthening Markets in Agriculture (PRISMA) Summary Design 2013 Design summary
Tertiary Irrigation Technical Assistance (TIRTA) Design 2014 Design
Applied Research and Innovation Systems in Agriculture Design Document 2014 Design
Strengthening Agricultural Finance in Rural Areas Design Document 2015 Design
Mid Term Review and Management Response 2016 Independent evaluation and management response
Independent Review of the Australia Indonesia Partnership for Rural Economic Development (AIP-Rural) and management response 2018 Independent evaluation and management response

Australia Indonesia Partnership in Disaster Risk Management

$17.8 million, 2015-2018

This program supported the Indonesian Government to make better informed decisions about disaster risk management including by having the right policies, awareness and training, and improving hazard and exposure mapping.

It was comprised of two key projects. First, DMCreate (Disaster Management Capacity Development and Community Resilience) worked in partnership with civil society organisations and UN agencies to improve preparedness through training, provision of technical experts, development of key national and provincial documents, and mainstreaming disaster risk management into village planning.

Second, DMInnovation (Disaster Management Innovation), which was implemented by Geoscience Australia and focused on hazard and exposure mapping and developing tools (like InaSAFE and OpenStreetMap) to support decision making. Over 12.4 million buildings and 404,000 km of road have now been mapped in OpenStreetMap, which helps Indonesia make informed decisions about underlying hazards.

Australia assists Indonesia after the devastating earthquake in Pidie Jaya, Aceh Province, in 2016.

Related documents*

Name of document Year published Type
Indonesia Australia Partnership in Disaster Risk Management - Program background brief 2018 Brief
Australia Indonesia partnership in disaster risk management: Final Completion Report 2018 Report

Eastern Indonesia National Road Improvement Project (EINRIP)

$338.8 million, 2007-2016

EINRIP supported 20 major road projects across nine provinces, totalling 395 km of national roads, and some 1,300m of fabricated steel bridge structures. Australia provided a concessional loan of $290 million for construction works and supervision. Government of Indonesia management of this loan program was bolstered by Australian technical assistance of more than $35 million to improve project implementation and oversight, including high-quality road engineering designs and a program of technical and financial auditing to ensure roads are constructed to a high standard. Australia support was also provided to continue monitoring and evaluation activities beyond the delivery of the program to assess the true impacts of the investment.

Related documents*

Name of document Year published Type
Anti-Corruption Action Plan for the Eastern Indonesia National Roads Improvement Project 2007 Plan
EINRIP Guidelines for Implementation of Environmental and Social Safeguards 2007 Guidelines
EINRIP design document 2007 Design
Eastern Indonesia National Roads Improvement Project (EINRIP) activity completion report 2009 Report
EINRIP Project Preparation Consultant Independent Completion Report 2009 Independent evaluation
EINRIP – Projection Preparation Consultant Independent Completion Report – Management Response 2009 Evaluation management response
Eastern Indonesia National Roads Improvement Project: Program fast facts 2013 Fact sheet
EINRIP project management manual 2011 Manual
EINRIP Independent Progress Review – Final Report 2012 Report

Government Partnership Fund (GPF) Phase II

$74.8 million, 2011-2018

The Government Partnerships Fund was a whole-of-government program through which we facilitated and strengthened government-to-government partnerships and policy dialogue between Australia and Indonesia on improved economic and public sector governance.

Through GPF we provided Indonesian agencies with access to the institutional knowledge of Australian Government agencies experienced in economic and public sector reform.

GFP was with the Australia Indonesia Partnership for Economic Governance (AIPEG) to form the Australia-Indonesia Partnership for Economic Development (PROSPERA).

Related documents

Name of document Year published Type
Australia Indonesia Government Partnerships Fund Phase II 2010-15 design document 2010 Design
Mid-Term Review of the Indonesia Government Partnership Fund Phase Two 2013 Review

Indonesia Infrastructure Initiative (IndII)

$227.5 million, 2007-2017

IndII worked with the Indonesian government to address constraints to infrastructure investment, such as delays and high costs to freight due to congestion on roads and railways, energy shortages, and uncompetitive technologies, and to enable efficient and effective infrastructure service delivery. IndII focused on water and sanitation, roads and transport, and crosscutting policy and regulations.

IndII oversaw the Water and Sanitation Grant Program and the Provincial Road Improvement and Maintenance Program. IndII also provided technical assistance in response to requests from Indonesian government agencies. IndII provided experts to undertake feasibility studies, cost-benefit analyses, planning documents, engineering and architectural designs, project evaluations, and training on important infrastructure projects.

Related documents

Name of document Year published Type
Indonesian Infrastructure Initiative Program Design Document 2007 Design
Indonesia Infrastructure Initiative (IndII) Monitoring and Evaluation Plan 2009 Plan
Communication and Visibility Strategy – Australia support for infrastructure development in Indonesia 2010 Strategy
Indonesia Infrastructure Initiative (IndII) Facility Extension Assessment Mission 18 to 28 October 2010 – Mission Report 2010 Report
Indonesia Infrastructure Initiative Phase II Implementation Document (July 2011 – June 2015) Workplan and Annexes 2012 Plan
Indonesia Infrastructure Initiative Program Fast Facts 2013 Fact sheet
Indonesia Infrastructure Initiative Program Impact Assessment Team Mission 1 Report 2014 Independent evaluation
Indonesia Infrastructure Initiative Program Impact Assessment Team Mission 1 Report: Management Response 2014 Evaluation management response
Indonesia Infrastructure Initiative Program Impact Assessment Team Mission 2 Report and management response 2014 Evaluation and management response
Indonesia Infrastructure Initiative Program Impact Assessment Team Mission 3 Report and Management Response 2017 Independent evaluation and management response
Gender Equality in the Indonesia Infrastructure Initiative Program 2017 Report

Poverty Reduction Support Facility

$122 million, 2010-2015

The Poverty Reduction Support Facility (PRSF) supported the Indonesian Vice President's National Team for the Acceleration of Poverty Reduction. PRSF's objectives were to help enhance the efficiency and effectiveness of existing social protection programs, and to help Indonesia advance its agenda for developing a comprehensive social protection framework. The PRSF did this by:

  • generating knowledge to inform social assistance policies, define policy options and translate policy choices into operational programs
  • providing technical assistance; and
  • providing high-quality monitoring and evaluation.

Australian support through the PRSF helped develop and implement a unified database that covers 97 million individuals, constituting the poorest 40 per cent of Indonesia's population. This database has assisted Indonesia's largest social assistance programs to better reach and support the poorest 25 per cent of Indonesia's population. Australia's support also helped to design a compensation package that allowed Indonesia to reform its fuel subsidies.

Following the success of PRSF, Australia has continued with a second phase of support to strengthen the Indonesian Government's social protection systems. The MAHKOTA (Towards a Strong and Prosperous Indonesian Society) program will run from 2015-2019 and will continue to support the Indonesian Government to improve the quality and effectiveness of its poverty reduction programs.

Related documents*

Name of document Year published Type
Poverty Reduction Support Facility Independent Completion Report and management response 2015 Completion report and management response

Technical Assistance for Education Systems Strengthening (TASS)

$12 million, 2015-2020

TASS was a demand driven, systems-strengthening Facility that delivered high quality, short-term technical assistance to the Government of Indonesia. Its aim was to improve the effectiveness of policy and practice in the education sector. Working primarily at the national level, the assistance provided through TASS focused on supporting Indonesia's efforts to address two key constraints in basic education: the poor quality of teaching and learning; and persistent disparities. Through TASS, we worked with the Indonesian Ministry of Education and Culture, Ministry of Religious Affairs, and Ministry of National Development Planning.

Related documents*

Name of document Year published Type
TASS Monitoring and Evaluation Plan 2018 Strategy
Gender and Disability Inclusion Plan 2018 Strategy
TASS Factsheet September 2019 2019 Factsheet
TASS Annual Progress Report 2019 Report
TASS newsletter 2 2019 Newsletter
TASS Investment document 2019 Strategy
TASS newsletter 3 December 2019 Newsletter

* The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) is committed to high standards of transparency and accountability in the management of the Australian aid program through publishing information on our website, including policies, plans, results, evaluations and research. Our practice is to publish documents after the partner government and any other partners directly involved in the delivery of the initiative have been consulted. Not all material published on this site is created by the Australian aid program and therefore not all documents reflect our views. In limited circumstances some information may be withheld for reasons including privacy and commercial sensitivity.

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