Indonesia joins the Development Centre

Indonesia has become the 34th member of the OECD’s Development Centre. Announcing the arrival of Indonesia on the Centre’s Board, Director and Chief Development Economist Javier Santiso said, “Indonesia is a very important G20 country, both in terms of the size of its population and economically. It’s development experience and its capacity to influence the economic development of Southeast Asia make it a valuable addition to the Board of the Development Centre”. Indonesia has ben part of the OECD's Enhanced Engagement Coutry Program since 2007.

 

Asian countries have been represented at the Development Centre since 2001, when India  became a member; it was joined in 2005 by Thailand and in 2008 by Viet NamKorea, an OECD country, is also a member. The Centre is unusual in the OECD in that it can accept both non-OECD countries on its Board alongside member countries of the Organisation.

 

The Development Centre was established to act as a channel of communication and knowledge transfer between the generally industrialised countries of the OECD and the developing world. It publishes the highly successful African and Latin American “Economic Outlooks”, as well as a series of studies and documents on development policy. In the course of 2009, the Centre will expand its Asia Desk to reinforce work on Southeast Asia, the Black Sea and Central Asian regions. The arrival of Indonesia as the eleventh emerging-economy member of the Centre’s Board will reinforce the Centre's activities in the most populous region of the globe.

Top of page

Latest Videos

"India's economy will not converge with China's"


'The Latin American Economic Outlook gives us examples of successful policies to tackle the crisis'


Engage with us:





Hot Topics

China and developing and emerging economies

The rise of China

International migration and economic progress

Migration

Gender equality and growth

Gender

The resource curse

Commodities

Did you know?

The creation of the OECD Development Centre was proposed by US President John F. Kennedy.

Watch the video!

Tackling the aid crisis

The poor must not pay for it

Stay informed


Subscribe to our feed