KADIN Indonesia Chairman Anindya N. Bakrie and Apex Brasil President Jorge Viana sign an MoU witnessed by Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto and Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. 📷: Instagram/@aninbakrie.
By Teguh Anantawikrama
Vice Chairman of the Indonesian Chamber of Commerce (KADIN) for Technology and Digital Transformation
UKMDANBURSA.COM – Under the leadership of Anindya N. Bakrie, the Indonesian Chamber of Commerce and Industry (KADIN Indonesia) has stepped beyond its traditional domestic mandate and evolved into a regional hub of business diplomacy. In an era defined by realignments among the Global South and emerging economic powerhouses, KADIN’s proactive engagement has placed Indonesia at the center of a new web of cooperation — a “middle-power dot connector” linking Asia, the Gulf, Africa, Europe, and South America through trade, technology, and trust.
Anindya Bakrie has been instrumental in transforming Indonesia’s economic diplomacy from government-to-government talks into business-to-business bridges. His outreach has revitalized South–South cooperation, creating actionable platforms for investment and industrial collaboration.
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Bridging Asia’s Rising Powers
KADIN’s renewed memorandum with China’s CCPIT (China Council for the Promotion of International Trade) and partnership with the South China Morning Post to host the China–Southeast Asia Business Forum in Jakarta demonstrate this shift. These forums are not symbolic — they are where deals on Electric Vehicle (EV) supply chains, digital payments, and manufacturing cooperation are being seeded, giving Indonesia visibility as the ASEAN gateway to China and the Indo-Pacific.
Anindya Bakrie’s diplomacy also extends westward. KADIN’s engagement with India has focused on increasing bilateral trade toward a US$50 billion target, aligning Indian industrial momentum with Indonesia’s raw materials, logistics, and digital capabilities. This is how South–South synergy becomes measurable — not in communiqués, but in trade corridors.

At the same time, KADIN’s deepening ties with the UAE and Qatar are shifting Gulf capital into Southeast Asia’s growth story. The US$4 billion joint investment commitment with Qatar covering food security, energy, digital infrastructure, and healthcare illustrates how Indonesian enterprises are now part of Gulf diversification portfolios. These are the new arteries of South–South finance that Indonesia can navigate with strategic confidence.
Power from the South
What makes Anindya Bakrie’s leadership distinctive is not isolationist “South-first” rhetoric but balanced connectivity. While fortifying ties across Asia, the Middle East, and Africa, KADIN has also positioned Indonesia as a credible partner for European capital looking for stable emerging-market exposure.
During his participation at Choose France 2025, Anindya Bakrie emphasized Indonesia’s role as “the sister of ASEAN,” inviting French and European Union (EU) investors to see Indonesia not as a frontier market, but as the anchor of the Indo-Pacific middle class. The announced US$300 million partnership with Invest International (Netherlands) to finance Indonesian green and digital projects proves that European partners see Indonesia as a reliable part of global value chains — not just a resource supplier.
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A Call to Consolidate Our Momentum
Indonesia’s identity as a middle power has often been treated as a geopolitical phrase. Under Anindya Bakrie’s leadership at KADIN, it has become an economic strategy — connecting business ecosystems between continents, while giving Indonesian enterprises front-row visibility in the conversations that matter most.
By integrating GCC capital, Chinese manufacturing networks, Indian digital prowess, and European green finance, Indonesia is no longer a peripheral participant. It is a platform. This is how Indonesia earns credibility not just in diplomacy, but in deal-making.
For Indonesia’s private sector, the momentum must now translate into project pipelines — from smart logistics and renewable energy to sustainable tourism and digital health. KADIN’s global bridgework gives us the channels; now we must fill them with Indonesian innovation and investment readiness.
In this sense, Anindya Bakrie’s leadership symbolizes more than institutional reform. It is Indonesia’s declaration that it belongs at the center of the new South–South economic map, linking emerging powers with shared prosperity, and putting Indonesian business on a level — and visibility — it has never reached before. ***
