Indonesia: 'Bleak' Eid for thousands of workers laid off from textile manufacturer Sritex
"Wave of layoffs, deflation herald bleak Hari Raya for thousands of Indonesians", 20 March 2025
The upcoming Lebaran, or Hari Raya Aidilfitri, celebrations will be less than festive for Mr Sriyono, 52, who, like many Indonesians, has a name with only one word.
He is one of the more than 10,000 workers at textile manufacturer PT Sri Rejeki Isman, popularly known as Sritex, who lost their jobs on Feb 26 after the company lost its court appeal against bankruptcy.
“I still can’t believe this... I didn’t change companies because it feels like family here. I feel so sad, I am speechless,” he told The Straits Times over the phone. He had worked at the company’s factory in Solo, Central Java, for 33 years, serving refreshments to foreign buyers who visited the plant.
The closure of Sritex, once South-east Asia’s largest textile manufacturer, comes after a wave of shutdowns in at least 60 other textile and garment manufacturers across Indonesia between January 2023 and December 2024, according to the Indonesian Fiber and Filament Yarn Producers Association...
Some 60,000 workers from 50 companies lost their jobs in January and February, according to the Indonesian Trade Union Confederation in a media statement on March 15.
And more layoffs are in store for the year. Indonesia’s Centre for Research at the Parliamentary Expertise Agency estimates that 280,000 workers will be laid off in 2025, making it the highest annual number since the Covid-19 pandemic, which saw 3.6 million people lose their jobs in 2020...
Analysts told ST that these job losses arise from the government’s failure to protect domestic industries from foreign competition...
Mr Bhima Yudhistira, executive director of the Centre of Economic and Law Studies think-tank, said: “The government is busier attracting new investments rather than maintaining existing industries.”
He noted that recent moves to ease import rules and provide tax incentives have opened the doors to cheaper Chinese goods, particularly textile products.
Economists are also concerned that the layoffs come amid Indonesia’s first recorded deflation in over 20 years...
The Indonesian government has said that the wave of layoffs is under control and that the manufacturing industry is still showing signs of growth. At a press conference on March 5, Indonesia’s Minister of Manpower, Professor Yassierli, said Sritex workers would receive some financial aid.
However, such aid may not come soon enough for Mr Sriyono and his family of three, as he tries to stretch his last pay cheque of 2.3 million rupiah for the Lebaran festivities, which mark the end of the Muslim fasting month, at the end of March, and beyond.
“It is already our tradition to celebrate Lebaran; after all, it is only once a year. But we also have to save money. We need to make sure that the last salary we have will last till after Hari Raya,” he said.