Currency: Rupiah
(Rp) = 100 sen. Notes are in denominations of Rp100,000,
50,000, 20,000, 10,000, 5000, 1000, 500 and 100. Coins are
in denominations of Rp1000, 500, 100, 50 and 25.
Currency exchange: Although there should
be no difficulty exchanging major currencies in the main tourist
centres, problems may occur elsewhere. The easiest currency
to exchange is the US Dollar.
Credit & debit cards: MasterCard,
American Express and Visa are widely accepted in Jakarta and
the main tourist areas. In more remote areas it is best to
carry cash in small denominations. Check with your credit or
debit card company for details of merchant acceptability and
other services which may be available.
Travellers cheques: Limited merchant
acceptance but can be easily exchanged at banks and larger
hotels. To avoid additional exchange rate charges, travellers
are advised to take travellers cheques in US Dollars or Pounds
Sterling.
Currency restrictions: There are no
restrictions on the import or export of foreign currency. The
import and export of local currency is limited to Rp5,000,000
which must be declared; more than Rp10,000,000 need authorisation.
Failure to declare amounts in excess of Rp10,000,000 may result
in heavy fines. Local currency may be exchanged on departure.
Indonesia's banking sector plunged into crisis
in 1997 when the rupiah tumbled against the U.S. dollar, exposing
the shaky lending practices of local banks. For instance, borrowings
of 54 local banks exceeded their capital by 200 percent. The
result was massive bank runs and a loss of confidence that
nearly brought the payments system to a halt. The severity
of the crisis meant that even thriving exporters benefitting
from the rupiah's devaluation were denied credit.
To breathe new life into a languishing financial
industry, the government either liquidated, merged, recapitalized
or took over the nation's various banks. Since the crisis began,
65 banks have been closed and 13, including the country's biggest
private bank, Bank Central Asia, have been nationalized.. In
addition, seven private banks were given a fresh injection
of capital to stabilize their finances and four out of seven
state-owned banks--Bank Exim, Bank Bumi Daya, Bank Dagang Negara
and Bapindo-were merged into one entity called Bank Mandiri.
The World Bank estimates that the total cost of cleaning up
the banking system is 670 trillion rupiah.
Bank Indonesia is the central bank. It acts
as the government's banker and is tasked with issuing currency,
implementing monetary policy, and regulating financial institutions.
Besides printing Indonesia's currency, the rupiah, it also
maintains the economy's international reserves and formulates
the annual budget.
Foreign banks open from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m., and
can exchange foreign currency. Only two state-owned banks are
able to handle foreign exchange: Bank Negara Indonesia and
Bank Rakyat Indonesia.