Indonesian Employers Association

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Indonesian Employers Association
Asosiasi Pengusaha Indonesia
AbbreviationAPINDO
FormationJanuary 31, 1952; 69 years ago (1952-01-31)
TypeNon-governmental trade association
FocusPolicy advocacy
HeadquartersPermata Kuningan, Jl. Kuningan Mulia Kav. 9C, Jakarta, Indonesia
Coordinates6°12′44″S 106°50′03″E / 6.212090°S 106.834040°E / -6.212090; 106.834040
Area served
Indonesia
ServicesBusiness promotion, networking, policy reforms
Key people
Hariyadi Sukamdani [1][2]
Websiteapindo.or.id/en

The Indonesian Employers Association (Indonesian: Asosiasi Pengusaha Indonesia) or commonly known as APINDO, is an independent, non-partisan organization of entrepreneurs engaged in the economical sector in Indonesia.[3] The employers organization is headquartered in Jakarta with regional offices across the Indonesian archipelago. The organization works to bargain different issues faced by employers of the country, as well as to bridge the gap by between workers and employers.[4][5][6]

History[]

The organization was founded on January 31, 1952 under the name of the Indonesian Socio-Economic Entrepreneurship Consultative Board (PUSPI). At the APINDO II National Conference in Surabaya, in 1985, PUSPI changed its name to the Indonesian Employers' Association (APINDO). APINDO was recognized in 1975 by Decree of the Minister of Manpower, and mandated by KADIN, to represent the Employers on issuer related to industrial relations and manpower affairs.

Membership[]

APINDO membership consists of two types, namely Ordinary Members and Extraordinary Members.

  • Ordinary Member is a company in the form of a legal entity or not, owned by an individual, an association or a legal entity, both private and state owned, employing workers / laborers by paying wages or other forms of compensation.
  • Extraordinary Members are certain companies both on a National or International scale that are registered directly with the National Board or Leadership and / or the Provincial Leadership Council.

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Article:"Masuk Pemerintahan, Sofjan Wanandi Perpisahan dengan Apindo" di detik.com
  2. ^ Article:"Sofjan Wanandi Mundur dari Ketua Umum Apindo " di detik.com
  3. ^ "Lobby groups want more talks on taxation bill". The Jakarta Post. Retrieved 19 August 2019.
  4. ^ "Apindo plans 3 million jobs a year over five years". The Jakarta Post. Retrieved 19 August 2019.
  5. ^ "Apindo calls on government to cancel negative investment list policy". The Jakarta Post. Retrieved 19 August 2019.
  6. ^ "Businesses seek lower tax rate to improve competitiveness". The Jakarta Post. Retrieved 19 August 2019.
Retrieved from ""