INDONESIA JUST BEAT CHINA AT ITS OWN GAME — AND THE WORLD IS NOTICING
For the first time in a G20 ranking, Indonesia sits at number one for GDP growth. Here's why that number matters far beyond the spreadsheet.
The number that dropped quietly from Badan Pusat Statistik (BPS) last week turned a lot of heads in Jakarta's financial district. Indonesia's Gross Domestic Product grew 5.61% year-on-year in the first quarter of 2026 — placing the country at the top of a provisional G20 growth ranking that includes powerhouses like China, the United States, and South Korea.
In plain terms: Indonesia is, right now, the fastest-growing large economy on the planet among the nations that have reported Q1 2026 data.
The G20 is a group of the world's 20 largest economies — including the US, China, Germany, and Japan — that together account for roughly 85% of global GDP. The provisional Q1 2026 growth ranking, compiled as member nations report their data by May 5, 2026, shows Indonesia at 5.6%, China at 5.0%, and Singapore at 4.6%. At the bottom: Mexico at just 0.1%, and Germany at 0.3%.
The counterintuitive part? Indonesia didn't outpace China by some dramatic margin — it was 0.61 percentage points. But in macroeconomic terms, that gap is enormous. China has the world's second-largest economy with a GDP measured in trillions of dollars. Beating its growth rate at this scale is the equivalent of a sprinter not just keeping pace with the frontrunner, but edging ahead at the tape.
Walk into any coffee shop in Menteng or Kemang right now and you can smell the optimism — not just in the aroma of kopi susu but in the conversations between young professionals who, for the first time, are talking about their country's economy the way Koreans talked about the Miracle on the Han River in the 1980s.
One caveat the data is honest about: this ranking is provisional. As of May 5, 2026, not all G20 nations had released their Q1 figures. Countries like Japan, India, and Brazil had not yet reported. When they do, Indonesia's position could shift. But the numbers that are in — from economies accounting for the majority of the G20's weight — make a compelling case.
What's driving the growth? BPS hasn't published a full breakdown at time of writing, but economists tracking Indonesia point to sustained domestic consumption, an expanding middle class, and resilient commodity exports. Indonesia is one of the world's largest producers of nickel — a metal the EV battery industry is scrambling for — and that structural advantage isn't going away.
The gap between Indonesia and the underperformers is just as striking. Germany posted 0.3% growth. Mexico managed only 0.1%. Both are G20 stalwarts facing structural headwinds — aging populations, energy transitions, and in Germany's case, the slow death of its industrial export model. Indonesia, by contrast, has a median age of around 30 and a consumer base that is only beginning to flex.
For readers who track their own financial futures alongside the country's — which is most of you — this matters because economic growth at this pace typically precedes stronger job markets, more foreign investment, and a currency with firmer footing. None of that is guaranteed. But right now, the data is pointing in one direction.


























