Revenue data for the Jakarta Provincial Government (Pemprov) from regional transfers (TKD) can be accessed at Databoks-series.katadata.co.id.
Summary:
- The Jakarta Provincial Government targets Rp30 trillion in revenue from TKD in 2025, higher than previous years.
- However, for 2026, the targeted revenue from TKD is expected to decrease, following cuts to revenue sharing funds (DBH) from the central government.
Regional transfers (TKD) are funds transferred by the Indonesian central government to regional governments, in order to support decentralization and regional autonomy.
These TKD consist of various components, such as revenue sharing funds (DBH), general allocation funds (DAU), special allocation funds (DAK), and special autonomy funds (otsus).
Based on the latest regional revenue and expenditure budget (APBD), in 2025, the Jakarta Provincial Government targets Rp30.08 trillion in revenue from TKD.
This figure is larger than in previous years, as shown in the graph.
However, the Jakarta Provincial Government's TKD revenue for next year will decrease, following the policy of cutting DBH, a component of TKD.
Jakarta Governor Pramono Anung also stated that he would make adjustments to Jakarta's 2026 APBD.
"The DKI Jakarta Provincial Government truly wants to align with the fiscal policies adopted by the central government, especially regarding the adjustment of revenue sharing funds (DBH)," said Pramono, quoted from the website of the Committee for Monitoring the Implementation of Regional Autonomy (KPPOD), Monday (October 13, 2025).
As a result of the DBH reduction, the target for Jakarta's total APBD revenue in 2026 will decrease by approximately Rp16 trillion, from an initial plan of Rp95 trillion to Rp79 trillion.
According to Pramono, this will not affect the salaries of civil servants (ASN) and non-ASN employees, including civil servants (PNS), government employees with work agreements (PPPK), and individual service providers (PJLP).
However, the cuts will impact opportunities for new PJLP recruitment next year.
"Like before, we opened 1,000 [vacancies] for Damkar (Fire Department), 1,100 for 'orange troops' (street sweepers/public facility maintenance), and 500 for 'white troops' (waste management/sanitation workers). Due to this reduction, next year, those [recruitment] opportunities will also decrease," said Pramono.