Bangka Belitung Islands (Babel) had the lowest economic growth rate nationally in 2024.
According to data from the Central Statistics Agency (BPS), Babel's constant price regional gross domestic product (PDRB) in 2024 was Rp60.8 trillion, growing only 0.77% from the previous year.
In 2024, several business sectors in Babel experienced contraction, burdening the province's economic growth. Specifically, the mining and quarrying sector fell by 4%, the manufacturing industry by 3.93%, construction by 0.57%, and wholesale and retail trade by 0.34%.
The next lowest economic growth was in Riau, with a constant price PDRB growth of 3.52% in 2024, followed by East Nusa Tenggara (3.73%), Gorontalo (4.13%), West Sumatra (4.36%), and Central Kalimantan (4.46%).
Following these were Jambi (4.51%), North Kalimantan (4.57%), and Lampung and Bengkulu, each growing at 4.57% and 4.62% respectively.
These ten provinces had lower growth than the national economic growth rate, which reached 5.03% in 2024.
Here is a complete list of Indonesian provincial economic growth in 2024, ordered from lowest to highest:
1. Bangka Belitung Islands: 0.77%
2. Riau: 3.52%
3. East Nusa Tenggara: 3.73%
4. Gorontalo: 4.13%
5. West Sumatra: 4.36%
6. Central Kalimantan: 4.46%
7. Jambi: 4.51%
8. North Kalimantan: 4.57%
9. Lampung: 4.57%
10. Bengkulu: 4.62%
11. Aceh: 4.66%
12. West Sulawesi: 4.76%
13. Banten: 4.79%
14. West Kalimantan: 4.90%
15. Jakarta Special Capital Region: 4.90%
16. East Java: 4.93%
17. Central Java: 4.95%
18. West Java: 4.95%
19. Riau Islands: 5.02%
20. South Sulawesi: 5.02%
21. Yogyakarta Special Region: 5.03%
22. South Sumatra: 5.03%
23. North Sumatra: 5.03%
24. South Kalimantan: 5.05%
25. West Nusa Tenggara: 5.30%
26. Maluku: 5.34%
27. North Sulawesi: 5.39%
28. Southeast Sulawesi: 5.40%
29. Bali: 5.48%
30. East Kalimantan: 6.17%
31. Central Sulawesi: 9.89%
32. North Maluku: 13.73%
Meanwhile, data comparing to the previous year is unavailable for the six provinces in Tanah Papua (West Papua, Southwest Papua, Papua, South Papua, Central Papua, and Highland Papua) due to the impact of regional divisions.