Sign in
Edition of 20:00 CETSunday, June 21, 2026
307 outlets · 17 languages702 briefings today
Economy & MarketsSunday, June 21, 2026

Jakarta Labour Scheme Attracts 100,000 Applicants as Dhaka Maps Out Public-Sector Hiring

Jakarta’s short-term employment drive draws overwhelming demand amid economic pressure, while Bangladesh unveils phased recruitment for nearly half a million vacant government posts.

Jakarta’s labour-intensive public works programme drew more than 100,000 registrations within days of opening, a surge that lays bare the depth of economic anxiety in the Indonesian capital. Officials counted 100,000 applicants vying for just 2,843 temporary positions—a ratio of 35 to 1—after the provincial government launched the first phase of a scheme designed to serve as a social cushion for residents hit by global economic headwinds. The spike in demand, recorded by the city’s communications agency on Sunday, provides a stark measure of how aggressively households are seeking income buffers even in one of Southeast Asia’s most dynamic cities.

The programme, a direct instruction from Governor Pramono Anung, channels workers through third-party contractors to perform maintenance, landscaping, flood-drain clearance and sanitation jobs under four municipal agencies: roads, parks and forests, water resources, and the environment. Participants receive the provincial minimum wage for engagements lasting three to six months, but the roles carry no pathway to permanent public employment. Registration for the first batch closes on 26 June, with results on 27 June, when a second tranche of placements will also open. Officials stressed that the selection process is transparent and monitored, explicitly barring the sort of patronage that often dogs such relief schemes.

Meanwhile, a parallel employment push is unfolding in South Asia. Bangladesh’s public administration minister told parliament on Sunday that the government will fill 2,879 posts within six months, part of a phased plan to address a staggering 4,68,000 vacancies across all ministries and agencies. The road map extends to 4,459 hires within a year and a further 3,110 within five years for the administration ministry alone. Separately, the law minister disclosed 2,620 sanctioned judge positions, of which 1,964 are filled, and noted that 650 new civil judge and senior judicial magistrate courts, 406 joint session judge courts and 204 additional session judge courts have been established. Those numbers underscore a judiciary struggling to cope: 1,19,830 family court cases remain pending nationwide.

Dhaka also revealed a political dimension to its recruitment drive. The law minister stated that 23,865 politically motivated cases—more than 1,42,000 were allegedly filed against opposition activists during recent years of authoritarian rule—have been withdrawn, and a committee is reviewing the remainder. The admission, while limited to data supplied by the main opposition party’s central office, signals an effort to recalibrate the public workforce and legal system after a period of acute polarisation.

The next milestone for Jakarta is the 27 June publication of first-phase results and the simultaneous launch of phase-two registration, while Dhaka’s credibility will be tested by the pace at which its recruitment targets are met. Both governments are deploying administrative machinery—one through time-limited projects, the other through institutional cadre replenishment—as they navigate the politically volatile intersection of unemployment and state capacity.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 3 languages

32%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Indian & South Asian pressSoutheast Asian press
Indian & South Asian press
PragmatismDetachment

The Bangladesh government outlined a phased hiring plan in parliament to fill thousands of vacancies in public administration over the coming years. Clear timelines signal a pragmatic, methodical approach to workforce management.

Southeast Asian press
PragmatismUrgency

Jakarta's intensive labor program drew more than 100,000 applicants for just 2,800 positions, underscoring the strong demand for income among residents. Designed as a social safety net, the scheme will be carried out in several recruitment waves.

Related articles

Read more
Breaking
Trump Threatens Iran with ‘Harder’ Strikes as Swiss Peace Talks Open·Two Fatalities at Live Events, Rock Icon Rod Stewart Needs Oxygen Onstage·Pogacar Seals Tour de Suisse Dominance with Largest Victory Margin Since 1959·Seven women dead, dozens critical in Tamil Nadu ammonia leak at shrimp factory·Global Navies Race to Modernise Fleets as Submarine and Warship Deals Multiply·Digital Loans and Pay-Later Apps Test Islamic Finance Guardrails in Indonesia·A Childhood Snapshot and a Day for Fathers: From the Emirates to the World·Undav’s late double spares Germany’s blushes and seals last-32 spot·Trump Threatens Iran with ‘Harder’ Strikes as Swiss Peace Talks Open·Two Fatalities at Live Events, Rock Icon Rod Stewart Needs Oxygen Onstage·Pogacar Seals Tour de Suisse Dominance with Largest Victory Margin Since 1959·Seven women dead, dozens critical in Tamil Nadu ammonia leak at shrimp factory·Global Navies Race to Modernise Fleets as Submarine and Warship Deals Multiply·Digital Loans and Pay-Later Apps Test Islamic Finance Guardrails in Indonesia·A Childhood Snapshot and a Day for Fathers: From the Emirates to the World·Undav’s late double spares Germany’s blushes and seals last-32 spot·
Upd. 03:35 PM3 languages · 5 outlets
PreviousEconomy & MarketsNext
5 outlets|3 languages|3 min read
Sunday, June 21, 2026

Jakarta Labour Scheme Attracts 100,000 Applicants as Dhaka Maps Out Public-Sector Hiring

Jakarta’s short-term employment drive draws overwhelming demand amid economic pressure, while Bangladesh unveils phased recruitment for nearly half a million vacant government posts.

Jakarta’s labour-intensive public works programme drew more than 100,000 registrations within days of opening, a surge that lays bare the depth of economic anxiety in the Indonesian capital. Officials counted 100,000 applicants vying for just 2,843 temporary positions—a ratio of 35 to 1—after the provincial government launched the first phase of a scheme designed to serve as a social cushion for residents hit by global economic headwinds. The spike in demand, recorded by the city’s communications agency on Sunday, provides a stark measure of how aggressively households are seeking income buffers even in one of Southeast Asia’s most dynamic cities.

The programme, a direct instruction from Governor Pramono Anung, channels workers through third-party contractors to perform maintenance, landscaping, flood-drain clearance and sanitation jobs under four municipal agencies: roads, parks and forests, water resources, and the environment. Participants receive the provincial minimum wage for engagements lasting three to six months, but the roles carry no pathway to permanent public employment. Registration for the first batch closes on 26 June, with results on 27 June, when a second tranche of placements will also open. Officials stressed that the selection process is transparent and monitored, explicitly barring the sort of patronage that often dogs such relief schemes.

Meanwhile, a parallel employment push is unfolding in South Asia. Bangladesh’s public administration minister told parliament on Sunday that the government will fill 2,879 posts within six months, part of a phased plan to address a staggering 4,68,000 vacancies across all ministries and agencies. The road map extends to 4,459 hires within a year and a further 3,110 within five years for the administration ministry alone. Separately, the law minister disclosed 2,620 sanctioned judge positions, of which 1,964 are filled, and noted that 650 new civil judge and senior judicial magistrate courts, 406 joint session judge courts and 204 additional session judge courts have been established. Those numbers underscore a judiciary struggling to cope: 1,19,830 family court cases remain pending nationwide.

Dhaka also revealed a political dimension to its recruitment drive. The law minister stated that 23,865 politically motivated cases—more than 1,42,000 were allegedly filed against opposition activists during recent years of authoritarian rule—have been withdrawn, and a committee is reviewing the remainder. The admission, while limited to data supplied by the main opposition party’s central office, signals an effort to recalibrate the public workforce and legal system after a period of acute polarisation.

The next milestone for Jakarta is the 27 June publication of first-phase results and the simultaneous launch of phase-two registration, while Dhaka’s credibility will be tested by the pace at which its recruitment targets are met. Both governments are deploying administrative machinery—one through time-limited projects, the other through institutional cadre replenishment—as they navigate the politically volatile intersection of unemployment and state capacity.

Source divergence

Economy & Markets · 5 outlets · 3 languages

32%Medium

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Favorable20%
Neutral80%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 3 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Indian & South Asian pressSoutheast Asian press
Indian & South Asian press
PragmatismDetachment

The Bangladesh government outlined a phased hiring plan in parliament to fill thousands of vacancies in public administration over the coming years. Clear timelines signal a pragmatic, methodical approach to workforce management.

Southeast Asian press
PragmatismUrgency

Jakarta's intensive labor program drew more than 100,000 applicants for just 2,800 positions, underscoring the strong demand for income among residents. Designed as a social safety net, the scheme will be carried out in several recruitment waves.

This story appeared in

5 outlets · 3 languages

Related articles

Geopolitics & Politics

US and Iran Begin Technical Talks in Switzerland as Strait of Hormuz Dispute Flares

9 languages · 36 outlets

Sport

Japan Thrash Tunisia 4-0 in 1,000th World Cup Clash

7 languages · 40 outlets

Geopolitics & Politics

Trump Threatens Iran with ‘Harder’ Strikes as Swiss Peace Talks Open

5 languages · 19 outlets

Read more