Indonesia launches free-meal programme to combat stunting
JAKARTA
Indonesia launched an ambitious $4.3 billion free-meal programme on Monday to combat stunted growth due to malnutrition, a key election promise of President Prabowo Subianto.
Prabowo has pledged to provide nutritious meals free to tens of millions of schoolchildren and pregnant women, saying it would improve their quality of life and boost economic growth.
"This is historic for Indonesia for the first time conducting a nationwide nutrition programme for toddlers, students, pregnant and breastfeeding mothers," presidential spokesman Hasan Nasbi said.
At least 190 kitchens run by third-party catering services opened nationwide, including some run by military bases, and were busy preparing meals from midnight before distributing them to schoolchildren and pregnant women.
The government has allocated 10,000 rupiahs (62 U.S. cents) per meal, with kitchens preparing rice, protein, vegetables and fruit for students.
The programme has a budget of 71 trillion rupiah ($4.3 billion) for the 2025 fiscal year and is set to deliver meals to almost 83 million people by 2029.
The free-meal programme is designed to tackle stunting, which affects 21.5 percent of children in the archipelago of some 282 million people.
However, analysts have said the scheme is not sustainable in the long term.
"I am quite pessimistic if everything is shouldered by the central government. Economically, it's not sustainable," Aditya Alta, a public policy analyst from the Center for Indonesian Policy Studies think tank, told AFP.
"Stunting is a multidimensional issue and addressing it through just one approach is insufficient," he said.