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Indonesia 2023 Press Freedom Profile

Indonesia scores 54.8/100 on the 2023 RSF World Press Freedom Index, ranking #108 globally. Freedom House rates it Partly Free (57/100). Context: pop 270.2 million, GDP $1.12T.

RSF Score54.83Global rank #108
Freedom StatusPartly FreeFH total 57/100
GDP$1.12TWorld Bank data
Population270.2 millionNational total

2023 Press Freedom Scorecard

Overall score and global position

In the 2023 World Press Freedom Index, Indonesia scores 54.83 out of 100 and ranks #108 globally — a difficult press environment. Of the 25 Freedom House indicators, Indonesia earns 4 at the maximum 4/4 and 0 at 0/4; its strongest category is Electoral Process (11/12) and its weakest is Rule of Law (5/16).

54.8 / 100

Composite index comparison

RSF Overall (Reporters Without Borders)54.8 / 100

Press freedom score — higher is freer.

Political Rights (Freedom House)29 / 40

Elections, political pluralism, government functioning.

Civil Liberties (Freedom House)28 / 60

Freedom of expression, association, rule of law, personal autonomy.

Freedom of Expression (V-Dem 2025)68.8 / 100

Academic press-freedom index from the Varieties of Democracy project (0–1 rescaled to 0–100).

Five-year RSF trend

02550751002019: 63.232020: 63.182021: 62.62022: 49.272023: 54.8320192020202120222023

Over 2019–2023, Indonesia moved from 63.23 to 54.83 on the RSF scale (a decline of 8.40 points). The lowest recorded score was 49.27 and the highest was 63.23.

Year-over-year RSF movement

Indonesia's biggest single-year RSF movement in the 2019–2023 window was a loss of 13.33 points between 2021 (62.60) and 2022 (49.27).

Years From To Δ score
2019 → 2020 63.23 63.18 ▼ -0.05
2020 → 2021 63.18 62.60 ▼ -0.58
2021 → 2022 62.60 49.27 ▼ -13.33
2022 → 2023 49.27 54.83 ▲ 5.56

Full socio-economic dashboard

public

Demographics & geography

Population270.2 million
Urban population151.5 million
Density151.0 people / km²
Land area1,904,569 km²
CapitalJakarta
Largest cityKalimantan
Latitude-0.7893°
Longitude113.9213°
Forested area49.9%
Agricultural land31.5%
CO₂ emissions563,325 kt
payments

Economy & labour

GDP$1.12T
GDP per capita$4,142
CurrencyIDR
CPI151.18
CPI change (%)3.0%
Minimum wage$0.48 /hr
Unemployment rate4.7%
Labor-force participation67.5%
Tax revenue (% of GDP)10.2%
Total tax rate30.1%
Gasoline price$0.63 /L
medical_services

Health

Life expectancy71.5 years
Birth rate18.07 / 1 000
Fertility rate2.31 births / woman
Infant mortality21.1 / 1 000 live births
Maternal mortality ratio177 / 100 000 live births
Physicians0.43 / 1 000 people
Out-of-pocket health spend48.3%
school

Education

Gross primary enrollment106.4%
Gross tertiary enrollment36.3%
account_balance

Administration

Official languageIndonesian
ISO abbreviationID
Calling code+62
Armed forces size676,000 personnel

All socio-economic indicators from the World Bank country dataset (2023 snapshot).

Democratic Rights & Civil Liberties

Freedom status explained

Freedom House classifies Indonesia as Partly Free with a 2024 aggregate score of 57/100 — political rights and civil liberties are respected in part but undercut by specific institutional or legal weaknesses.

Within Freedom House's Asia region (43 countries), Indonesia ranks #24 on the latest aggregate score — the 45th percentile. The region leaders are New Zealand, Japan, Australia.

Political Rights vs Civil Liberties

Political Rights

29/ 40

Rating 3 of 7 (1 = best)

Civil Liberties

28/ 60

Rating 4 of 7 (1 = best)

Political rights are rated noticeably higher than civil liberties — the formal political framework is more open than the day-to-day environment for expression, association, and personal autonomy.

Twelve-year Freedom House trend

02550751002013: 652014: 642015: 642016: 652017: 652018: 642019: 622020: 612021: 592022: 592023: 582024: 57201320142015201620172018201920202021202220232024

Between 2013 and 2024, Freedom House moved Indonesia from Free (Free, 65/100) to Partly Free (Partly Free, 57/100).

Status transitions

Freedom House records 1 status transition for Indonesia between 2014 and 2014 — each row below marks the year the classification flipped between Free, Partly Free, and Not Free.

Year From To
2014 Free Partly Free

Indicator trajectory (A–G over 12 years)

Of the 25 Freedom House indicators tracked for Indonesia, 8 moved at least one point across the available Freedom House history. The eight with the largest absolute change appear below.

Code Indicator Earliest Latest Δ
D3 Academic freedom 4/4 (2013) 2/4 (2024) ▼ -2
E2 NGO freedom 4/4 (2013) 2/4 (2024) ▼ -2
B3 Free political choice 3/4 (2013) 2/4 (2024) ▼ -1
D4 Private discussion 4/4 (2013) 3/4 (2024) ▼ -1
E3 Trade union freedom 3/4 (2013) 2/4 (2024) ▼ -1
G1 Freedom of movement 3/4 (2013) 2/4 (2024) ▼ -1
A1 Free and fair head-of-government elections 4/4 (2013) 4/4 (2024) • 0
B4 Minority political rights 2/4 (2013) 2/4 (2024) • 0

Latest A–G indicator scorecard

A.

Electoral Process

PR

Subtotal11 / 12
  • A1Free and fair head-of-government elections

    4/4

  • A2Free and fair legislative elections

    4/4

  • A3Electoral laws and framework

    3/4

B.

Political Pluralism & Participation

PR

Subtotal12 / 16
  • B1Right to organise in political parties

    4/4

  • B2Opposition can realistically gain power

    4/4

  • B3Free political choice without domination

    2/4

  • B4Political rights of minorities

    2/4

C.

Functioning of Government

PR

Subtotal6 / 12
  • C1Elected officials determine government policy

    3/4

  • C2Safeguards against corruption

    1/4

  • C3Transparency of government

    2/4

D.

Freedom of Expression & Belief

CL

Subtotal9 / 16
  • D1Free and independent media

    3/4

  • D2Freedom of religious expression

    1/4

  • D3Academic freedom

    2/4

  • D4Free private discussion

    3/4

E.

Associational & Organisational Rights

CL

Subtotal6 / 12
  • E1Freedom of assembly

    2/4

  • E2Freedom for NGOs

    2/4

  • E3Free trade unions

    2/4

F.

Rule of Law

CL

Subtotal5 / 16
  • F1Independent judiciary

    2/4

  • F2Due process in civil and criminal matters

    1/4

  • F3Protection from illegitimate force

    1/4

  • F4Equal treatment under the law

    1/4

G.

Personal Autonomy & Individual Rights

CL

Subtotal8 / 16
  • G1Freedom of movement

    2/4

  • G2Property rights

    2/4

  • G3Personal social freedoms

    2/4

  • G4Equality of opportunity

    2/4

Each indicator is scored 0–4 by Freedom House analysts; category subtotals combine into the Political Rights (A + B + C = 0–40) and Civil Liberties (D + E + F + G = 0–60) aggregates shown above. 2024 edition.

Frequently Asked Questions

When did Indonesia see its biggest RSF press-freedom change?

The sharpest single-year shift was an deterioration of 13.33 points between 2021 (62.60) and 2022 (49.27) on the RSF index.

Has Indonesia changed Freedom House classification in the last 12 years?

Yes — Freedom House reclassified Indonesia from Free to Partly Free in 2014, and the classification has held since.

Which Freedom House indicator moved most in Indonesia?

Indicator D3 (Academic freedom) changed by -2 points, moving from 4/4 to 2/4 across the available history — the biggest indicator-level movement of the 25 Freedom House sub-scores for Indonesia.

How does Indonesia rank within its Freedom House region?

Indonesia holds position #24 of 43 in the Asia region on the latest Freedom House aggregate score. The region's top country is New Zealand (99/100).

What is Indonesia's economic context for its press freedom score?

Indonesia has a GDP of $1.12T across a population of 270.2 million, giving a per-capita GDP of about $4,142. Its capital is Jakarta; the official language is Indonesian.