Rising fuel costs in Indonesia spark concern about tighter supplies, subsidy strain

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Indonesia’s increase in prices for some non-subsidised fuel products could push more households towards subsidised fuel grades, economists have warned, raising the risk of tighter supplies and added pressure on a state budget already trying to contain politically sensitive energy costs.The move by state energy company Pertamina underscores the government’s balancing act: allowing market-priced fuels to rise with global crude costs while shielding subsidised products used by lower-income...