Berliner Boersenzeitung - Indonesia's silvermen beg to make ends meet

EUR -
AED 4.173027
AFN 79.15009
ALL 98.687011
AMD 436.211437
ANG 2.033332
AOA 1042.416289
ARS 1350.845109
AUD 1.764335
AWG 2.046479
AZN 1.935955
BAM 1.960526
BBD 2.292706
BDT 138.753236
BGN 1.957939
BHD 0.428358
BIF 3379.917364
BMD 1.136144
BND 1.46572
BOB 7.845774
BRL 6.491361
BSD 1.135527
BTN 97.197434
BWP 15.251629
BYN 3.716025
BYR 22268.414841
BZD 2.280878
CAD 1.560278
CDF 3255.051866
CHF 0.93346
CLF 0.02794
CLP 1072.183174
CNY 8.185124
CNH 8.184534
COP 4724.085148
CRC 576.885474
CUC 1.136144
CUP 30.107806
CVE 110.53143
CZK 24.921356
DJF 201.91589
DKK 7.459811
DOP 67.032168
DZD 150.115293
EGP 56.533897
ERN 17.042154
ETB 151.945783
FJD 2.56706
FKP 0.842392
GBP 0.843479
GEL 3.113477
GGP 0.842392
GHS 11.63885
GIP 0.842392
GMD 81.802744
GNF 9838.6289
GTQ 8.720945
GYD 237.577305
HKD 8.90848
HNL 29.585314
HRK 7.532864
HTG 148.496636
HUF 403.797242
IDR 18583.333028
ILS 3.997788
IMP 0.842392
INR 97.2335
IQD 1487.485505
IRR 47860.050153
ISK 144.449737
JEP 0.842392
JMD 181.006306
JOD 0.805571
JPY 163.443393
KES 146.794074
KGS 99.356196
KHR 4547.922498
KMF 493.658711
KPW 1022.530458
KRW 1570.696259
KWD 0.348581
KYD 0.946273
KZT 580.544262
LAK 24534.924193
LBP 101738.945415
LKR 340.076744
LRD 227.095403
LSL 20.334436
LTL 3.354737
LVL 0.687242
LYD 6.219993
MAD 10.499023
MDL 19.700313
MGA 5192.470474
MKD 61.518969
MMK 2385.531885
MNT 4063.85951
MOP 9.173131
MRU 44.886976
MUR 51.990362
MVR 17.56521
MWK 1968.963413
MXN 22.01042
MYR 4.836
MZN 72.611367
NAD 20.334616
NGN 1804.696391
NIO 41.790366
NOK 11.591737
NPR 155.515493
NZD 1.901766
OMR 0.436847
PAB 1.135517
PEN 4.113178
PGK 4.662423
PHP 63.389433
PKR 320.122922
PLN 4.253324
PYG 9072.869674
QAR 4.139041
RON 5.063456
RSD 117.276196
RUB 88.04858
RWF 1605.956939
SAR 4.262695
SBD 9.487671
SCR 16.152416
SDG 682.258417
SEK 10.881382
SGD 1.465402
SHP 0.892831
SLE 25.813604
SLL 23824.363763
SOS 648.958568
SRD 42.285566
STD 23515.878952
SVC 9.935862
SYP 14771.822264
SZL 20.32782
THB 37.34546
TJS 11.355922
TMT 3.982183
TND 3.394683
TOP 2.660966
TRY 44.552332
TTD 7.710518
TWD 33.981719
TZS 3061.907421
UAH 47.170971
UGX 4127.913786
USD 1.136144
UYU 47.285853
UZS 14498.522176
VES 107.759274
VND 29564.16106
VUV 137.306816
WST 3.143685
XAF 657.530368
XAG 0.034477
XAU 0.000345
XCD 3.070485
XDR 0.817742
XOF 657.54197
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.049033
ZAR 20.435713
ZMK 10226.659976
ZMW 30.232341
ZWL 365.83778
  • CMSC

    0.0050

    22.095

    +0.02%

  • BCC

    -1.0700

    86.78

    -1.23%

  • SCS

    -0.0250

    10.335

    -0.24%

  • NGG

    0.9197

    71.4352

    +1.29%

  • RIO

    -0.8700

    59.33

    -1.47%

  • GSK

    1.0600

    41.06

    +2.58%

  • RELX

    -0.0500

    53.88

    -0.09%

  • BCE

    0.2950

    21.795

    +1.35%

  • RBGPF

    -0.2380

    65.43

    -0.36%

  • CMSD

    0.0030

    22.113

    +0.01%

  • JRI

    0.0800

    12.86

    +0.62%

  • BTI

    0.0650

    45.035

    +0.14%

  • RYCEF

    0.1100

    11.69

    +0.94%

  • VOD

    0.0050

    10.345

    +0.05%

  • BP

    -0.0400

    29.13

    -0.14%

  • AZN

    1.9450

    72.815

    +2.67%

Indonesia's silvermen beg to make ends meet
Indonesia's silvermen beg to make ends meet / Photo: Yasuyoshi CHIBA - AFP

Indonesia's silvermen beg to make ends meet

On a rainy day in Indonesia's capital Jakarta, three men coated in metallic paint known as the "manusia silver", or silvermen, brave the elements at an intersection near a mall to ask drivers for change.

Text size:

It is an arresting act that comes with health risks, one some young Indonesians feel is necessary to make ends meet as the cost of living worsens and jobs dwindle after the Covid pandemic.

"I'm ashamed to earn money like this. I want to find a real, more dignified job," said Ari Munandar, 25.

"But the embarrassment disappears when you remember that your daughter and your wife are at home."

Barefoot, dressed only in shorts and daubed head to toe by the irritating paint, Ari, his brother Keris and their friend Riyan Ahmad Fazriyansah each take a lane in the road.

When the cars come to a stop they strike robotic poses in front of the drivers.

"Good afternoon, have a nice drive," says Ari.

The poses have little meaning other than to attract cash.

"I do them because one day I saw a friend earn more by doing them," he said, moving between cars, holding out a bucket for donations.

On a good day they can pocket up to 200,000 rupiah ($12), but typically earn around 120,000.

That's much less than Jakarta's monthly minimum wage of five million rupiah and barely enough to cover daily expenses.

"I'm not going to eat lunch, just drink and smoke," said Ari.

Every penny counts in a country where prices have risen steadily in recent years.

A kilogram (two pounds) of rice, the archipelago's main staple, jumped by 27 percent between 2015 and 2025, according to statistics agency data.

And behind the paint, the friends are clearly undernourished.

None are taller than 172 centimetres (five feet eight inches) nor weigh more than 55 kilograms.

- 'Stings my eyes' -

A lack of employment opportunity is the main cause of young men and women taking to the streets, they say.

"Since I was made redundant in 2019 I've been begging," said Ari.

"Before that, I worked cleaning toilets."

According to government data, the number of people living below the poverty line in metropolitan Jakarta -- a megalopolis of 11 million people -- was up from 362,000 in 2019 to 449,000 as of September 2024.

"Many young people with few qualifications between the ages of 20 and 40 have found themselves unemployed," said Bhima Yudistira, executive director of the Center of Economic and Law Studies.

"Even though there is no national count, there has been a huge rise in begging in Jakarta after the pandemic of 2021."

After five hours at the intersection, the group returns home by hitchhiking a ride from a tuk-tuk.

The three pile into the back, counting their meagre earnings and lighting a cigarette to share.

Once dropped off, they walk by a polluted river and across a railway line to their Jakarta slum.

Far from the capital's high-rises, children play near the tracks to the rhythm of the trains as Ari makes his way back to remove the silver.

The paint, similar to that used for screen-printing on fabric, is not easy to remove.

Squatting in front of a well and buckets filled with water, he splashes his body before scrubbing fiercely, his one-year-old daughter Arisya watching.

"At first the paint burned and I had a blister on my neck, but now it only stings my eyes," he said.

The shower reveals a new, younger man.

Once dry, he heads home to play with Arisya.

"As soon as I'm here I forget all the fatigue and the hardship," he says, smiling.

"But I hope she never does what I do."

(L.Kaufmann--BBZ)