International education market in Indonesia

Indonesia is one of the world’s largest education markets, with over 50 million students. The Indonesian government has invested heavily to expand access, enhance quality, and strengthen global competitiveness. The recent creation of a dedicated Ministry of Higher Education, Science, and Technology highlights Jakarta’s renewed emphasis on research, innovation, and international partnerships. 

While public universities continue to dominate overall enrollment, private institutions and vocational schools are expanding quickly, especially in urban and industrial centres. The growing demand for industry-aligned technical education and workforce-ready skills is creating new opportunities for Canadian institutions and training providers to engage in partnerships, joint programs, and capacity-building initiatives.

Key opportunities

  • Institutional partnerships: Indonesian universities seek exchange, vocational, and research linkages, with strong government support for internationalization.
  • Healthcare workforce mobility: Tens of thousands of Indonesian healthcare workers are already placed abroad. Canadian institutions could adopt a similar model to address healthcare shortages.
  • Training and capacity-building: 60% of Indonesian workers in low-productivity sectors. Demand is rising for industry-integrated training, certification, and TVET expertise.
  • Scholarships and sponsorships: Funding opportunities exist, such as the Indonesia Endowment Fund for Education (LDPD, CAD 12.4 billion) and other programs support study abroad, including executive and technical training.
  • Student mobility: 62,000 Indonesians study abroad yearly, but only 1,500 are in Canada despite high English skills and visa approval rates.

Industry highlights

More than 50 million students and a rapidly expanding middle class make Indonesia Southeast Asia’s fastest-growing education market. Demand is rising for technical and vocational training as well as international university pathways, supported by strong digital adoption. 

2 million workers entering the workforce per year strains Indonesia’s labour market, where youth unemployment and shortages of priority technical skills continue. 

Tens of thousands of Indonesian healthcare workers are already being deployed abroad through Indonesian agreements with Japan and Germany. This is a proven model that Canadian institutions could adopt. 

CAD 12.4 billion in endowment funds has already supported over 45,000 master’s and PhD students. 

Notable challenges

  • University rankings: Most Indonesian universities don’t rank very high worldwide, limiting deeper partnerships and pointing collaboration towards mobility and short-term programs. 
  • Funding and pathways: Few articulation agreements with Canada means students often choose closer, more affordable destinations such as  Malaysia and Singapore. Flexible pathways and scholarships could help Canada compete. 
  • Global competition: Australia, the UK, and other countries  actively pursue coordinated strategies with stronger funding, though Canada appeals as a welcoming, high-quality study destination. 
  • Research funding: Limited funding, especially outside major cities, constrains collaboration. Projects with clear local relevance remain attractive. 
  • Connectivity barriers: No direct flights to Canada from Indonesia increase costs and travel time, affecting mobility. 
  • Ownership rules: At least 51% local ownership is required for foreign education institutions in Indonesia, restricting control but opening doors for joint ventures. 

Indonesian business landscape

Indonesia’s education sector is undergoing a major transformation focused on equity, innovation, and labour market alignment. At the school level, the Merdeka Belajar initiative promotes student-centred learning, 21st-century skills, teacher upskilling, and digital integration. Since October 2024, the new Ministry of Higher Education, Science, and Technology has overseen tertiary education, focusing on institutional autonomy, research with societal impact, and science and technology for inclusive growth.

International partners play a key role. The World Bank and Asian Development Bank (ADB) support higher education quality, vocational training, and digital infrastructure. Meanwhile, Germany, Switzerland, Australia, and the United Kingdom (UK) provide technical assistance and funding for technical and vocational education and training (TVET) reform. Philanthropic foundations support curriculum development, inclusive education, and skills training. These initiatives aim to positioning Indonesia as a globally competitive knowledge economy by 2045.

Summary

Indonesia is a dynamic, high-potential market for Canadian education institutions, driven by its large student population, growing middle class, and strong government commitment to reform and international collaboration. The new Ministry of Higher Education, Science, and Technology highlights a push toward research, innovation, and global engagement. This creates opportunities in higher education, TVET, and capacity building. With strengths in technical training, flexible learning, and English-language instruction, Canadian institutions can meet Indonesia’s demand for industry-aligned skills and international pathways.

Contact us

For more information on international education in the Indonesian market, please contact Trade Commissioner, Julia Pangkey (julia.pangkey@international.gc.ca).

Additional Information

Date published: