Since 2004, World Bank assistance has evolved into a more collaborative system of support for a policy agenda with significant domestic control and guidance, better conforming with Indonesia's middle-income country classification.
These engagements consisted of community empowerment projects, government administration reforms, energy production, and infrastructure development.
[1] The International Finance Corporation (IFC), a component of the World Bank Group, has demonstrated particularly high involvement in Indonesia's economic development.
[1] In December 2015, the board of the World Bank introduced a revised, sweeping strategy for Indonesia, known as the Country Partnership Framework (CPF).
In May 2015 Jim Yong Kim, offered President Joko Widodo as much as $11 billion in new loans over the following three to four years for basic infrastructure.