Work from home, but we’re watching: Indonesia, Malaysia geo-track remote civil servants
Indonesia and Malaysia have implemented work-from-home schemes for government workers that require strict location monitoring.
Photo: Shutterstock Indonesia and Malaysia have ordered civil servants to work from home to save fuel amid the Iran war but with digital surveillance measures far stricter than those used during the pandemic.
Civil servants in Indonesia must activate location tracking and respond to work communications within five minutes.
Their Malaysian counterparts must log into a geolocation monitoring system every hour.
Those who fail to comply face escalating sanctions.
The work-from-home policies, announced within days of each other, are both governments’ response to soaring global oil prices after the conflict disrupted shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, pushing crude above US$100 a barrel.
Indonesia and Malaysia both heavily subsidise fuel, putting their national budgets under mounting pressure.
Jakarta’s policy, which took effect on Wednesday, allows civil servants to work remotely every Friday – a measure the government estimates could save about 6.2 trillion rupiah (US$365 million) in fuel costs, according to Coordinating Minister for Economic Affairs Airlangga Hartarto.
The Manpower Ministry is expected to draft guidelines on how the rule could apply to the private sector too.
Civil servants walking to their flats after arriving by shuttle bus in Ibu Kota Nusantara (IKN), the planned new capital of Indonesia in East Kalimantan.
Photo: AFP “The WFH rule for private sector employees still takes into account the characteristics and needs of each business,” Airlangga told a press briefing on Tuesday.
Friday was chosen because it was the lightest workday in the Muslim-majority country, where workers normally leave early for prayers, he explained. “People only work for half a day on Fridays, unlike the other weekdays.
But public services remain operational.
The same goes for productive activities, including the capital market and banking services.
Offices may use [digital] apps to manage [the attendance],” the minister said.
The policy applies only to non-essential public services, so those in strategic sectors or fields requiring direct interaction – such as healthcare, security and sanitation – will still have to report to their offices.
Those who do get to work remotely face a trade-off: closer government scrutiny of their location and response times. “The goal is to ensure that civil servants genuinely carry out work-
原文链接: 南华早报
