Indonesia faces a dual challenge in achieving the Golden Indonesia 2045 vision: maintaining macroeconomic stability amid global uncertainty while transforming the economic structure from raw commodity dependence to high value-added manufacturing. This study aims to formulate strategies to strengthen the synergy among the three pillars—government, business, and academia—to lock in dynamic economic stability and accelerate inclusive downstreaming and industrialization.The research employs a descriptive-analytical approach using literature review and secondary data analysis from BPS, Bank Indonesia, the Ministry of Industry, IMF, and the World Bank. The analysis focuses on downstreaming policies in the mineral and agriculture sectors as case studies. The theoretical framework applies the Triple Helix model to explain the dynamic interactions among actors in the innovation ecosystem.Findings show that Indonesia’s macroeconomic stability was maintained, with economic growth of 5.11% and inflation at 2.92% in 2025. However, structural transformation remains limited as exports are still dominated by low-complexity products. Downstreaming in nickel and cocoa has progressed, but is constrained by technological gaps, limited skilled labor, MSME financing access, and policy fragmentation. The Triple Helix synergy is key to addressing these barriers through a permanent coordination platform, MSME integration into supply chains, and strengthening applied research.Policy recommendations include establishing a National Downstreaming Coordination Council, strengthening regional innovation funds, mandating at least 30% MSME participation in strategic projects, reforming vocational education, and enhancing fiscal incentives for R&D and green technology. The implication is that inclusive downstreaming can drive high-quality, equitable, and sustainable economic growth toward Advanced Indonesia.
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