US Trade Pact Lets Apple and Google Challenge Chinese Smartphone Grip in Indonesia
Key Takeaways
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JAKARTA, Investortrust.id — Apple Inc and Google can finally mount a serious challenge to Chinese smartphone dominance as Indonesia implements the Agreement on Reciprocal Trade with the United States, easing local content rules that had slowed their market entry and strengthened rivals such as Xiaomi and Oppo. The policy shift is expected to accelerate official launches of US devices and intensify competition in Southeast Asia’s largest consumer market.
The agreement was signed on Thursday, Feb 19, 2026 in Washington and immediately rippled across the technology and trade landscape. It capped months of negotiations that officials framed as a diplomatic win despite new tariff terms.
Under Article 2.2, Indonesia cannot require a fixed percentage of domestic components as a condition for importing or selling US goods. That provision directly challenges the country’s long-standing Tingkat Komponen Dalam Negeri, or TKDN, rule that mandates 35% to 40% local content for smartphones.
Analyst Aryo Medianto said the relaxation would benefit consumers who had long waited for simultaneous global launches. “So far, TKDN rules have delayed products like Apple, and Google’s Pixel line has never officially entered. If relaxed, consumers can enjoy releases at the same time as global launches,” he said on Friday, Feb 20, 2026 in Jakarta.
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For companies such as Apple Inc and Google, the change could clear a regulatory bottleneck in Southeast Asia’s largest economy. Indonesia, with more than 280 million people, has been an attractive yet complicated market because of its local assembly requirements.
Yet the policy shift also stirred unease among manufacturers that invested in assembly plants in Cikarang, Batam and Tangerang to comply with TKDN thresholds. “If the obligation is removed specifically for the US, we are essentially pulling the teeth out of our own regulation,” Aryo said.
Local assembly contractors could feel the pressure first. If US brands continue producing in Vietnam or India and ship directly to Indonesia, domestic factories risk losing contracts and scale.
Digital Taxes and Market Access
The pact also reshaped Indonesia’s digital tax regime. Article 3.5 removed customs duties on electronic transmissions, covering streaming films, digital advertising, cloud computing and social media services.
Article 3.1 barred discriminatory digital services taxes targeting US firms, effectively shielding companies such as Meta Platforms and Netflix from country-specific levies. Domestic value-added tax remains permissible as long as it applies equally to local and foreign players.
US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer said at the signing that the agreement “tears down trade barriers while advancing the economic and national security interests of the American people.” President Donald Trump had earlier warned countries against imposing discriminatory digital taxes on US firms.
On the tariff front, Indonesia accepted a 19% import tariff under the reciprocal framework, though several commodities secured zero-duty access, including coffee, cocoa, rubber, palm oil, electronics components, semiconductors and aircraft parts. Officials argued the exemptions would support export growth after shipments to the US rose 16% last year.
Trade Minister Budi Santoso credited Prabowo Subianto for accelerating negotiations. “This is actually a good achievement. President Prabowo’s diplomacy on the international stage has been strong,” he said in Jakarta on Friday.
Economists said the broader question is whether Indonesia can recalibrate its industrial policy without abandoning its ambition to move up the value chain. The government has long relied on TKDN to encourage technology transfer and domestic manufacturing.
Aryo warned that the country risks reverting to a consumption-driven model if safeguards are not redesigned. “We can become a very attractive market for US products. But if we are not careful, we risk returning to being merely a consumer country,” he said.

