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Daily Digest

Indonesia's 'Nobar Economy' Boosts Businesses During World Cup

Published Tuesday, June 30, 2026 · Updated July 1

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Narrative Spectrum

Convergent Narrative · 0
  • World Cup's Local Economic Impact1 source

Media Analysis

AI synthesis

The World Cup has significantly boosted Indonesia's local economy, particularly through public screenings and the 'nobar economy'. Businesses hosting these screenings are required to pay a license fee ranging from 10 million to 150 million rupiah.

What We Know — Key Points

  • Commercial businesses in Indonesia must pay a license fee ranging from 10 million rupiah (US$560) to 150 million rupiah to legally host public screenings for the World Cup.
  • The World Cup has a significant economic and cultural impact in Indonesia, boosting local businesses through public screenings and the unique 'nobar economy'.

What Is Claimed — Perspectives

World Cup's Local Economic Impact
  • Channel News Asia

    The article highlights the economic and cultural impact of the World Cup in Indonesia, focusing on how local businesses benefit from public screenings and the unique 'nobar economy'. It also notes that commercial businesses must pay a license fee ranging from 10 million rupiah (US$560) to 150 million rupiah to legally host these public screenings.

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  • This topic was generated by an AI system.
  • Key points, perspectives, bias labels, and categorisation may contain errors.
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