The Makan Bergizi Gratis (MBG) or Free Nutritious Meal program, initially campaigned as the "Free Lunch" initiative, has been framed by the Indonesian government as a foundational investment toward achieving a "Golden Indonesia" (Indonesia Emas). Positioned as a dual pronged strategy to combat childhood malnutrition while simultaneously stimulating grassroots economic development, the program purportedly empowers micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs), including traditional working class food stalls (warung tegal or wartegs) and local regional caterers. This study critically examines the structural, political, and economic realities underlying the MBG program, testing the hypothesis that the initiative functions less as a public health measure and more as a mechanism for oligarchic wealth consolidation through state guaranteed markets, high barrier entry central kitchens, and taxpayer subsidized revenue streams for politically connected investors. The MBG program represents a paradigmatic case of state orchestrated oligarchic capture disguised as social welfare. Rather than addressing the structural determinants of malnutrition—including poverty, food price volatility, and inequality—the program redirects public resources toward capital intensive infrastructure that benefits a narrow stratum of politically connected elites. The findings challenge the framing of the MBG as a pathway toward Indonesia Emas, arguing instead that it entrenches the very power asymmetries that perpetuate food insecurity. Keywords: Oligarchy; rent seeking; school feeding; Indonesia; political economy; nutrition policy; state capitalism; elite capture; food sovereignty; welfare state
Muhammad Dhiya Ulhaq (Wed,) studied this question.
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