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Statistics Indonesia (Indonesian: Badan Pusat Statistik, BPS, lit. 'Central Agency of Statistics'), is a non-departmental government institute of Indonesia that is responsible for conducting statistical surveys. Its main customer is the government, but statistical data is also available to the public.
The Statistics Indonesia (Badan Pusat Statistik) derives GRP for a province as the sum of the GRP Nominal originating in all the industries in the province at current prices market. [1] List of Indonesian administrative divisions by GRP Nominal, with 14,308 IDR = US$1 term of Nominal while 4,833.87 IDR = US$1 term of PPP. [2]
Global access to the data is provided by the websites of the wwPDB member organizations (PDBe, [3] PDBj, [4] RCSB PDB, [5] and BMRB [6]). The PDB is a key in areas of structural biology, such as structural genomics. Most major scientific journals and some funding agencies now require scientists to submit their structure data to the PDB.
In economics, the GDP deflator (implicit price deflator) is a measure of the money price of all new, domestically produced, final goods and services in an economy in a year relative to the real value of them.
In the words of one academic economist, "The actual number for GDP is, therefore, the product of a vast patchwork of statistics and a complicated set of processes carried out on the raw data to fit them to the conceptual framework." [16] China officially adopted GDP in 1993 as its indicator of economic performance. Previously, China had relied ...
PDB (Palm OS), a record database format; Pluggable database, in Oracle Database; Program database, a debugging information format; Python Debugger (pdb), of the Python programming language; see Stepping
Program database (PDB) is a file format (developed by Microsoft) for storing debugging information about a program (or, commonly, program modules such as a DLL or EXE). PDB files commonly have a .pdb extension. A PDB file is typically created from source files during compilation.
The Indonesia Clean Technology Fund was raised in partnership with Indonesia's finance ministry and the Government Investment Unit raised 10% of the fund. [2] In January 2010, the GIU pledged a contribution of $100 million to the Indonesian Green Investment Fund, which it will also oversee in terms of management. [ 3 ]