The barrier to entry for a business is virtually zero. A 19-year-old university student in Bali can become a "dropshipper" with 5,000 followers. They curate photos from a distributor, mark up the price by 50%, and ship via GoJek. This has created a generation of micro-CEOs.
You will see a teenager wearing a BTS hoodie while carrying a bag hand-painted with Batik motifs, listening to Ndarboy Genk (a Javanese punk-pop band) on Spotify. The trend is no longer "Korea vs. Indonesia" but "Korea and Indonesia." The barrier to entry for a business is virtually zero
Mobile Legends: Bang Bang and Free Fire are national obsessions. Professional esports players are treated like rockstars. But beyond pros, there is a vast economy of "game top-up" resellers, boosters, and streamers. For many youth, buying a "skin" (cosmetic weapon) in a game is a more significant status symbol than buying new shoes. 4. The Urban Muslim: Faith as Fashion It is impossible to discuss Indonesian youth without addressing Islam, practiced by nearly 90% of the population. However, the stereotype of the "conservative rural villager" is dead. The trend is the "Urban Muslim" or Hijabers . This has created a generation of micro-CEOs