Economics Report.Indonesia has one of the world'sfastest growing economies,expanding at a rate ofsix percent this year.Technology is helping fuelthat growth, and producinga new generationof young entrepreneurs.One of these "technopreneurs"is Nadiem Makarim.He graduated fromthe Harvard Business Schoolin Boston, Massachusetts.He returned home and launched Go-Jek.This service connectsmotorcycle taxis, called ojeks,with people who need a rideor a delivery.Go-Jek uses online maps,mobile phones and a call center.The aim is to improve Jakarta'sdisorganized motorcycle taxi system.Nadiem Makarim says everythingdepends on a business plan.NADIEM MAKARIM: "If you want to do good,there needs to bea business model behind it.If you want sustainable impact,then you need a marketincentive to do that.I firmly believe that businessand just straight uprational business growth,profitable business growthand social impactare not mutually exclusive."Go-Jek recentlywon ten thousand dollarsin a competition through the AmericanState Department's GlobalEntrepreneurship Program.Indonesia is one of five countriesin this program which linksstartup businesses with investors.Many startupsare Internet-based services.Indonesia already has more thanseven hundred startups online,and new ones are launched every week.Half of Indonesians still live onless than two dollars a day.But Indonesia has a young populationinterested in trying new technology.Right now, about forty-five millionIndonesians, or only about one in five,use the Internet.But about half of those peopleuse mobile devices to go online,and those numbers are only growing.Some experts say the conditionsfor local entrepreneursare the best in the world.Still, the World Bank currentlyranks Indonesia one hundred twenty-firstout of one hundred eighty-three economies in ease of doing business.The biggest barrier to entrepreneursis a lack of financing.Also, economists say Indonesianeeds more entrepreneurs.They now make up less thanone percent of the workforce.The rate is over seven percentin nearby Singapore, and almosttwelve percent in the United States.Indonesia's biggest bank,Bank Mandiri, expectsto increase loans by as muchas twenty-five percent this year.Demand is growing for creditfor small businesses and for consumers.Leonard Theosabrata helpedstart Whiteboard Journal.This online publicationoffers a place for young designersto show their products.He says Indonesiahas a lot of opportunityfor entrepreneurs who take a risk.And that's the VOA Special EnglishEconomics Report.