http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/FK09Ae07.html

Fiscal policy strangles Indonesian economy
By Jephraim P Gundzik

Compared with other countries in Southeast Asia, economic performance has 
been disappointingly modest in Indonesia since the 1997 regional financial 
crisis. Overly tight fiscal policy courtesy of the International Monetary 
Fund (IMF) has prevented any recovery of domestic investment, containing 
gross domestic product (GDP) growth. Without increased public-sector 
expenditure, Indonesia's one-dimensional economic growth will slow in 2005, 
triggering capital flight and rupiah depreciation.

Regional laggard
Between 1999 and 2003, annual average GDP growth in Indonesia was 3.4%. Over 
the same period, the annual average rate of GDP growth was 4% in the 
Philippines, 4.7% in Thailand and 4.8% in Malaysia. Indonesia's economic 
growth during the past several years has been almost exclusively driven by 
the expansion of private consumption expenditure. The impact of net exports 
on growth has fallen to almost nothing, while continuously contracting 
private investment has been a drag on the economy.

Decentralization has increased government transfers to Indonesia's regions 
but central government expenditure has been spiraling downward since 2001 as 
IMF-directed fiscal austerity has pushed the budget deficit lower. Tight 
fiscal policy has helped lower inflation and interest rates while 
stabilizing the rupiah. Perversely, IMF policies in Indonesia have also 
strongly undermined the recovery of private investment, making economic 
growth increasingly one-dimensional.

Corporate sector weakness
Within the region, Indonesia's banks and private enterprises were hit the 
hardest by the Asian financial crisis. At their peak, non-performing loans 
(NPLs) were equivalent to 64% of total credit outstanding in Indonesia. The 
ratio of NPLs to total credit in the Philippines, Malaysia and Thailand 
never exceeded 20%.

Though the operation of the Indonesian Bank Restructuring Agency (IBRA) 
ended early this year, much of the corporate sector's debt remains in 
default. Notoriously weak legal and judicial systems have prevented 
resolution of this defaulted debt and will keep its resolution in limbo for 
the foreseeable future. The continuing overhang of defaulted debt has almost 
eliminated the flow of domestic credit to private enterprises, making the 
decline of interest rates of little consequence to investment.

The contraction of investment in Indonesia has been stunning. Prior to the 
crisis, investment accounted for 30% of GDP. Last year, investment accounted 
for only 16% of GDP. Without investment, Indonesia's export manufacturing 
sector has become increasingly uncompetitive. More worrying, contracting 
investment has led to plummeting oil production.

Ill effects of contracting investment
Between 2001 and 2003, Indonesia's non-oil exports shrank at an annual 
average rate of almost 2%. This year, non-oil exports are expected to shrink 
by 3%. The lack of investment in export manufacturing has been a gift to 
Indonesia's export competitors, which are gaining market share at 
Indonesia's expense.

Weakness in the export manufacturing industry has led to widespread job 
losses and rapidly rising unemployment and underemployment. It also has 
encouraged the further shift of employment from the formal to informal 
sectors of the economy, where wages are substantially lower. With 
unemployment rising and incomes declining, the primary fuel for growing 
private consumption expenditure has been rapid growth of credit to 
individuals.

Though bank lending to private enterprises has seized, bank lending to 
individuals has expanded rapidly. The growth of real credit to individuals 
has been around 25% annually since 2000. High margins have encouraged banks 
to lend to individuals while falling interest rates and credit availability 
have encouraged individuals to borrow money from banks.

With employment conditions and incomes expected to continue weakening in 
2005, it is safe to assume that the debt-servicing capability of individuals 
will deteriorate, especially since interest rates have averaged about 19% 
for consumer credit over the past three years. Rising interest rates and 
slower economic growth could trigger another banking crisis.

Remarkably, almost nobody expects interest rates to rise or economic growth 
to slow in Indonesia - not consumers borrowing money to buy new cars and 
motorcycles, nor banks lending money to these consumers. Not even foreign 
investors who are pouring money into Indonesia's equity market, pushing it 
to consecutive record highs, are downbeat.

Fiscal mismanagement
Fiscal mismanagement by the IMF over the past several years has laid the 
groundwork for an economic slowdown next year. The high probability of 
continued fiscal mismanagement by the government of President Susilo Bambang 
Yudhoyono amplifies the risk of economic slowdown, sudden foreign capital 
flight and rupiah depreciation.

Like manufactured exports, oil exports have also suffered from contracting 
investment. Deteriorating security and legal conditions have limited new 
investment by foreign operators. Tight fiscal policy has prevented new 
investment by the state-owned oil company Pertamina. As a result, oil 
production has slid from about 1.5 million barrels per day in 1998 to 
966,000 barrels per day in September. The decline in production has made 
Indonesia a net oil importer this year.

High oil prices and the balance of payments
Continued high oil prices have very significant negative implications for 
Indonesia's balance of payments. After several years of large surpluses, 
Indonesia's current account is expected to decline toward a balance this 
year. Next year, export contraction led by the further weakness of 
manufactured exports, and strong import growth led by oil imports, will push 
the current account toward a deficit of about US$7 billion (Rp63.8 
trillion).

The only funds available to finance the current account deficit will be 
foreign exchange reserves. Net foreign direct investment and lending flows 
into Indonesia are expected to continue their contraction, which has been 
almost unabated since 1998. Foreign portfolio investment, which has provided 
the only source of foreign capital inflow in the past several years, could 
easily reverse.

Indonesia could see its foreign-exchange reserves decline by $10 billion or 
$12 billion in 2005, weakening the rupiah and pressing interest rates up. 
Interest rates could also be pushed higher by the tight fiscal policy of the 
Yudhoyono government.

Yudhoyono's fiscal policy
Though Indonesia exited its final IMF program last year, the Fund appears 
still to have considerable influence over fiscal policy. The IMF has 
repeatedly tried to persuade Indonesia to reduce fuel price subsidies since 
the late 1990s. This year these subsidies will cost the government more than 
$6 billion, or 3% of GDP, increasing pressure for their reduction. All 
indications suggest that Yudhoyono will begin to dismantle the fuel price 
subsidies next year.

Apart from the obvious upward push to inflation, the reduction of fuel-price 
subsidies will probably provoke widespread social unrest. Fuel price hikes 
in 1998 sparked the social unrest that eventually ousted the Suharto regime. 
In early 2001, former president Megawati Sukarnoputri's attempt to raise 
fuel prices was met with similar unrest, forcing the government to reverse 
the price increase.

For a country such as Indonesia where private investment is very weak, 
fiscal policy must be used to spur investment, creating the conditions for 
sustainable economic growth. Unfortunately the IMF, in pursuing fiscal 
austerity for the sake of foreign investors, has undermined economic growth 
in Indonesia, laying the foundation for an economic downturn, declining 
foreign exchange reserves and capital flight.

Jephraim P Gundzik is president of Condor Advisers Inc. Condor Advisers 
provides emerging markets investment risk analysis to individuals and 
institutions globally. Please visit  www.condoradvisers.com  for further 
information.

(Copyright 2004 Jephraim P Gundzik.) 



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