*Eastern Indonesia? Is there a region called Eastern Indonesia in the
neo-Mojopahit development dictionary? hehehehhehehe*

https://www.newmandala.org/weighing-jokowis-infrastructure-projects-in-eastern-indonesia/



Weighing Jokowi’s infrastructure projects in Eastern Indonesia

*EMILIANUS YAKOB SESE TOLO*
<https://www.newmandala.org/author/emilianus-yakob-sese-tolo/>* - 28 MAR,
2019*


Of all the infrastructure projects established by President Joko Widodo
(Jokowi) during his first term, the *Makassar New Port*
<https://finance.detik.com/infrastruktur/d-4284881/makassar-new-port-i-a-rp-25-triliun-mulai-beroperasi>
in
South Sulawesi is his crowning achievement. Built at a cost of over Rp89
trillion (A$8.9 billion), the port is one of the most expensive
infrastructure projects in Eastern Indonesia. Construction first began in
2015, and is scheduled for completion by 2025.

In contrast, my hometown in the Nagekeo district of Flores, East Nusa
Tenggara (NTT), has been waiting since 2016 for the Lambo dam to be built.
The dam is needed to improve the water supply for household consumption and
to irrigate 5,000 hectares of rice fields. Members of *local *
<http://www.seputar-ntt.com/tiga-komunitas-masyarakat-adat-tolak-pembangunan-waduk-lambo-di-nagekeo/>*adat
<http://www.seputar-ntt.com/tiga-komunitas-masyarakat-adat-tolak-pembangunan-waduk-lambo-di-nagekeo/>**
or
indigenous communities*
<http://www.seputar-ntt.com/tiga-komunitas-masyarakat-adat-tolak-pembangunan-waduk-lambo-di-nagekeo/>
have
resisted the construction of this dam, and refuse to be relocated from
customary territories on which their ancestors’ graves are located. With
this problem unresolved, the Rp1–1.5 trillion (A$100–150 million) project
is long overdue and will not be completed by the end of the 2019 national
elections.

Eastern Indonesia is one of the poorest regions of Southeast Asia,
consisting of 13 official provinces including Bali, Lombok, Sumbawa,
Flores, Timor, Sulawesi, Maluku, and Papua. Many of these provinces are
categorised as “economically poor”. *I
<https://www.bps.go.id/publication/download.html?nrbvfeve=NWE5NjNjMWVhOWIwZmVkNjQ5N2QwODQ1&xzmn=aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuYnBzLmdvLmlkL3B1YmxpY2F0aW9uLzIwMTgvMDcvMDMvNWE5NjNjMWVhOWIwZmVkNjQ5N2QwODQ1L3N0YXRpc3Rpay1pbmRvbmVzaWEtMjAxOC5odG1s&twoadfnoarfeauf=MjAxOS0wMy0yNiAxMjo0MToxNg%3D%3D>n
2018
<https://www.bps.go.id/publication/download.html?nrbvfeve=NWE5NjNjMWVhOWIwZmVkNjQ5N2QwODQ1&xzmn=aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuYnBzLmdvLmlkL3B1YmxpY2F0aW9uLzIwMTgvMDcvMDMvNWE5NjNjMWVhOWIwZmVkNjQ5N2QwODQ1L3N0YXRpc3Rpay1pbmRvbmVzaWEtMjAxOC5odG1s&twoadfnoarfeauf=MjAxOS0wMy0yNiAxMjo0MToxNg%3D%3D>*,
Eastern Indonesia was home to only 15.6% of Indonesia’s total population,
while the Eastern Indonesian provinces’ contribution to Indonesia’s
national economic growth amounted to 20% of the national GDP. Yet the
region remains afflicted by serious poverty: around 39,000 or *52% of
Indonesia’s underprivileged villages*
<https://thediplomat.com/2017/05/solving-indonesias-infrastructure-gap/>,
for instance, are located in Eastern Indonesia.

*
<https://i0.wp.com/www.newmandala.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/Indonesia-Timur.jpg>*Eastern
Indonesia as defined by the Indonesian government: Bali, Sulawesi, Nusa
Tenggara, Maluku and Papua (Photo: Wikimedia Commons)

During his 2014 election campaign, Jokowi promised to develop
infrastructure projects in Eastern Indonesia. His rationale was that
infrastructure development projects in Eastern Indonesia could boost *national
economic competitiveness, facilitate local economies*
<http://ekonomi.metrotvnews.com/mikro/0k8Zn5WN-dampak-positif-pembangunan-infrastruktur-era-jokowi-jk>
, *reduce regional disparities*
<https://www.liputan6.com/bisnis/read/3608553/ini-deretan-infrastruktur-yang-dibangun-di-era-jokowi>
, *increase connectivity between regions*
<https://www.liputan6.com/bisnis/read/3627713/ada-16-pelabuhan-ekonomi-indonesia-timur-bakal-lebih-maju>,
and *enhance the social and political unity of the nation*
<http://ekonomi.metrotvnews.com/mikro/0k8Zn5WN-dampak-positif-pembangunan-infrastruktur-era-jokowi-jk>.
Eastern Indonesians supported this platform. *In 2014*
<https://nasional.kompas.com/read/2014/07/22/20574751/Ini.Hasil.Resmi.Rekapitulasi.Suara.Pilpres.2014>,
Jokowi won 60% of the vote across the 13 provinces in Eastern Indonesia,
with huge margins in East Nusa Tenggara (NTT) (65.92%), West Papua
(67.63%), Bali (71.42%) South Sulawesi (71.43%), and West Sulawesi
(73.37%). From the very beginning, Jokowi has promoted his claimed *philosophy
of developing Indonesia from the periphery*
<http://www.globalindonesianvoices.com/31948/jokowis-big-infrastructre-push-benefiting-rural-villages/>
by
making infrastructure, particularly in poorer areas of Eastern Indonesia,
the focus of his presidency.

Has Jokowi lived up to his promise? And will the infrastructure projects
that have been developed to date encourage Eastern Indonesians to vote for
him again? The answer might depend on where you live in Eastern Indonesia.
The contrast between Makassar and Nagekeo’s stories encapsulates the
challenge of ensuring more even development within Eastern Indonesia.
Jokowi’s policies have generally promoted economic growth in the province
of South Sulawesi, especially the “boom town” of its capital city Makassar,
while other regions remain deprived of similar attention. There is still
significant economic disparity within Eastern Indonesia, which needs to be
addressed in the next term of government no matter who is president.
*Sulawesi-centred*

Most of the designated “*nationally strategic” development projects*
<https://www.rappler.com/indonesia/berita/185764-3-tahun-jokowi-jk-5-pencapaian-sektor-infrastruktur>
in
Eastern Indonesia are concentrated in South Sulawesi province, and its
capital city of Makassar. Jokowi has allocated 27 such projects for
Sulawesi. (By comparison, just 13 such projects have been earmarked for the
provinces of Papua and Maluku.) The establishment of Makassar New Port as
the biggest port in Eastern Indonesia, as well the *construction of 3 large
dams*
<https://finance.detik.com/foto-bisnis/d-4091977/3-bendungan-besar-lagi-dibangun-di-sulsel-ini-penampakannya>
 and *railways*
<https://www.liputan6.com/bisnis/read/3672741/4-tahun-jokowi-jk-ini-deretan-infrastruktur-yang-dibangun-di-ri>connecting
the port towns of Makassar and Parepare, have strengthened Makassar’s
position as the hub of the region. While there are *seaports*
<https://www.liputan6.com/bisnis/read/3627713/ada-16-pelabuhan-ekonomi-indonesia-timur-bakal-lebih-maju>
located
in Papua and Maluku, they mainly circulate commodities (such as fish,
livestock, logs, candlenuts, corns, cloves, and cashews) within *Eastern
Indonesia*
<https://www.liputan6.com/bisnis/read/3672741/4-tahun-jokowi-jk-ini-deretan-infrastruktur-yang-dibangun-di-ri>
towards
ports in South Sulawesi, to be then re-exported elsewhere.

South Sulawesi has enjoyed one of the *highest rates of economic growth in
Indonesia*
<https://id.beritasatu.com/tajuk/pacu-pertumbuhan-di-atas-6/185321> in the
past five years: at more than 7.07%, it’s the second highest in Eastern
Indonesia after North Maluku (7.92%), and is much higher than the *national
rate*
<https://ekonomi.kompas.com/read/2018/08/07/102100026/pertumbuhan-ekonomi-kuartal-ii-2018-tertinggi-sejak-2014>
that
hovers between 4.7% and 5.27%. During the period between 2010 and 2012,
*booms* <https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/14672715.2011.623518> for
export crops like cocoa and coffee helped South Sulawesi experience growth
rates above 8%. According to *2018 data*
<https://www.bps.go.id/website/materi_ind/materiBrsInd-20190115115001.pdf>,
South Sulawesi province contributed 2.43% (Rp62.3 trillion or A$6.24
billion) of Indonesia’s total national exports, the second highest rate in
Eastern Indonesia after Central Sulawesi province (2.84%).

Based on these figures, Jokowi and his administration might think that
injecting a huge amount of funds and projects in Makassar will boost the
development of other parts of Eastern Indonesia such as Nusa Tenggara,
Maluku, and Papua. However, this development approach has only resulted in
continuing the economic disparity gap between Sulawesi—in particular
Makassar—and other regions in Eastern Indonesia (excluding Bali, whose
poverty rate of 3.91% is the lowest in Eastern Indonesia, and is the result
of tourism development initiated by previous government administrations).

Under-development in Eastern Indonesia is not a new problem. For instance,
in 2010, poverty rates in some provinces in Eastern Indonesia ranged from
20% to 30%—in East Nusa Tenggara (23.03%), Maluku (27.74%), West Papua
(34.88%), and Papua (36.80%). The Human Development Index (HDI) scores were
also low in East Nusa Tenggara (59.21), Maluku (64.27), Papua (54.45) and
West Papua (59.60). In *2011*
<https://www.bps.go.id/dynamictable/2015/10/07/961/-seri-2010-laju-pertumbuhan-produk-domestik-regional-bruto-atas-dasar-harga-konstan-2010-menurut-provinsi-2010-2016-persen-.html>,
economic growth in these provinces was low when compared to South Sulawesi,
as seen in Papua (-4.28%), West Papua (3.64%), NTT (5.67%) and Maluku
(5.67%). In contrast, in 2010, South Sulawesi had a poverty rate of *11.60%*
<https://makassarkota.bps.go.id/publication/download.html?nrbvfeve=ZmQxZjY5MzU5MDQ2NDA5NWE5MWFlNWFk&xzmn=aHR0cHM6Ly9tYWthc3NhcmtvdGEuYnBzLmdvLmlkL3B1YmxpY2F0aW9uLzIwMTcvMDgvMTcvZmQxZjY5MzU5MDQ2NDA5NWE5MWFlNWFkL2tvdGEtbWFrYXNzYXItZGFsYW0tYW5na2EtMjAxNy5odG1s>,
a *HDI* <https://www.bps.go.id/linkTableDinamis/view/id/1211> of 66, and
economic growth of *8.19%*
<https://akhmuhammadarifin.blogspot.com/2013/01/data-pertumbuhan-ekonomi-provinsi_18.html>.
In 2010, Makassar city itself had a much better performance in terms of
poverty rate (5.86%), HDI (77.63), and economic growth (*9.83%*
<https://www.beritasatu.com/nasional/202978/sby-apresiasi-pertumbuhan-ekonomi-makassar>
).

Over the course of the last decade, including during Jokowi’s
administration, the poverty rates in all provinces in Eastern Indonesia
have reduced. But the inequality between Sulawesi and non-Sulawesi areas
persists. *In September 2018*
<https://www.bps.go.id/website/materi_ind/materiBrsInd-20190115115001.pdf>,
three provinces in Eastern Indonesia still reported poverty rates greater
than 20%: East Nusa Tenggara (21.03%), West Papua (22.6%) and Papua
(27.43%). The poverty rate in Maluku was also quite high at 17.85%. When
you look at the islands rather than provinces, the poverty rate in Sulawesi
is much lower (10.37%) than those of Bali/Nusa Tenggara (13.84%) and
Maluku/Papua (20.94%).

*In contrast*
<https://www.bps.go.id/website/materi_ind/materiBrsInd-20190115115001.pdf>,
the poverty rate in South Sulawesi at 8.87% was lower than the national
level of 9.66%. More precisely, *in 2018*
<https://celebesmedia.id/ekonomi/artikel/1035031218/jumlah-penduduk-miskin-di-makassar-capai-60-100-orang>,
Kota Makassar even had much better performance in terms of poverty rate
(4.59%) compared to other regions in Eastern Indonesia. Kota Makassar’s
economic growth in *2018*
<http://simponinews.com/2018/07/24/pertumbuhan-ekonomi-makassar-799-persen-presiden-jokowi-puji-danny-pomanto/>
was
one of the highest in Indonesia with 7.9%. In 2017, Kota Makassar HDI was
much higher (81.13) compared to other provinces in Eastern Indonesia such
as East Nusa Tenggara (63.17), West Nusa Tenggara (66.58), Papua (59.09%)
and West Papua (62.99).


Aerial view of Makassar, South Sulawesi (Photo: thisisinbalitimur on
Flickr, Creative Commons
*Why prioritise Sulawesi?*

A few factors explain the government’s apparent prioritisation of
investment in Sulawesi. First is the political influence of Makassar
leaders in Jakarta. Vice President Jusuf Kalla, who was born in South
Sulawesi and studied at the Hasanuddin University in Makassar, has the
influence to push the central government to prioritise Sulawesi interests.
Other provinces in Eastern Indonesia do not have the influential political
networks in Jakarta that South Sulawesi has. Some politicians have appealed
to the sense of being politically marginalised: when giving a public talk
in Flores in February 2019, Julie Sutrisno Laiskodat, the wife of the East
Nusa Tenggara governor Viktor Bungtilu Laiskodat, announced her plan to run
as a national member of parliament in the 2019 general election to
represent the election area (*daerah pemilihan*) of Flores, based on her
previous experiences dealing with politicians in Jakarta. She told voters
that she had previously tried to secure funding from politicians and
national parliament members in Jakarta for the construction of 700-1,000
wells in East Nusa Tenggara, only to be told: “how much will you pay us for
one well?” Based on this experience, Laiskodat said she intends to compete
in the 2019 general election to influence national policies on behalf of
East Nusa Tenggara herself without resorting to paying off politicians in
Jakarta.

In general, Eastern Indonesians do not have enough reliable representatives
as ministers in the national cabinet, including within Jokowi’s
administration. For instance, both Papua and West Papua provinces are
represented by Yohana Susana Yembise, whose position as Minister of Women’s
Empowerment and Child Protection in President Jokowi’s Working Cabinet
means she holds little sway over infrastructure policies. Meanwhile there
are no ministers from *NTT*
<https://nasional.tempo.co/read/617331/warga-ntt-bangga-saleh-husin-jadi-menteri/full&view=ok>(especially
after the *reshuffle*
<https://www.indopos.co.id/read/2016/07/31/22406/ntt-hilang-dari-kabinet-presiden-tersenyum>
 in *2016*
<https://www.rotendaokab.go.id/reshuffle-kabinet-kerja-tanpa-ntt/>), NTB,
and Maluku in Jokowi’s cabinet. Representation matters. In criticising
Prabowo’s lack of support for women in positions of power, Jokowi has
named *numerous
women occupying ministerial positions*
<https://www.beritasatu.com/politik/533219/jokowi-kritisi-inkonsistensi-keterwakilan-perempuan-di-kubu-prabowo>
in
his own administration. However, he could be criticised for not giving due
representation to Eastern Indonesia’s leaders.

Second, Jokowi may be prioritising infrastructure development in Sulawesi
because in 2019 he no longer has Jusuf Kalla as his vice-presidential
candidate to help secure votes there. *In the 2014 presidential election*
<https://nasional.kompas.com/read/2014/07/22/20574751/Ini.Hasil.Resmi.Rekapitulasi.Suara.Pilpres.2014>,
Sulawesi was home to over 44% of the total number of voters in Eastern
Indonesia, with 20% of them coming from South Sulawesi alone. In 2014,
South Sulawesi contributed a third of all votes won by Jokowi across the 13
provinces of Eastern Indonesia. Favouring Sulawesi might be one of the
smartest political investments for Jokowi given the upcoming 2019
presidential election, especially since the region is home to the Muslim
voters whose votes Jokowi is trying to secure.

Jusuf Kalla visiting Bili-Bili dam in Parang Loe, South Sulawesi (Photo:
Vice President’s office on Instagram)
*What is to be done?*

Politicians and the mainstream media in Jakarta have hailed Jokowi’s
infrastructure development projects in Eastern Indonesia as a great
success. Jokowi has in many ways kept his promise to deliver roads,
seaports, bridges and dams, electricity power plants and improvements to
internet infrastructure in Eastern Indonesia. As a result, *Viktor Bungtilu
Laiskodat*
<https://pilpres.tempo.co/read/1123831/viktor-laiskodat-yakin-jokowi-menang-di-ntt-tanpa-susah-payah/full&view=ok>,
the governor of East Nusa Tenggara (NTT), has said that “without [even]
campaigning, Jokowi will easily win in NTT.”

Indeed, in less developed parts of Eastern Indonesia, small projects are
having a valuable impact. In Flores, the establishment of roads to villages
has enabled local villagers to access city markets where they can buy and
sell their agricultural produce. The construction of *embung* (small dams
in the savannah to store water during rainy season) in Flores, especially
in Ngada and Nagekeo, has also improved the ability of farmers to water
their crops and feed their livestock. The government has also allocated
village funds (*dana desa*), which villages are using for building roads,
opening farming land and providing clean water. As all the projects
financed by village funds should employ local labour, the projects have
helped to provide job opportunities for local people.

But if we want to close the gap between Eastern Indonesia and the more
developed islands, we need to begin with a better understanding of the
inefficiencies and disparities that currently shape Jokowi’s infrastructure
development projects. The Indonesian government also needs to begin
developing Eastern Indonesia from the village level, while ensuring the
capital cities of each district have the opportunity to become “boom towns”
by extending the same developments we see in Makassar to Maumere, Kupang,
Jayapura, Kota Ambon, and so on.

*RELATED**
<https://www.newmandala.org/wholl-pay-for-indonesias-national-health-insurance/>*
*Who’ll pay for Indonesia’s national health insurance?*
<https://www.newmandala.org/wholl-pay-for-indonesias-national-health-insurance/>

Politicians need to make some hard decisions to make the system financially
sustainable.

*ADE PRASTYANI* <https://www.newmandala.org/author/asty/>* 28 FEBRUARY,
2019*

To do this, the government needs to invest not just in infrastructure
projects but in human resource development in Eastern Indonesia as well.
Many projects designed to improve the economy—such as Jokowi’s idea to
replicate Bali’s success in 10 other tourist destinations—rely on managers
and labour from more developed provinces in Java, Bali and Sulawesi. In
East Nusa Tenggara (NTT) province, for instance, there are plans to develop
Labuan Bajo in western Flores into the “*new Bali*
<https://finance.detik.com/berita-ekonomi-bisnis/d-4319368/pamer-10-bali-baru-jokowi-peluangnya-menjanjikan>.”
But many of the people who are working in the hotels, resorts, and
restaurants and as tour operators in Labuan Bajo originally come from Java,
Bali, Lombok and Sulawesi. Finally, the policy of building Makassar and
South Sulawesi as a hub of infrastructure development needs to be balanced
with more speedily completed projects in other areas of Eastern Indonesia,
which are delayed or still under construction.

There are multiple and varied reasons which determine how Eastern
Indonesians will vote in April, which include issues of religion, the
personalities of candidates, the credibility of opposition candidates, and
party machinery on the ground. Politicians in Eastern Indonesia have begun
leveraging intolerant Islamic political movements in Jakarta to reap
electoral support. In his campaign in Boawae in Flores, Andreas Hugo
Pareira—a senior PDIP politician who is competing for a national parliament
seat based in Flores—sought to persuade his constituents to vote for Jokowi
in order to secure national unity, which has lately been threatened by
intolerant Islamic political movements.

So despite what is commonly stated in Jakarta, it should not be assumed
that Jokowi’s infrastructure development policy is uniformly successful
throughout the region, and that Eastern Indonesians will all vote for the
President on the grounds of his infrastructure policies. If Jokowi is
successfully re-elected for a second term, there are areas of urgent policy
reconsideration for how to reduce poverty in Eastern Indonesia.

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