http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/NJ20Ae01.html

Oct 20, 2012


Indonesia put to test
By Richard Javad Heydarian 

With the world's third-largest democracy and Asia's fifth-largest economy, 
Indonesia has emerged as a regional bastion of political stability and economic 
dynamism, assuming a place of pride among developing nations. But with global 
economic clouds on the horizon, the country looks increasingly vulnerable to 
losing some of its newfound luster. 

Unlike China's fast growth, Indonesia's economic boom has relied more on 
commodity exports than shipments of high-value-added manufactured products. 
About half of Indonesia's exports are basic commodities, including coal, 
coffee, copper, natural gas, nickel, oil, rubber, tea and tin, making its 
economy highly vulnerable to volatility in global commodity markets. 

Exports have fallen for five straight months, with August   
  

registering a worse-than-expected contraction of 24.3% from a year earlier. 
Fitch Ratings, a sovereign-risk credit-rating agency, recently categorized the 
country as "highly vulnerable to systemic stress", alongside China, Mongolia 
and Sri Lanka in Asia. As China shows signs of a slowdown, demand for 
Indonesian commodities is expected to fall further in the months ahead. About 
15% of Indonesia's exports are shipped to China. 

A domestic consumer and investment boom, meanwhile, has buoyed growth but also 
placed heavy pressure on the current account. For the first time in four 
decades, Indonesia registered a current-account deficit for two months in a row 
in April and May. The trend has sparked market speculation that the country 
could register a record trade deficit in 2012. International reserves have 
dwindled in the process, falling 15% from August 2011 to July this year. 

Before these statistical dips, Indonesia was viewed widely as a reservoir of 
countercyclical resilience. Three years after the 2008 global recession, 
Indonesia outpaced its pre-crisis (2003-07) average growth clip with a robust 
6.5% expansion in gross domestic product, bucking the slower post-recession 
trend seen in many developing countries. To sustain that resilience during the 
impending slowdown, however, Indonesia will need to address two structural 
challenges: lagging infrastructure and over-reliance on commodity exports. 

Rising star
Indonesia's economic emergence has shone against the gloomy backdrop of its 
recent past. It was arguably the worst-hit country during the 1997-98 Asian 
financial crisis, with its economy contracting by a staggering 20% and the 
value of the local currency plunging by 80%. The economic catastrophe ignited a 
major political upheaval, culminating in the demise of Suharto's three-plus 
decades of authoritarian rule and a transition toward democratic rule. 

Jakarta has clearly learned lessons from that tumultuous economic past. Where 
local banks collapsed under the weight of poor lending decisions in 1997-98, 
their current gross ratio non-performing assets is among the region's lowest at 
around 2%, according to Fitch. 

Indonesian banks' return on average assets of 2.6% is currently more than twice 
as high as comparable financial institutions in India, Malaysia and Vietnam, 
and substantially higher than Philippine and Thai banks, Fitch reports. This 
month, Indonesian monetary authorities maintained the benchmark interest rate 
at 5.75%, a record low it has maintained for eight consecutive months. 

While the International Monetary Fund recently narrowed its 2012 
economic-growth forecast for Asia, Indonesia is still expected to expand by 
more than 6% this year. GDP grew by 6.3% and 6.4% year on year in the first and 
second quarters respectively, the fastest rate of any large global economy 
outside China. Despite fears of overheating, inflation actually fell month on 
month in September and is viewed as manageable at 4.3% on an annualized basis. 

Strong flows of foreign direct investment have contributed to the resilience. 
FDI flows rose from US$10.8 billion in 2009 to $18.9 billion in 2011. In the 
first half of this year, Indonesia attracted $12 billion in FDI, raising 
government hopes of a record $25 billion inflow for the full calendar year. The 
inflows have gathered pace despite rising resource nationalism and 
protectionism, lingering concerns about the country's inefficient and 
perceived-as-corrupt courts and bureaucracy, and creaky infrastructure. 

Better balance
Political devolution spearheaded by President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono's 
administration has allowed for a more balanced and equitable distribution of 
investment, public spending and economic growth across the sprawling 
archipelago of 250 million people. As structural inflation - the inevitable 
rise in labor and related costs in rapidly growing economies - erodes China's 
competitiveness, lower-cost Indonesia has benefited from a recent inflow of 
investment relocations from mainland China. 

Based on a recent International Labor Organization report, Indonesian workers 
earn about $148 per month against $190 for average workers in Chinese 
manufacturing hubs such as Shenzhen, a substantial wage differential for 
multinational manufacturers. Chinese entrepreneurs from the Aigo Entrepreneurs 
Alliance expressed plans last year to relocate their textile factories to 
Indonesia. In August 2011, Chinese companies signed $10 billion worth of 
investment projects in cement, infrastructure, agriculture, and real estate in 
Indonesia. 

Japanese investors have also poured in capital. After major disruptions in 
their Thailand-based production facilities last year, just months after the 
Fukushima tsunami and nuclear disaster, leading Japanese car manufacturers 
including Toyota, Nissan and Daihatsu pledged $1.8 billion worth of investments 
to improve and expand their Indonesia-based production facilities. Annual car 
sales in Indonesia have risen rapidly and are expected to reach about a million 
new vehicles this year. 

Indonesia's expanding and increasingly sophisticated domestic market is part of 
the attraction. It is now among the world's largest markets for consumer 
products and electronics and among the world's top four biggest subscribers to 
social-networking giant Facebook. 

Indonesia now has a 50-million-strong "bourgeoisie" market, which is projected 
to reach around 150 million by 2014, according to the Japanese bank Nomura. 
Consulting firm McKinsey, meanwhile, estimates Indonesia will become the 
world's third-largest consumer market - trailing only China and India - by 
2030. Riding that optimism, Yudhoyono has announced his goal of setting the 
country on course to become one of the world's 10 largest economies by 2025. 

Persistent weakness
Yet all these positive assessments and predictions mask persistent structural 
weaknesses. In particular, Indonesia's competitiveness is undercut by its weak 
infrastructure and corrupt bureaucracy. Experts believe that without a fast and 
major upgrade of both, the dual inefficiencies will be an increasingly 
substantial drag on growth, crucially at a time when the global and regional 
economy is expected to slow. 

Decades of corruption, legal uncertainty and misappropriation of public funds 
have all conspired to retard Indonesia's infrastructure development. In the 
2010 Logistics Performance Index - a World Bank measure of overall 
infrastructural competitiveness and efficiency - Indonesia ranked 75th, well 
below regional peers in Malaysia, Thailand and even the laggard Philippines. 

Indonesia's "ease of doing business" ranking in the World Bank's annual survey 
slipped from 126th in 2011 to 129th this year. It also scored poorly in global 
comparative indicators such as electricity supply (161st), starting a business 
(155th), and contract enforcement (156th). It also slid by four spots in the 
2012-13 Global Competitiveness report, from 46th in 2011 to 50th this year. The 
independent report characterized Indonesia's infrastructure as "largely 
underdeveloped", while the institutional framework is undermined by "corruption 
and bribery". 

To improve the situation, the government pushed through a new land-acquisition 
bill, approved in December 2011, to hasten infrastructure development. 
Officials say they plan to double spending on roads, railways, airports and 
ports to $140 billion within the next five years. Total infrastructure spending 
is scheduled to hit $250 billion from 2011 to 2015. If actually realized, 
Indonesia's investment-to-GDP ratio would jump from 3.9% in 2009 to 5.9% in 
2015, according to Morgan Stanley, an investment bank. The accelerated spending 
would supplement a larger, longer-term $600 billion infrastructure spending 
plan to be implemented between 2011 and 2025. 

Diversity dilemma
Where all that money will come from, however, is still unclear. Indonesia has a 
major tax-collection problem: 80% of state revenues are currently derived from 
a narrow tax base, amounting to only 12.7% of GDP. That's well below the 
regional average, which ranges between 14% and 22%. Inefficient energy-subsidy 
schemes also eat into the state's budget and raise wider concerns about the 
quality of current and planned public spending. 

Better infrastructure is crucial to diversifying the economy away from raw 
commodity exports toward more value-added manufacturing. While Indonesia has 
registered significant gains in labor productivity, representing by some 
measures a 60% rise from the previous decade, its overall manufacturing sector 
suffers from anemic annual growth compared with other economic sectors. 

Recent nationalistic efforts to shift investments into manufacturing by raising 
restrictions on the mining sector, which currently accounts for 12% of GDP, 
have backfired badly. New rules requiring special licenses for mineral exports 
have led to a major decline in outward shipments and fueled complaints from 
piqued multinationals about the rising costs of government corruption. New laws 
and regulations have also aimed to limit foreign ownership in mining and 
banking ventures. 

Despite these challenges, Indonesia's strong macroeconomic fundamentals, robust 
domestic demand and relatively healthy corporate and financial sectors provide 
room to maneuver amid rising global economic uncertainties. The government also 
has considerable room for fiscal stimulus and other schemes such as direct cash 
transfers. But without efforts to overcome structural weaknesses and endemic 
corruption, Indonesia's resilience will be tested by any sudden shift in market 
and investor sentiment. 

Richard Javad Heydarian is a foreign affairs analyst based in Manila. He can be 
reached at [email protected]. 

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