http://thediplomat.com/2013/02/05/a-false-hope-indonesias-economic-miracle/?all=true
A False Hope? Indonesia’s Economic Miracle
EconomyTopicIndonesia 
February 05, 2013 
By Michael Buehler 
Indonesia has made a remarkable economic comeback. Yet, its amazing growth is 
neither sustainable nor inclusive.


A few years ago, I was sitting in a swanky bar in South Jakarta popular with 
expats and Indonesian bureaucrats, sipping red wine for $25 a glass. During a 
discussion about the state of affairs in the country, my reference to Indonesia 
as a “Third World” country triggered an angry reaction by an Indonesian 
diplomat working for the Ministry of Trade. “Indonesia is no longer a poor 
country,” she rebutted, quoting various studies that placed Indonesia firmly in 
the group of emerging economies and went on to argue that the “I” in BRIC 
should belong to Indonesia rather than India. The acronym MIST to describe the 
next tier of large emerging economies had not yet been coined at the time.

Indeed, Indonesia has made a remarkable comeback from being Southeast Asia’s 
economic basket case in 1998 to an emerging market whose economy has been 
growing annually at more than 5 percent for several years. In reaction, 
analysts and journalists alike have been outdoing one another with positive 
assessments of Indonesia’s economic growth trajectory. The writing frenzy 
recently culminated in an article published in The Guardian, a UK daily, which 
claimed that Indonesia’s economy may surpass England and Germany in a few 
years. “It’s like people don’t want to hear anything else,” a foreign 
journalist based in Jakarta whom I had sent the article told me afterwards, 
lamenting how she finds it increasingly difficult to pitch stories to newspaper 
editors that cast doubt on Indonesia’s economic miracle.

Yet, Indonesia’s economic growth is neither sustainable nor inclusive.

An inconvenient fact is that Indonesia’s economic growth is mainly driven by a 
commodity boom fuelled by China’s appetite for raw materials and global demand 
for biofuels. China’s enterprises are building bullet trains while Indian car- 
and IT-companies compete around the world. Indonesia, all the while, 
manufactures…essentially nothing. Most international manufacturing companies 
have moved on to greener pastures a long time ago while domestic companies are 
unable to compete internationally with the exception of a few conglomerates run 
by crony capitalists from the New Order period. 

The other main driver of Indonesia’s economic growth is domestic consumption. 
This is mostly driven by easy access to credit cards. Since the mid-2000s banks 
have been successful in convincing Indonesians, much like their American 
counterparts, to buy stuff they don’t need, with money they don’t have to 
impress people they don’t know. The amount of credit cards in circulation, 
which have increased 7 to 8 percent annually, reached such staggering heights 
in recent years that Bank Indonesia had to introduce new guidelines last year 
to limit the number of credit cards a single person is allowed to hold. The 
same guidelines also stipulated that Indonesians earning less than U.S.$330 a 
month should no longer receive credit cards. 

Can Indonesia’s economic growth be sustained? Maybe for a few more decades, but 
even Indonesia’s rich natural resources are finite. Already, the nation’s oil 
reserves are dwindling faster than in any other Asian country— and Indonesia 
became a net oil importer during the last decade— while it is exporting most of 
its approximately 5 billion tons of coal reserves to China and India. Worse, 
the money generated from selling these national assets is not used to help 
rebalance Indonesia’s economy towards high-end manufacturing. 

Providing access to cheap credit is an unsustainable growth strategy. Already, 
Indonesians exhausted from trying to keep up with the Mallarangeng family seem 
to turn to forms of sarcasm similar to that of debt-ridden Americans. Grinding 
through Jakarta’s infamous traffic jam a few months ago, I spotted several 
bumper stickers on the back of upmarket vehicles, saying in the local 
vernacular “Don’t crash into my car, I am still paying it off.” Plenty of 
Indonesians can no longer repay their debts and therefore no longer consume. 
The bludgeoning to death of an Indonesian citizen in 2011 by debt collectors on 
the payroll of Citibank may be a scary sign of things to come.

It’s politics, stupid! 

In their 2012 book, Why Nations Fail, Daron Acemoglu and James Robison, 
professors at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University 
respectively, show the central importance of political institutions for 
achieving sustainable and inclusive growth. While economic institutions are 
important determinants of a country’s wealth, political institutions are 
paramount since they define what economic institutions a country has. In this 
respect, Indonesia’s achievements look bleak.

Since the collapse of the New Order dictatorship in 1998, the government has 
missed almost every opportunity to turn its economic boom into a positive force 
for all Indonesians. Serious and comprehensive reforms of Indonesia’s political 
institutions have been anathema to the Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono government and 
most of the president’s political appointees almost from day one in their 
decade long reign.

Masked behind pro-poor rhetoric and lukewarm support for symbolic reform 
agencies such as the Corruption Eradication Commission, Indonesia’s elites have 
used their political power to protect their personal interests and keep the 
judiciary in shambles. The bureaucracy remains completely unreformed fifteen 
years after the demise of Suharto and corruption continues to be rampant. A 
serious discussion about Indonesia’s systemic corruption problem has never 
occurred during Yudhoyono’s two tenures. Instead, the emphasis has been on 
arresting “bad” politicians.

Indonesia’s elites have also done everything in their power, the power they do 
have, to channel the country’s riches into their own pockets. The lack of will 
to develop a truly prosperous Indonesia is most visible in the government’s 
failure to integrate Indonesia’s internal market. This has had deleterious 
effects for the domestic economy. Indonesia, for instance, imports almost half 
of the salt consumed in the country from places such as Australia, Germany, 
Singapore and New Zealand because decrepit infrastructure and predatory taxes 
make it cheaper to import the commodity from the German mines of Berchtesgaden 
7,000 miles away than from Indonesia’s seashores.

Similarly, the government’s failure to curb corruption, rent-seeking and red 
tape has turned Indonesia essentially into a high-cost economy shun by 
manufacturers. While Americans’ sneakers would most likely have been produced 
in Indonesia fifteen years ago, this is now done in places such as Vietnam or 
China. Ironically, Indonesia’s steady growth is also a result of the country’s 
detachment from volatile world markets.

Stuff made in Indonesia, anyone?

Due to a lack of robust political institutions undergirding Indonesia’s 
economy, inequality has increased in Indonesia in recent years. At the time of 
writing, around 120 million Indonesia lived on less than two U.S. dollars a day.

It remains to be seen how long Indonesia’s elites can ignore the other side of 
Indonesia’s boom. They would certainly have enough clues in their own lives.The 
Indonesian trade diplomat who so vigorously advocated Indonesia’s place in the 
BRIC group in our discussion a few years ago has since been posted to the 
United States. Rather than advocating space- and IT-technologies in the tech 
clusters of Boston and San Francisco like her fellow trade diplomats from China 
and India, she is now promoting Indonesian rattan furniture at trade shows in 
North Carolina.

Michael Buehler is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at Northern 
Illinois University, and an Associate Fellow with the Asia Society.

 
  a.. Why Obama Should Speak in Indonesia? 
  b.. Indonesia’s Looming AIDS Crisis 
  c.. Faith, Hope and Justice 
  d.. Inside Indonesia’s ‘Burning Forests’ 
  e.. Politics Trump God in Indonesia? 


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