http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/140339/karen-brooks/indonesia-and-the-philippines

Indonesia and the Philippines
A Tale of Two Archipelagoes
By Karen Brooks
>From our January/February 2014 Issue
As recently as 2008, the economies of Southeast Asia received roughly less 
than half as much foreign direct investment as China did. Four years 
later, in 2012, they pulled to within spitting distance ($111 billion 
versus $121 billion). This surge in international interest reflects the 
region’s attractive demographics and, even more so, its impressive recent 
economic performance.

The ten countries of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) 
represent a collective market of 620 million people, significantly larger 
than that of North America, Latin America and the Caribbean, the eurozone, 
or the Middle East and North Africa. They are home to a young, large, and 
growing labor pool, as well as a growing and increasingly 
consumption-oriented middle class. The ASEAN countries posted a combined 
GDP of over $2.2 trillion in 2012 -- larger than Russia’s GDP and almost 
the same size as Brazil’s -- and many economists expect that number to 
double by 2020. ASEAN’s five core countries -- Indonesia, Malaysia, the 
Philippines, Singapore, and Thailand -- have been growing as fast as any 
other regional grouping in the world over the past five years.

Impressive as this pack has been, two of its members have stood out as 
particularly promising. Giant Indonesia soared during the last half 
decade, boasting high growth, low inflation, an extremely low debt-to-GDP 
ratio, strong foreign exchange reserves, and a top-performing stock 
market. But it is the Philippines, the region’s other archipelago, that is 
now providing the biggest upside surprise. The Philippine economy expanded 
by 6.6 percent in 2012, exceeding most economists’ predictions, and was 
among the fastest-growing economies in the world in the first half of 
2013, expanding by 7.6 percent. (Despite the destruction of Typhoon 
Haiyan, which had just ravaged the country as of this writing, the 
Philippines’ growth rate for all of 2013 is expected to remain above 6.5 
percent.) The Philippine Stock Exchange Index has posted record highs 
since President Benigno Aquino III came into office in 2010, and approvals 
for foreign investment have more than doubled in that period. The country’s 
inflation is low, its foreign exchange reserves are high, and its public 
debt is steadily declining. As a result, all three of the major 
credit-rating agencies upgraded Philippine sovereign debt to investment 
grade in 2013: the first such rating in the country’s history.

Past performance, however, is not necessarily indicative of future 
prospects. So what is to be expected of these two island nations in the 
years ahead?

JAKARTA'S STRAITJACKET

Indonesia, with more than 250 million citizens, isn’t just the largest 
country in ASEAN; it is the fourth largest in the world. Thanks to 
abundant natural resources, a massive domestic market, and solid 
macroeconomic policymaking, it has grown by more than five percent a year 
on average for more than a decade. In the five years leading up to 2011, 
it more than doubled its exports (from $84 billion to $204 billion), and 
many experts started calling for it to be added to the BRICs group of 
major emerging markets.

Today, however, the picture looks far less rosy. Indonesia’s current 
account went into deficit in the fourth quarter of 2011, its trade balance 
followed suit the following spring, and the rupiah was one of Asia’s 
worst-performing currencies in 2012, with its value dropping by almost six 
percent. Those trends accelerated in 2013, as the country’s trade and 
current account deficits ballooned and as the rupiah slumped still 
further. Indonesia quickly went from being hailed as a new economic 
superstar to being dubbed by Morgan Stanley as one of the world’s “fragile 
five” countries, owing to the vulnerability of its currency to foreign 
capital outflows. The weak rupiah is raising the cost of imported goods, 
exacerbating inflationary pressures, and eroding Indonesian purchasing 
power -- significant factors for an economy whose growth is overwhelmingly 
consumption-driven.

Some of these problems can be attributed to the retreat of capital from 
emerging markets in anticipation of changes to the U.S. Federal Reserve’s 
policy of quantitative easing. But Indonesia’s currency and stock market 
were hit far harder than those of its peers in mid-2013, and Indonesia did 
not recover as quickly when the Federal Reserve ended up keeping its foot 
on the stimulus pedal last fall. Investors correctly saw Indonesia’s 
deficits as symptomatic of broader structural imbalances in the country’s 
economy, and they remain concerned that Jakarta has no strategy for 
responding to its numerous challenges.

Among these are the fact that Indonesia’s export sector is overly 
dependent on commodities, a handful of which, including coal, rubber, palm 
oil, and mineral ores, account for over 50 percent of the country’s 
exports. Indonesia was a major beneficiary of the commodities boom between 
2009 and 2011, when revenues for key resources rose exponentially. But 
those same commodities experienced precipitous price drops throughout 2012 
and 2013, and prices are expected to remain low for some time. The decline 
in prices has largely been a function of decreased demand from China, yet 
increases in supply have also played a role, due to the proliferation of 
small miners in Indonesia who get licenses at the local level.

The biggest source of Indonesia’s recent problems, however, has been its 
shrinking exports of oil and gas, thanks to declining production and 
rising consumption at home. Indonesia has been a net importer of refined 
oil since 2004, but for most of the years thereafter, it has remained a 
net exporter of crude oil and natural gas. In 2013, however, Indonesia 
experienced huge crude oil deficits, and the revenue it took in from 
exporting surplus domestic gas also dropped dramatically. The declines in 
crude oil production and natural gas exports highlight the problems that 
plague Indonesia’s energy sector, including regulatory uncertainty, 
corruption, and a trend toward criminalizing commercial disputes. Rising 
resource nationalism has also paralyzed a number of major oil and gas 
projects, as the government and powerful domestic business interests have 
tried to squeeze foreign contract holders. With a young and growing middle 
class, Indonesia will have to either improve its investment climate in 
order to increase production at home or else be condemned to an 
ever-greater reliance on imported energy.

Manufacturing, meanwhile, has also fallen behind: exports of electrical 
appliances, iron and steel, chemicals, cars, auto parts, and computers all 
declined in the first nine months of 2013 compared with the same period in 
2012. At the same time, Indonesia has started importing significantly more 
of just about everything, especially oil and gas. Indonesia’s fuel 
subsidies are among the highest in the world, which encourages profligate 
consumption. And as the rupiah weakens, the import bill is going up.

The absence of sufficient domestic processing capability to make refined 
fuels and petrochemicals represents another structural problem. Indonesia 
needs 1.3 million barrels of refined crude oil per day, but its existing 
refineries produce only 770,000 barrels a day. Meanwhile, Indonesia’s 
failure to attract the investment necessary to expand value-added 
manufacturing and processing industries at home has left the country 
increasingly dependent on a growing range of imports. From 2007 to 2012, 
for example, imports of textiles, electrical appliances, iron and steel, 
chemicals, cars, auto parts, computers, fertilizers, processed food, and 
feed increased significantly. Indonesia is going to have to learn how to 
make much more of what it needs at home if it is to turn its rapidly 
growing consumer class into an economic opportunity rather than a burden.

Indonesia needs domestic investment not just to correct its growing 
imbalances but also to create more and better-quality jobs. With over half 
the population now under the age of 30, the proportion that is of working 
age will rise significantly over the next decade. Attracting job-creating 
investments in manufacturing will require a more flexible labor regime, 
improved infrastructure, lower transportation costs, education reform, and 
more legal and policy certainty.

Jakarta is starting to make headway on some elements of this agenda, 
specifically allocating more of its budget to infrastructure spending, 
passing needed eminent domain laws to accelerate infrastructure projects, 
and bringing a growing number of corruption cases against powerful 
politicians and officials. The government has also made progress on 
reducing the overall level of poverty. But after years of complacency on 
economic reform, fed by the commodities boom and easy credit, the 
government now faces a long to-do list. With legislative and presidential 
elections looming in 2014, however, leadership is in short supply, 
nationalism and populism are on the rise, and the appetite among the major 
political parties for reform appears limited. This suggests a period of 
stagnation and further backsliding is ahead, at least until a new 
administration takes office in October 2014.

THE THRILLA IN MANILA

The Philippines enjoys some of the same strengths as Indonesia. With the 
second-largest population in ASEAN, at 106 million, the Philippines has 
also enjoyed consumption-led growth and similarly benefits from high 
domestic demand. Thanks to reforms put in place after the 1997–98 Asian 
financial crisis, the Philippines, like Indonesia, has a strong banking 
system, with large amounts of capital on hand and a low incidence of loans 
in default. Respected technocrats run key economic portfolios in both 
countries and produce sound macroeconomic management.

The two economies also share many of the same challenges. They are both 
vulnerable to severe natural disasters. They have low tax-to-GDP ratios, 
limiting government revenue. They both suffer from inadequate 
infrastructure, high logistical costs, and rigid labor regimes, which have 
restricted the expansion of their manufacturing sectors. The Philippines’ 
exports are nearly as dominated by electronics as Indonesia’s are by 
commodities, and shipments of electronic components and semiconductors, 
which account for over 50 percent of Philippine exports, have slumped due 
to a drop in global demand. As a result, the Philippines has run a 
substantial trade deficit in recent years.

Unlike Indonesia, however, the Philippines’ current account has been in 
surplus since 2003, ending an era of perennial balance-of-payments crises. 
Indeed, the Philippines’ current account surplus exceeded that of the rest 
of Asia in 2012 and is projected to keep growing. This success is the 
result of two key factors: the substantial flow of remittances from the 
more than ten million Filipinos working abroad and a dramatic expansion in 
the Philippines’ service sector, thanks to huge growth in business-process 
outsourcing.

A high birthrate and a lack of jobs at home has for years sent millions of 
Filipinos to look for work abroad. Almost ten percent of the population 
now lives overseas, and remittances from this group, which represent nine 
percent of GDP, have grown by double-digit rates since 2002. With the 
working-age population forecast to expand for the next 50 years, the 
outflow of people will continue, as will the money they send home. These 
remittances help keep consumption up, especially among the poor and the 
unbanked, and they are among the sources of foreign exchange least 
sensitive to economic shocks. During the Asian financial crisis, for 
example, remittances helped stabilize capital flows and shield the peso 
from depreciation. Similarly, the peso fell by only five percent in 2013, 
while the rupiah dropped by 18 percent.

Another distinctive feature of the Philippine economy is the large role of 
the service sector, accounting for 57 percent of GDP in 2012. The 
Philippines is now the second-largest center of business-process 
outsourcing in the developing world, after India. The industry is 
estimated to have created about 800,000 jobs, originally mostly in 
lower-end call centers but increasingly also in fields such as 
engineering, medicine, and accounting. The government deserves credit for 
facilitating this growth through investments and fiscal incentives.

Still, the Philippines continues to struggle on a number of key fronts. 
High economic growth has yet to translate into more jobs and less poverty. 
Unemployment has stubbornly remained above seven percent -- higher than in 
any other core ASEAN state -- for the past six years, and underemployment 
has stood at roughly 20 percent during the same period. With over one 
million Filipinos entering the labor force each year, the service sector 
alone cannot absorb them all, especially since the manufacturing and 
agricultural sectors have been shedding jobs. No surprise, then, that 
poverty has barely declined in recent years or that the country’s per 
capita GDP is the lowest among ASEAN’s core five.

To reverse these trends, the country has to create jobs for semi- and 
unskilled workers in manufacturing and agriculture. But doing that, in 
turn, will require attracting more foreign investment, which for the 
Philippines is currently among the lowest in Asia, reaching only $2 
billion in 2012 (compared with the $20 billion that went to Indonesia).

Investment in the Philippines has stayed so low because the country’s 
economy remains one of the most restrictive in the world, with 
constitutional provisions limiting foreign ownership of Philippine 
companies to 40 percent in a broad range of sectors. Manila must address 
this problem, as well as regulatory bottlenecks, infrastructure 
shortcomings, and confusion about the overall direction of its economic 
policies. The land reforms that were passed during the administration of 
the current president’s mother, Corazon Aquino, for example, have not had 
their intended effect, as uncertainty over property rights has limited 
investment in the agricultural sector. The Philippines is one of the most 
mineral-rich nations on earth. However, policy flip-flops have ground 
mining investment to a halt, and infrastructure projects have suffered a 
similar fate.

Manila’s to-do list, then, is nearly as long as Jakarta’s. But whereas 
Indonesia has not passed any meaningful reforms in nearly a decade, the 
Philippines, under Benigno Aquino III’s bold leadership, has taken real 
steps to address some of its challenges. In the first three years of his 
six-year term, Aquino has been relentless in fighting corruption and has 
implemented reforms to improve transparency and efficiency in government 
spending and tax administration. Despite fierce opposition from the 
Catholic Church, he won passage of a landmark reproductive health bill to 
help the country’s poor gain access to birth control. He liberalized the 
aviation industry by adopting an “open skies” policy, enabling the entry 
of long-prohibited foreign carriers and giving the Philippines’ 
underperforming tourism industry a boost. He has challenged vested 
business interests by passing a sin tax on tobacco and alcohol to reduce 
the overall consumption of these products and to improve government 
finances, implemented a conditional cash-transfer program to provide a 
social safety net for the poor, and expanded access to education and 
health care. On the political side, he reached a framework agreement for a 
new peace deal with the country’s largest insurgent group. For these and 
other reasons, Aquino enjoys unprecedented popular support for a president 
halfway through his presidency, as shown by his coalition’s decisive 
victory in the May 2013 midterm elections.

The president is also well received abroad: his record has earned the 
Philippines significantly improved scores on a number of global surveys. 
During his tenure in office, the Philippines has moved up 26 spots on the 
World Economic Forum’s Global Competitiveness Index. The Philippines beat 
Indonesia on Transparency International’s 2012 Corruption Perceptions 
Index, moving up 24 spots (to 105); Indonesia fell 18 spots (to 118). And 
the Philippines jumped 30 notches on the World Bank’s 2014 Ease of Doing 
Business Index, reversing years of decline and again surpassing Indonesia.

As a result of these improvements, the Philippines is well placed to 
withstand the expected return to volatility in global capital and equity 
markets when the U.S. Federal Reserve ends its quantitative easing in 2014 
(as it is expected to do). The Philippine central bank will have 
significantly more leeway than its Indonesian counterpart, for example, to 
maintain a flexible monetary policy and to take measures to spur growth. 
Although the Philippines is unlikely to continue booming at the pace it 
managed in early 2013, which was driven in part by election-induced 
stimulus measures, growth is expected to remain above six percent in the 
coming years. (Typhoon Haiyan may impact this forecast.) By contrast, the 
World Bank and the International Monetary Fund have significantly 
downgraded Indonesia’s 2013 and 2014 growth forecasts, to just over five 
percent.

THE REFORM IMPERATIVE

Indonesia’s many strengths, including its size, natural resource wealth, 
strategic location, consumer-driven economy, and resilient financial 
system will continue to attract investment and bolster the country’s 
economic prospects in the years ahead. But the next president will need to 
return to a path of reform if Indonesia is to retain its competitive edge.

The Philippines, on the other hand, has momentum behind its reform efforts 
and a popular president with three years left in his term. This provides a 
compelling platform for growth moving forward. But to make the most of the 
country’s opportunities, Aquino will first need to manage the humanitarian 
disaster wreaked by Typhoon Haiyan as quickly, efficiently, and 
compassionately as possible. Then, he will need to push forward with 
structural reforms, especially constitutional changes necessary to promote 
foreign investment. The president has shown little enthusiasm for this 
project thus far, but a range of forces, especially the evolution of 
public opinion, may well push him toward change.

All major business groups now support the relevant constitutional 
amendments, reflecting a change in the country’s political economy, as 
Filipino oligarchs now feel that they have more to gain than lose from the 
introduction of new foreign capital and competition. The shift in opinion 
on liberalizing the economy also reflects public support for the Aquino 
administration’s decision to draw closer to Washington, a result of Manila’s 
strained relations with Beijing over maritime boundary disputes. Support 
is growing among Filipino elites for joining the U.S.-led Trans-Pacific 
Partnership, a regional free-trade agreement that would also help open up 
the Philippine economy. This stands in stark contrast to Indonesia, where 
no constituency speaks in favor of joining the TPP and where the polity as 
a whole is turning more nationalist and increasingly favoring 
protectionism.

In the end, it may be this evolving public consensus in favor of openness 
and transparency that provides the most promise in the Philippines. 
Revelations in late 2013 that legislators had siphoned off huge sums of 
pork-barrel funds for personal use and that the office of the president 
had also misused discretionary funds sparked a public outcry so strong 
that Aquino may have to go even further than intended in fighting 
corruption in order to maintain his moral authority. If he does, the 
president could leave his country with an impressive and lasting legacy --  
unlike the outgoing Indonesian president, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, who 
will leave behind nearly a decade of missed opportunities to advance 
economic and political reform when he steps down in 2014.

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