http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/FE15Ae01.html
May 15, 2004

Grim report: Indonesia needs infrastructure funds
By Bill Guerin

JAKARTA - The Asian Development Bank has predicted that Indonesia's economy
will grow by only 4.5 percent in 2004 and 2005, and warned that foreign
direct investment (FDI) was urgently needed to improve infrastructure,
especially in transport, power and telecommunications.

The warning, in the bank's annual report on regional economic development,
was coupled with criticism of the Indonesian government's lack of clarity in
its laws and regulations, and the lack of adequate law enforcement, which
worsen the country's investment climate and discourage investors.

With parliamentary election results announced just last week and
presidential elections scheduled for early July, there are still no clues as
to how the next government will approach infrastructure needs. But figures
from the Investment Coordinating Board (BKPM) project that foreign
investment sentiment will likely be wholly negative before a new
administration takes the reins, though infrastructure improvements currently
being pursued by the government may attract some investment.

The 1997-98 regional economic crisis took a heavy toll on major projects in
the transport, power and telecommunications sectors, many of them financed
privately. most were canceled or deferred because of allegations that they
were unlawfully awarded. Since then, the public sector has more or less
monopolized infrastructure projects.

The tight monetary policy implemented at the behest of the International
Monetary Fund (IMF), however, has severely restricted Jakarta's ability to
fund infrastructure programs that would create jobs and get the real economy
moving.

The development of roads and public sanitation, especially in large cities,
still depends on financial aid from the government. But without the
continued involvement of the private sector in funding labor-intensive
infrastructure projects, there is little chance of significantly reducing
unemployment, estimated at some 40 million.

The National Development Planning Board (Bappenas) estimates that slightly
more than US$72 billion in investment will be needed to upgrade the
infrastructure network, boost employment and help achieve targeted economic
growth of 6 percent between 2005 and 2009. The Ministry of Finance says
government investment will be capped at $40.8 billion, leaving a financing
gap of $31.34 billion to be filled by private investors.

There is already evidence of severe infrastructure deterioration: a limited
road network that cannot cope with the rise in traffic volumes, and power
outages that reflect the heavy demands placed on power generation, as higher
economic activity requires heavier power consumption.

As a result of poor infrastructure, productivity suffers. Foreign investors
lose confidence and become concerned with efficiency and costs.

Moreover, investments in the infrastructure needs of Asia's less-developed
economies such as Indonesia entail bigger risks for investors, compared with
Japan and the region's so-called tiger economies of Hong Kong and Singapore.

Whether or not the new government of Indonesia will be committed to
infrastructure reforms remains to be seen. Stable macroeconomic policies
will be needed to attract private investment, as will government guarantees.

Bappenas chief Kwik Kian Gie, the state minister for national development
planning, during the recent launch of a book titled The Economic Landscape
of Indonesian Infrastructure, underscored the importance of the private
sector's participation in infrastructure projects, because of the financial
constraints faced by the government.

In what cynics might have deemed a lesson in high school economics, Kwik
pointed out that such participation, however, must be conducted as fairly
and evenhandedly as possible. He said the commercial risks should be handed
down to the private sector, while the government would bear the risks in
regulations and politics.

Expenditure on infrastructure also creates indirect benefits for supporting
industries. The business potential is enormous.

The good news is that the existing government plans to move on with several
infrastructure projects it considers to be urgent - this at a time of a
stalemated parliament where no party has a majority and continuing
uncertainty about who the country's next leader will be. These high-priority
projects include the construction of toll-road networks throughout Java, as
well as the development of a natural-gas pipeline and telecommunications
networks to connect rural villages.

A plethora of projects
A major revamp is to start with an expansion of the existing
93,700-kilometer network of public roads. As many as 17 toll roads are to be
built at a cost of some Rp77.3 trillion ($8.5 billion). The government has
encouraged investors to bid for different sections of the planned trans-Java
highway, which will connect Merak in Banten with Banyuwangi in East Java,
and has pledged to guarantee bank loans needed by construction companies
bidding for the project.

It is hoped that the ambitious project, which is expected to start before
the end of the year, will be completed by 2009. In a bid to expedite
construction, the Ministry of Finance has agreed to provide Rp10 trillion
($1.18 billion). The government also plans to issue bonds to raise cash to
help finance 70km of the toll roads, including unfinished sections of the
Jakarta Outer Ring Road (JORR) and the Cikampek-to-Padalarang Stage II
toll-road project in West Java.

State-owned toll-road builder and operator PT Jasa Marga (Jasa Marga)
currently manages 383km of the country's 520km of toll roads. The remainder
are operated by the private sector under build-operate-transfer (BOT)
schemes.

Jasa Marga wants the majority share in three of the toll roads to be built:
Gempol-Pasuruan, Semarang-Bawean and Cikampek-Cirebon roads in Java.
Majority ownership of the seven other projects will be offered to private
contractors.

The company plans to go public in November, and most of the Rp1.5 trillion
($166 million) it hopes to raise will be earmarked for working capital
needed to participate in building parts of the new highways.

In keeping with the trend over the past three years for Malaysian money to
flow into Indonesia, mainly into the banking, telecommunications and
infrastructure sectors, one of Kuala Lumpur's largest conglomerates, the UEM
group, is to collaborate with Jasa Marga on joint opportunities for the
development of toll roads in Indonesia, Malaysia and other countries.

The group employs 20,000 people and has 35 major operating companies, 11 of
which are listed on Bursa Malaysia Securities Bhd and one of which is listed
on the London Stock Exchange. Two of its subsidiaries, United Engineers Bhd
and Teras Teknologi Sdn Bhd, last week signed memorandums of understanding
prior to tenders for the construction of 10 of the new toll roads; seven in
Java, two in Sumatra and one in South Sulawesi.

The Japanese government has also provided 104.63 billion yen ($913 million)
in soft loans, part of its official development assistance (ODA) to
Indonesia for this year. The money will be used to finance seven major
infrastructure projects - three for power-generation, three port-facilities
and one railway project.

Yet another massive infrastructure project is the construction of a $15
billion, 33km underground twin tunnel, connecting Java and Sumatra. The
project, expected to be financed under a build-operate-transfer (BOT) scheme
by a consortium led by European Union investors, is due to start early next
year and be completed by 2008.

To cover the government's contribution of a mere $2 billion for the initial
construction and another $4 million per year for operational and maintenance
costs, there will be a toll charge of approximately $20 per vehicle, per
trip.

Plans also are in the works to build a Rp178 trillion ($19.7 billion) gas
pipeline network from Sumatra and Kalimantan to Java and to several end-user
countries, including Singapore and Malaysia. The project will take between
five and 10 years to complete, according to the Ministry of Energy and
Mineral Resources.

Other planned infrastructure projects include generating 21,900 megawatts of
electricity, installing 11 million fixed-line telephones, providing drinking
water to 30.5 million people and providing sanitation systems for 46.9
million people. In Jakarta alone health problems due a lack of water cost an
estimated $1 billion a year plus lost productivity because of poor health.

Though the telecommunications sector rapidly because of private sector
inputs, fixed-line telephone density amounts to only 6 percent of the
country's 220 million population. The sector plans to complete the
installation of 43,000 Universal Service Obligation (USO) telephone lines in
remote villages across the country by 2009.

In keeping with this plan, lines were laid in 3,010 villages last year, and
17,000 villages will benefit in 2004, according to the ministry of
communications.

The International Telecommunications Union (ITU) and Asia Pacific
Telecommunications (APT) have formally called on each member country,
including Indonesia, to provide all of their citizens with access to basic
telecommunication services - telephone, fax and telegram services - by 2005.

Future of foreign investment looks grim
Grim figures from the Investment Coordinating Board (BKPM) highlight the
reality that foreign investment sentiment will likely be wholly negative
before a new administration takes the reins in October.

Only 38 percent of the $13.2 billion of FDI approved in 2003 was realized,
according to the BKPM. In the first two months of this election year, FDI
approvals plummeted by 66 percent to $805.4 million, from $2.4 billion in
the corresponding period last year.

It is not known what priority the next government will place on
infrastructure. In fact, the only public comment so far from those bidding
for the top job that was even remotely business- or economy-related came
from the current odds-on favorite to win the presidency - Susilo Bambang
Yudhoyono.

The former security minister said in a campaign speech this week, "We need
to increase investment from in and out of the country. We have to be smart
in streaming welfare and economic resources from abroad into the country."

That was it - no expansion, however brief, on how this miracle might be
achieved.

The ADB report was particularly critical of the government's tendency to
propose simple legislation to expedite FDI approval, leaving critical issues
to be addressed by subordinate regulations. Unfortunately, these regulations
mostly lacked clarity and predictability in implementation.

Apart from this lack of clarity in its laws and regulations, the ADB said
that Indonesia also lacked adequate law enforcement, including legal
enforcement for investment project contracts, which further worsened the
country's investment climate.

The worst-case scenario is that the new government will be far too focused
on political survival to expend much energy on economic policymaking for
several months. At the other end of the spectrum of hope is the dream that
the improvements in infrastructure about to get under way will, in turn,
start to attract more investment.

It is predicted that by 2025, some 50 percent of Indonesia's population will
end up living in cities, which is the normal trend for a developing economy.

With the right economic policies in place to ensure that long-term private
investment is safe and profitable, the public and private sectors could work
together with development agencies such as the ADB and World Bank to build
an infrastructure that would continue the current momentum.

Unfortunately, the issues of legal certainty, the reliability of the
bankruptcy courts, and the potential for social violence remain poised, like
a Sword of Damocles, over the prospects for attracting sufficient investment
to help meet the infrastructure needs of 2005 and beyond.

(Copyright 2004 Asia Times Online Co, Ltd. All rights reserved. Please
contact [EMAIL PROTECTED] for information on our sales and syndication
policies.)





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