http://www.thejakartapost.com/detaileditorial.asp?fileid=20051209.F04&irec=3


SMEs: What have we done with this sector? 
C.G. Moghe, Jakarta



There have been several small tremors already felt by the Indonesian economy 
this year. The rupiah weakened from less than 10,000 to a dollar, almost 
entered the free-fall regime and was strengthened only by hiking interest 
rates. The resultant loss of purchasing power, coupled with increasing costs of 
fuel and the consequent spiraling costs of other services and commodities and 
uncertainty about issues like availability of power; the imminent increase in 
the minimum wage and further increase in interest rates are undermining the 
economic viability of small and medium enterprises (SMEs).

Several are responding by cutting jobs or even closing down. There is no safety 
net to halt this process and save the SMEs and the jobs they generate and to 
prevent the economy from plunging further into a tail spin. It looks like we 
have learned nothing from the economic crisis and have been caught napping once 
again. 

The SMEs generally fold up as a result of lack of sustaining power and the lost 
jobs bring many onto the streets as vendors and vagabonds, in general affecting 
all segments of the economy in terms of lost business. Is there a safety net, 
to minimize the impact? Can some short and medium term measures be taken to 
strengthen the SMEs to minimize the job losses? 

SMEs need assistance both for detecting and removing road blocks and for 
capacity building in any form such as better management skills to improve their 
competitiveness. 

The stakeholders in the success of SMEs are banks (since the failure of the 
SMEs means the lending banks have to write off the loans), other larger 
corporate players (whose market is assured by the jobs generated by the SMEs) 
and the government (which needs to ensure that SMEs keep growing and generating 
new jobs). 

Banks perceive SMEs as a risky proposition and do not consider the future 
growth potential of this market segment. Most banks in Indonesia therefore have 
an adversarial relationship with SMEs, focusing only on the security, usually 
land or buildings, against which the credit facility has been granted, instead 
of the inherent operational aspects of the SMEs. 

Banks by the very nature of their relationship with the SMEs can have access to 
a lot of aspects of the working of the SMEs, which can be converted into the 
health indicators of the businesses of the SMEs with some practical input from 
experts in the various industries. 

Banks operating collectively under their association -- PERBANAS -- together 
with other stakeholders interested in the wellbeing of SMEs may be able to 
establish SME assistance centers for skill/resource/management development for 
SMEs, where the unorganized SMEs, can be assisted to periodically upgrade their 
skills to meet the current competitive/quality needs, in areas of management 
development, export promotion, better quality control, development of standard 
MIS packages and other measures to assist SMEs to improve their performance. 

These efforts may strengthen the SMEs, reducing their failure rates and 
therefore protecting the funds banks have advanced to the SMEs, apart from 
improving the ability of the SMEs to generate and sustain jobs. Some efforts 
that have already commenced in this direction, aided by the World Bank, ADB, 
PNM and similar institutions may form a nucleus of such collective assistance 
centers. 

On the other hand, agencies like the Indonesian Chamber of Commerce and 
Industry (Kadin), in association with the relevant government officials, such 
as the Ministry of Industry can assist SMEs by identifying the existing and 
potential road blocks to the progress of SMEs and assist in initiating 
appropriate steps, such as regulatory changes based on cost-benefit studies. 
Changes in the structure and application of VAT forced many of the silverware 
makers of Yogyakarta to shut down, since they could not face the resulting hike 
in the cost of raw materials. 

The furniture makers and exporters have lost their export market and 
consequently many of the related jobs, as a result of non-availability of 
"legal" timber within Indonesia at reasonable prices. On the other hand, plenty 
of illegal Indonesian timber is available in China at prices, lower than in 
Indonesia, which makes it easier for China to make and export furniture made 
out Indonesian wood. In such instances, the cost-benefit studies may indicate 
the optimum tax levels the government may charge so that the businesses can 
still survive and continue providing jobs. 

Muslimin Nasution of the Indonesian Association of Muslim Intellectuals in a 
recent news item mentioned 5 C's, as the banks' guiding principles, namely: 
Character, capacity, capital, condition and collateral which the borrower must 
demonstrate. He should have added a few more C's for the banks to acquire, 
namely: Commercial common sense, conventional wisdom, close contact with the 
borrowers, conviction and courage, if the SMEs/small borrowers are to survive 
and thrive in their function as the providers of jobs and therefore maintain 
social stability. 

Indonesia does not have to feel these measures are an act of charity by giving 
benefits to SMEs. Even more advanced countries like Singapore provide "health 
checks" for small and medium businesses and consultancy for branding and 
automation at affordable costs as a measure to build their long term 
capabilities. India has long assisted small industries in the procurement of 
raw materials on a collective basis, where the small buyers can benefit from 
pooling of materials and orders, thereby lowering the overall costs. 

Recently Dr. Vivian Balakrishnan, the Second Minister for Trade and Industry, 
in Singapore, said that Singapore "... should nurture a strong base of local 
manufacturers who are ready to ride the wave of globalization to face 
international competition". Unless some special efforts are made to provide 
anchors against the wave of globalization, Indonesian SMEs may be simply washed 
away and the streets of Jakarta will be perpetually flooded, not with the usual 
excess rainfall but with those who were once employed by the SMEs. 

The writer has been working more than 33 years in banking, financial services 
and projects. He can be reached at [EMAIL PROTECTED] 


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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