http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/IH04Ae01.html

Aug 4, 2007 


A fight for Indonesia's economic soul
By Bill Guerin 


JAKARTA - After nearly a decade of economic restructuring and financial 
de-leveraging, Indonesia has finally returned to a position of fiscal strength 
from the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis. Much of the credit for the turnaround 
lies with Coordinating Minister for the Economy Boediono, who has held senior 
economic posts in two post-1997 administrations. 

An economist trained at Wharton, the business school of the University of 
Pennsylvania, the former finance minister and now chief economic policymaker 
has in recent years had a free hand in steering economic and financial reforms, 
under both former president Megawati Sukarnoputri and current leader Susilo 
Bambang Yudhoyono. In managing the national finances, he has faced down vested 
political interest groups in Parliament and the bureaucracy and moved to 
restore foreign confidence in central bank independence. 

Boediono's independent and apolitical control of Indonesia's economic levers to 
some analysts represents a sort of throwback to former dictator Suharto's New 
Order regime, whereby he insulated a group of US-trained economists, popularly 
known then as the Berkeley Mafia, from political interference so as to steer 
the economy's liberalization and export-oriented growth. 

Yet while Suharto's economic mandarins hovered above the cut-and-thrust of 
daily politics, Boediono frequently finds himself at loggerheads with the 
country's powerful, pro-business vice president Yusuf Kalla over economic 
policymaking. Kalla serves as chairman to the powerful Golkar party and has an 
exceptionally powerful voice inside Yudhoyono's cabinet, particularly over 
government spending decisions. 

Now some wonder whether Boediono's position could be in jeopardy as a new 
consensus builds around the notion that it's time for Indonesia to re-gear 
economic policy from pro-stability to pro-growth.

As a former head of the National Development Planning Agency (Bappenas) and 
deputy governor of Bank Indonesia, Boediono inherited control of a financially 
battered and stagnant economy under Megawati. Foreign investors had abandoned 
the country as a regional basket case where politics superseded the broad 
economic interest. In one of several controversial decisions, in June 2002 the 
Commercial Court declared that Canadian insurer Manulife was bankrupt. This 
ruling was instrumental in showing just how much the new administration was in 
the grip of powerful vested interests. 

Megawati, a former leading figure of the political-reform movement that 
followed the 1998 downfall of Suharto, had no clear strategy to stop the rot 
and revive the economy when she assumed the presidency in July 2001. Then the 
country was still reeling from the Asian financial crisis. Government budgets 
still showed huge deficits and were sustained by expensive external funding. 

The conditions attached to the International Monetary Fund's rescue package 
emphasized financial belt-tightening over fiscal stimulus and bank 
restructuring over issuing new loans. By 2001, the IMF-imposed belt-tightening 
was stirring nationalist complaints that were further spooking foreign 
investors. It was around then that Megawati handed the economic reins to 
Boediono and, in a politically risky maneuver, he shunned economic nationalists 
and moved to regain the IMF's confidence rather than challenge the agency's 
neo-liberal economic orthodoxy. 

Steady technocratic hand 
While many analysts agree that Megawati's government deserves credit for 
restoring a modicum of political stability, it was Boediono who played the 
largest role in steering the economy back on track. Following the IMF's 
prescriptions, belt-tightening policies in effect curbed inflation, reduced 
government debt to manageable levels, and restored depleted national coffers. 

Fast-forward to the present, and Yudhoyono's weak representation in the House 
of Representatives has nationalistically thwarted many of his government's 
economic reform policies, including liberalization measures. With the 
legislators from his own small party and the few others who consistently 
support him, at best he holds consistent sway over only 100 votes in the 
550-seat legislature. 

Faced with stiff parliamentary resistance, Yudhoyono moved to empower 
Boediono's sway over economic policymaking. In December 2005, Yudhoyono tapped 
the tested technocrat to replace Aburazil Bakrie, an influential political 
operator inside the Golkar party whose family has big business interests that 
allegedly feed on government contracts, as chief economics minister. 
Significantly, Boediono said at the time that he would decline the new post if 
Bakrie were still part of the president's economic team. 

Boediono's appointment restored foreign confidence in the government's 
technocratic credentials and provided Yudhoyono with an important political 
bulwark against his more business-minded deputy Kalla. The president told a 
press conference just before Boediono's appointment that he wanted the revamped 
cabinet to be more effective and cooperate better as a team. 

The implication, albeit unspoken, was that Yudhoyono needed to rid his economic 
team of vested-interest groups that were starting to raise new international 
concerns over the quality of his government's macroeconomic management. When 
Boediono and his technocratic ally and finance minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati 
took the reins in 2005, they faced a faltering economy and alarmingly high 
inflation levels. Indrawati replaced Golkar heavy Jusuf Anwar, a Kalla ally who 
had control over development project budgets. 

Together they moved to restore some market confidence in the country's reform 
direction, which to many foreign investors at the time were headed in the wrong 
direction. The massive reduction in fuel subsidies in 2005 triggered a 
political mini-crisis but, as the World Bank points out, the savings in 
subsidies left an extra US$15 billion to spend in 2006, $10 billion of which 
was earmarked for development programs. 

To be sure, Boediono hasn't always had his way, nor has Yudhoyono. After last 
month's passage of a new negative investment list, which imposed new barriers 
to foreign investment across several local industries, Boediono did his best to 
neutralize widespread foreign-investor perceptions that the list was 
protectionist, saying it gave investors greater "clarity" about which areas of 
the economy they were welcome to participate in. 

Notwithstanding such hiccups, Boediono is broadly viewed in international 
markets as a capable set of technocratic hands. In his recent prepared speeches 
abroad, he has said that political considerations should not be allowed to 
interfere with economic management. Yet he has faced consistent challenges from 
Kalla, who before Boediono's appointment as coordinating economic minister 
rammed through unopposed several spending measures in Yudhoyono's first 
cabinet. 

Unwelcome oversight
Last September, Yudhoyono suddenly announced the creation of a new presidential 
advisory body that would evaluate and monitor the cabinet's performance and 
report directly to him. Significantly, coordination of the oversight unit was 
placed under Boediono. 

After widespread reports of peeved Golkar legislators, Kalla and Yudhoyono met 
in private and, despite denials from the president's office that no changes 
would be made, it was soon announced that although the unit would remain in 
place, its tasks would be reconsidered. Most saw this as a victory for Kalla 
and a blow to the president's chances of uncovering where bureaucratic 
resistance and poor coordination were thwarting his economic policy and reform 
directives. The oversight unit still exists, though very little has been heard 
of it since. 

Meanwhile, Kalla has won praise from the country's banks and business community 
for his aggressive approach to economic policymaking, and he has clashed openly 
with Boediono and Sri Mulyani over what he perceives to be their overcautious 
approach to managing the national finances. In particular, Kalla has objected 
to their joint reluctance to release funds allocated for fiscal stimulus. At 
the end of 2005, nearly 70% of funds earmarked for development projects had not 
been disbursed. 

Boediono's approach was made clear during a 2006 keynote address he made in 
Bali. "Restoring stability and accelerating government spending are necessary 
but not sufficient to sustain higher growth in the longer term," he said. "The 
key to sustaining growth is to use increasing confidence in our macro and 
fiscal position to encourage private investment, especially in the context of 
reforms that reduce the obstacles." 

Boediono has remained tight-lipped concerning media criticism of government 
contracts, particularly in the infrastructure sector, won by companies owned by 
or associated with Kalla's and Bakrie's families. Big-ticket state projects won 
by the Bakrie Brothers conglomerate include a $1.26 billion gas pipeline 
connecting East Kalimantan and Central Java as well as the $1.4 billion Tanjung 
Jati A power project. 

The government's so-called "crash-start program" saw the award of $8 billion 
worth of coal-fired power projects, many without a tendering process. Not 
surprisingly the program, which was widely reported to be the brainchild of 
Yusuf Kalla's brother Achmad Kalla, owner of the Bukaka engineering company, 
sparked media allegations of conflicts of interest. 

One winner was infrastructure specialist PT Bosowa Energi, part of the Bosowa 
Group, a diversified conglomerate with businesses that include a turnpike 
operator owned by Yusuf Kalla's brother-in-law, Aksa Mahmud. Mahmud, 
coincidentally, is also deputy Speaker of the People's Consultative Assembly 
(MPR), Indonesia's highest legislative body. 

Still there are indications that Kalla's faster, looser approach to government 
spending is gaining political ground on Boediono's penchant for caution and 
probity. A World Bank report titled "Indonesia Public Expenditure Review 2007" 
released late last month commended the country's "bold reallocation of 
resources" and noted that there are now sufficient financial resources to 
address development needs better. 

While the report did not attribute the successful turnaround to any particular 
individual, it did note that prudent macroeconomic policies, particularly 
maintaining extremely low budget deficits, have been instrumental in the 
recovery. However, some economic analysts also read the report as an implicit 
endorsement of Kalla's stance, including its mention that now is the time to 
build on past achievements and deploy more state resources on education, health 
care and infrastructure. 

In March, Boediono signaled that he could be persuaded to slacken certain 
strictures on the economy and realign his pro-stability toward more pro-growth 
initiatives. For instance, he recently told reporters that stronger economic 
growth in 2008 would be achievable with "more relaxed monetary policies". Yet 
Boediono still faces an uphill task in building a political consensus around 
the need to speed up structural reforms and foreign participation in the 
economy ahead of what are expected to be hotly contested 2009 elections. 

With an estimated 60% of Indonesians without access to piped water and more 
than 70 million with no electricity, the need to get allocated funds out of the 
bureaucracy and into the grassroots economy is politically urgent. An even 
bigger problem, as Boediono conceded in Washington in April, is the 
government's inability to ensure that policies and reforms are actually 
implemented as designed. 

Bill Guerin, a Jakarta correspondent for Asia Times Online since 2000, has been 
in Indonesia for more than 20 years, mostly in journalism and editorial 
positions. He specializes in Indonesian political, business and economic 
analysis, and hosts a weekly television political talk show, Face to Face, 
broadcast on two Indonesia-based satellite channels. He can be reached at 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] . 

(Copyright 2007 Asia Times Online Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact us 
about sales, syndication and republishing.) 

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