*Govt asked to move faster on subsidy reform plan*

In a recent report, the World Bank, Bank of America (BofA) Merrill Lynch and
Standard Chartered said the government urgently needed to resolve the issue.
The House of Representatives is allowing the government to hike subsidized
fuel prices if the actual oil price is at least 10 percent higher than the
price assumed in the budget.

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http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2011/06/30/govt-asked-move-faster-subsidy-reform-plan.html

International financial institutions are urging the government to move
faster to reform energy subsidy policy to help ease financial strains
resulting from the growing deficit in the state budget.

In a recent report, the World Bank, Bank of America (BofA) Merrill Lynch and
Standard Chartered said the government urgently needed to resolve the issue.

“Increased public spending on subsidies means a higher opportunity cost in
terms of money that can be spent on pressing development needs, such as
education, health, social protection and infrastructure,” World Bank lead
economist for Indonesia Shubham Chaudhuri said in a statement released
Tuesday.

The warning was issued amid the steady increase in the world’s oil prices.

“The savings from reform could also be used for cash transfers to limit the
impact on vulnerable households,” he said, citing a possible ballooning fuel
subsidy to close to Rp 150 trillion (US$17.4 billion) if there’s no change
in the government’s policy, given increasing prices and consumption.

The government plans to spend Rp 136.6 trillion for overall energy subsidies
this year, of which Rp 95.9 trillion is allocated for fuel subsidies. The
energy subsidy accounts for the larger part of the government’s overall
subsidies of Rp 187.6 trillion this year.

The energy subsidy exceeds the Rp 135.9 trillion allocated for capital
expenditures.

The World Bank estimates that higher oil prices could increase the overall
subsidy bill to Rp 253.3 trillion.

Chaudhuri called for the government to reform its subsidies by, among
others, raising fuel prices and implementing a closed distribution of
subsidized fuel directly to those in need.

“Ballooning fuel subsidies raise the pressing issues of resource
misallocation and crowding out. This is especially given the inadequate
funds allocated for infrastructure and more direct lower income household
support,” Hak Bin Chua, BofA Merrill Lynch emerging Asia economist, said in
a recent report focusing on Southeast Asia.

Standard Chartered also shares the same view, saying in its latest Asia
report that the Indonesian government “is spending more on energy subsidies
and not enough on infrastructure”. The government and House of
Representatives members, concerned with high international oil prices and
relatively high inflation, have again indefinitely postponed the plan to
restrict subsidized fuel consumption for private cars that was supposed to
take effect in April of this year.

The House is allowing the government to hike subsidized fuel prices if the
actual oil price is at least 10 percent higher than the price assumed in the
budget. “However, we believe the final decision on raising fuel prices rests
with the President,” Standard Chartered economists Fauzi Ichsan and Eric
Sugandi said in the report.

Hak Bin Chua said fears of social unrest and high inflation will likely
continue to delay Indonesia’s plan to limit the sale of subsidized fuel to
passenger cars. “A more modest fuel price adjustment and subsidy cut is
likely before year-end, replace this more ambitious plan.”

“Political costs implementing the scheme in the current climate may be
high,” he added, citing President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono’s falling
popularity rating to about 66 currently from 85 when he was re-elected to
his second term.

A recent survey by the Indonesian Survey Circle also shows that the
President’s job approval rating reached a new low of 47 percent from 57
percent due to his failure to get things done and the graft allegations
surrounding his Democratic Party.

The BofA Merrill Lynch assessment shows that Indonesia could see energy
subsidies balloon to Rp 178 trillion from the budgeted Rp 136.6 trillion,
widening the fiscal deficit to 2.4 percent of GDP from the projected 1.8
percent. “Slow disbursements of funds are, however, counterbalancing the
higher subsidy costs,” Hak Bin Chua said.

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