https://www.newmandala.org/jokowinomics-gambles-with-indonesias-democratisation/


Jokowinomics gambles with Indonesia’s democratisation

JAMES GUILD <https://www.newmandala.org/author/james-guild/> - 30 OCT, 2019


*On 23 October, Indonesian President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo announced the
cabinet for his second term in office, after two days of theatrically
staged visits to the presidential palace by high-profile political,
military and business figures. The whole process made for compelling
melodrama, with the staggering plot twist that Prabowo Subianto, Jokowi’s
opponent in the divisive April election, was named the new Minister of
Defence.*


Reactions to the cabinet have largely tilted toward pessimism, especially
regarding the appointment of Prabowo. Marcus Mietzner took a *very bleak
view*
<https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/risks-aplenty-as-joko-widodo-rolls-out-his-cabinet-picks/news-story/a1204c76321b9ad394f10c846bfdafcd>,
suggesting Prabowo might “use the post to make the military loyal to
him…and destabilise the government from within to eventually profit from
its fall”. Some have decried Prabowo’s inclusion as a usurpation of
Jokowi’s *democratic mandate*
<https://insidestory.org.au/what-was-that-election-for-again/>. Others have
lamented the *lack of female representation*
<https://thediplomat.com/2019/10/what-does-jokowis-new-cabinet-mean-for-indonesia/>.
By and large the take-away is that Jokowi has packed the cabinet, more so
than in his first term, with *political power brokers*
<https://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2019/10/24/politicians-on-economic-team-raise-eyebrows.html?utm_medium=Social&utm_source=Twitter#Echobox=1571974457>
to
whom he is beholden for supporting his campaign or backing him in the DPR,
and that they will use their new suction to plunder the state’s resources.


But is there another way to look at these events, including the composition
of the new cabinet, besides as an unchecked descent into illiberalism and
elite patronage facilitated by a weak president captured by oligarchic
interests? Cabinet appointments in Indonesia have always been a balancing
act and a way of rewarding political allies, as is true in many political
systems. But if we frame recent developments in terms of Jokowi’s narrow
focus on economic development, many of these things snap into sharper focus..


Economic growth was, by and large, the singular focus of Jokowi’s first
term. He came into office in 2014 with big dreams of pumping money into
infrastructure projects and courting private capital, both foreign and
domestic, to propel the economy to 7% growth. Much of that private
investment never materialised and SOEs ended *up pouring billions of
dollars*
<https://www.eastasiaforum.org/2019/08/28/is-indonesias-state-led-development-working/>
into
building new airports, toll roads, hospitals, subsidised housing, ports,
bridges and other infrastructure. When private capital did get involved, it
usually required explicit financial guarantees from the government, or the
invocation of bulked up legal and administrative powers by the state to
speed up land acquisition or circumvent cumbersome regulatory hurdles in
order to reassure skittish investors.


While the economy fell short of the 7% growth target, this state-led
development approach, often referred to as Jokowinomics, has *been broadly
successful* <https://www.newmandala.org/in-defence-of-jokowinomics/> in
increasing the country’s stock of fixed capital. Despite an unreliable
judiciary, regulatory uncertainty, a long history of protectionism and
often incoherent policy-making, Indonesia has seen a wave of big-ticket
infrastructure projects accelerate under Jokowi’s leadership, including
hundreds of kilometres of new toll roads and thousands of megawatts of
additional power capacity. The 44 kilometre drive from Yogyakarta to
Magelang in Central Java, for instance, involves passing three new
hospitals that have gone up in just the last three years.


I believe Jokowi internalised two key lessons from his first term. First,
he believes he materially improved the lives of everyday Indonesians by
focusing on infrastructure development as a driver of economic growth. This
is a view I broadly agree with, though of course the gains from development
have been unevenly distributed and there has probably not been enough
attention paid to human rights or environmental protection. Second, these
gains were only possible by centralising power in Jakarta and leveraging
the power of the state to push through regulatory hurdles and compensate
for market failures created by Indonesia’s inefficient bureaucracy and
cock-eyed institutional architecture.


For his second term in office, Jokowi plans to double down on this
pro-growth platform by continuing to build infrastructure, invest in human
capital, and pass meaningful structural reforms that will actually induce
private investment at scale in a multitude of sectors, not just in
home-grown tech unicorns or coal-fired power plants. I believe this is his
singular, overriding policy goal for the next five years. He is willing to
horse-trade aggressively and make unsavoury political pacts with the ruling
elite in order to see it carried out.


Making this vision a reality, particularly the structural reforms necessary
to truly reduce transaction costs and boost productivity, will require
buy-in from a wide range of stakeholders. It cannot be accomplished through
a series of presidential decrees, but needs the backing of the legislature
and power brokers in the business and political community. The composition
of the new working cabinet is Jokowi laying the groundwork to get the
buy-in he considers necessary for Indonesia to reach its economic potential..

*RELATED*
*What was that election for again?*
<https://www.newmandala.org/what-was-that-election-for-again/>

The make-up of Joko Widodo’s second-term cabinet confirms worrying trends.

*LIAM GAMMON* <https://www.newmandala.org/author/liam/> 25 OCTOBER, 2019

Jokowi has been willing to allow lawmakers to inoculate themselves against
corruption charges, and has given the state security apparatus a free hand
in Papua. He has appointed political party bosses to positions in his
cabinet through which they can extract rents. He has side-lined the
opposition and, in the view of many, removed meaningful accountability.


This is obviously a gamble. Necessary reforms may continue to be held up or
they may not have the anticipated effect—in which case Jokowi will have
traded away his credentials as a reformer for nothing. A very valid
argument also exists that a myopic obsession with economic development at
the *expense of human rights*
<https://www.newmandala.org/jokowi-development/>, environmental protection
and accountability is not a worthwhile trade-off. Surely, in Papua the
answer to every question cannot simply be *pembangunan*. And to pretend
that economic growth is everything echoes the memory of Suharto, who turned
the state into a patronage machine while cloaking it in the rhetoric of
national development.


It is too early to say if the gamble is worth it—if Jokowi has given up too
much in exchange for too little. It is quite possible that Prabowo will
turn out to be a Trojan horse, abusing the military’s large budget and
accruing loyalty in the ranks for his own personal benefit. But Jokowi now
has the support of the Gerindra Party behind him, with less incentive for
them to engage in economic nationalist muckraking. This means it is
possible binding legislation will be passed to eliminate local content
requirements, reduce barriers on foreign investment, and make permitting
and licensing easier (even if this means making hard choices like
eliminating overlapping approval processes that have long provided cushy
jobs to large numbers of civil servants).


In his first term, Jokowi found himself making economic policy mainly via
executive fiat and by leaning into SOEs to do the heavy lifting of
infrastructure development. Yet presidential and ministerial decrees can
only go so far in driving sustainable growth, and the metastasizing of the
state-owned sector cannot continue unchecked forever. Eventually private
capital needs to step in and pick up some of the slack, and as the economy
matures and develops the labour pool will require more high-skilled workers
who can drive productivity gains. Jokowi is gambling that letting the foxes
into the henhouse will give him policies and reforms that can make those
things happen.


The question that will linger over the next five years is not whether the
foxes are in the henhouse—they clearly are. The question is whether letting
them in was worth it, and how many hens might get eaten along the way.

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