angin dari surga atau sekedar upaya pemerintah sekarang, khususnya SBY,
untuk meningkatkan popularitasnya ? maklum, kan menjelang pemilu....
 
Pujian seperti ini juga pernah terlontar dari analis luar, tapi gak lama 
kemudian krismon.
 
salam,
TfR

http://taufikurahman.wordpress.com

--- On Sun, 10/19/08, Tri Desmana R <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

From: Tri Desmana R <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [dago_permai] Fw: [Muslim3Bdg] Indonesia Mengikuti Jejak India 
(Sebagai Raksasa Ekonomi Asia) ?
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Sunday, October 19, 2008, 10:18 PM






Optimisme dari Newsweek.
Wassalam wr wb

--trides--

Bismillah.
Assalamu'alaykum wr. wb.

Ada optimisme dari ulasan Newsweek tentang Indonesia yang katanya akan 
mengikuti jejak India sebagai raksasa ekonomi Asia kedua setelah Cina dengan 
pertumbuhan ekonomi tahunan 8-9% (India), sementara Cina mencapai lebih dari 
10%. Semoga saja memang benar.

Kalau mau mengecek ke situs aslinya :
http://www.newsweek .com/id/163572
http://www.newsweek .com/id/163572/ page/2

Indonesia As the New India

This stable democracy with a hot market economy resembles another Asian 
giant in the 1990s.

By George Wehrfritz and Solenn Honorine | NEWSWEEK
Published Oct 11, 2008
>From the magazine issue dated Oct 20, 2008

Jakarta today could be any of Asia's 21st-century boomtowns. The malls buzz, 
traffic snarls and modern office towers dominate the skyline. It all feels 
profoundly normal—but that's big progress in a place that, barely ten years 
ago, seemed destined for ruin. Following the fall of longtime strongman 
Suharto, and with Indonesia reeling from the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis, 
many analysts feared that Asia's third-biggest country (population: 235 
million) would go the way of Yugoslavia. Instead, it has become a cohesive, 
robust and exuberantly democratic moderate Muslim nation. Things are so 
buoyant that Indonesia invites comparison to another Asian giant: India.

Both remain corrupt, chaotic and excruciatingly complex. Yet each is also an 
attractive emerging economy, and in India's case, a star of the developing 
world. Could Indonesia be next? Its economy grew by 6.3 percent last year, 
the main stock exchange ranks among the world's best performers since 2003 
and last year foreign direct investment nearly tripled, to a respectable $4 
billion. All of which resembles India in the 1990s, when reforms 
kick-started a potentially massive economy—though outsiders barely noticed 
until the IT sector took off and growth passed 8 percent. In Indonesia, the 
key sectors are energy, mining and soft commodities like rubber, palm oil 
and cocoa. And in an exclusive interview, President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono 
says he sees no inherent reason why a big democracy like his can't grow as 
fast China, which has posted 10 percent growth rates in recent years.

That would put Indonesia on a lot of magazine covers. In fact, the country 
already looks better than India in two ways: its per capita income ($3,348) 
is a third higher, and thanks to Jakarta's fiscal austerity, it now boasts 
one of the lowest debt ratios in the world. "After ten years of 
restructuring, Southeast Asia's largest economy is in great shape," says 
Nicholas Cashmore, CLSA's country head and chief researcher in Jakarta.
Indonesia's political turnaround has been just as dramatic as its economic 
one. The president, known universally as SBY, is a former general who was 
elected in mid-2004 and has since become the country's most effective 
democratic leader. In four years, he has helped Indonesia roll up its 
terrorist problem and rebuild from the 2004 tsunami. Less appreciated (but 
more enduring), he has backed a profound political decentralization program, 
empowering hundreds of local administrations. Jakarta now rules by 
consensus, not decree. This has its downsides: it makes it impossible to 
railroad through big national development projects of the sort China is 
famous for. As SBY himself admits, "in many circumstances, we face local 
communities that don't agree with government projects, so we have to 
convince them. I do not think the system is wrong. In a democracy like ours, 
change, reform and resistance are normal."

The country's largest parties now basically agree on economic policy and the 
need to reduce corruption, improve the rule of law and make government more 
efficient. Key democratic institutions—including a free press, impartial 
courts and a legislature chosen by voters—are remarkably robust, and the 
once all-powerful military has largely removed itself from politics. 
Meanwhile, regional autonomy has triggered economic booms at the periphery, 
in contrast to the typical Southeast Asian model. "From the U.S., the U.K. 
or even Hong Kong," writes Cashmore, "it is difficult to comprehend the 
magnitude of Indonesia's potential [or] appreciate just how much more there 
is to the country beyond Jakarta." By his calculation, greater Jakarta now 
accounts for just 15 percent of Indonesia's GDP, a relatively small share 
compared to other Asian capitals.

Indonesia's accomplishments are all the more impressive when you remember 
how far and fast the country has come. The fall of Suharto's New Order (a 
highly centralized system that vested absolute power in the dictator and his 
cronies) 10 years ago was accompanied by a financial meltdown so severe that 
the IMF had to step in. Indonesia also faced fierce separatist insurgencies, 
Christian-Muslim violence and Islamic extremism underscored by the 2002 Bali 
bombing. The country seemed to be teetering on the brink of wholesale 
disintegration. Yet today, as Australian National University economist 
Andrew MacIntyre and the Asia Foundation's Douglas Ramage argued in a recent 
report, observers should start thinking of Indonesia "as a normal country 
grappling with challenges common to other large, middle-income, developing 
democracies—not unlike India, Mexico or Brazil."
In some ways Indonesia's democracy is even more sophisticated than those 
other states'. Take decentralization. Jakarta, like New Delhi, oversees 
national defense, internal security, finance, foreign policy and the justice 
system. But unlike the Indian government, Indonesia's—thanks to two "big 
bang" reform packages passed in 2001 and 2006, and supported by SBY—must now 
coordinate most other activities through the country's 33 provinces and 
nearly 500 local administrations, where popularly elected leaders make 
policy, manage two thirds of all civil servants and oversee everything from 
schools to economic development. As World Bank economists Wolfgang Fengler 
and Bert Hofman observe in a soon-to-be-publishe d study, Indonesia has 
turned itself from "one of the most centralized countries in the world into 
one of the more decentralized ones."

To see what that means on the ground, follow the money. Under a new fiscal 
system implemented in 2001, regions are allocated a huge slice of the 
country's budget to spend more or less as they please. Poor and remote areas 
receive the most per capita, and those with abundant natural resources get 
shared extraction revenues. According to the World Bank, regional 
governments in Indonesia now account for 36 percent of all public 
expenditures, compared with an average of just 14 percent in all developing 
countries. And locals can promote whatever agendas they choose. "This is the 
real revolution," says Erman Rahman, who heads the World Bank's local 
governance initiatives in the country. Regions with proactive leaders have 
become laboratories of experimentation from which innovative 
anti-corruption, public-health and economic-growth initiatives have emerged. 
For his part, SBY has enabled this process by maintaining macroeconomic 
discipline and political
stability. And his support for local autonomy has undermined separatism, 
extremism and communal violence.

One regional pioneer, Gamawan Fauzi, took power in West Sumatra's Solok 
region in 2001 and quickly created a one-stop shop for government services, 
replacing an opaque and complex web of offices and brokers. Fauzi's concept 
was to bring all government services under a single roof, post set fees, 
promote autopayment and guarantee prompt service as a means of rooting out 
corruption. And it has worked: the model has since been emulated across 
Indonesia, and Transparency International reports that corruption, while 
still high, has been reduced substantially.

Other local leaders have earned fame by initiating innovative new programs. 
Gede Putrayasa, who heads the poorest of nine regencies on the tourist 
island Bali, won office in 2001 on a pledge to provide universal medical 
insurance and free education. The latter proved relatively easy (he simply 
waived the 5,000 rupiah monthly fees), but improving health care without 
breaking the local budget was tougher. Under the old system, funds went to 
hospitals and local administrators, who did things like stockpile 
pharmaceuticals procured from companies that paid kickbacks. Putrayasa's 
innovation: provide every local household free health insurance that 
compensates clinics for services actually provided. "There's not a big 
savings," says Putrayasa, "but everyone is covered and the efficiency is 
much better because there is no longer any corruption."

Such reforms have stimulated economic growth. Putrayasa's health-care and 
education initiatives (as well as a jobs program that sends underemployed 
rice farmers to Japan) have reduced the local poverty rate fourfold to just 
5.5 percent today. Better local governance has also made Indonesia a major 
beneficiary of the global soft commodity boom. Together, the value of its 
four largest crops—rubber, coconut, palm oil and cocoa—rose from $2.3 
billion in 2000 to an estimated $19 billion in 2008, CLSA calculates. That's 
thanks to local leaders like Fadel Muhammad, governor of the hardscrabble 
province of Gorontalo on the island Sulawesi, who turned his constituents 
into the country's best corn farmers by deploying teams of agricultural 
consultants; providing subsidized seeds, fertilizers and rental machinery to 
farmers; and giving cash rewards to village leaders who boost yields. Since 
2002, Gorontalo's poverty rate has shrunk from 49 to 29 percent.

Of course, decentralization has its problems. Analysts and watchdog groups 
say that while the number of effective leaders in the 500 local 
administrations has spiked from a handful to 50 or more under SBY, they are 
sometimes particularly effective at blocking necessary national reforms and 
projects. The result, says Ramage, is that progress will be "evolutionary, 
not revolutionary. " For example, the Trans Java highway, which would link 
Jakarta with Indonesia's second-largest city, Surabaya, was launched in 2004 
with a target completion date of 2009, but is still only 10 percent done 
because of local opposition.

Nonetheless, Indonesia has already become a beacon of stability in Southeast 
Asia and the Islamic world. Its antiterrorism campaign—Indonesia has shut 
radical madrassas, established an effective counterterrorism force and 
cracked down hard on suspected cells, while also avoiding human-rights 
abuses—is seen as a model for the region. And as the world's most populous 
Muslim country, Indonesia's democratization has implications from Morocco to 
Mindanao in that it exemplifies an alternative to zealotry, intolerance and 
extremism. "Indonesia is not immune to radicalism we see worldwide, but this 
is exactly why we must maintain our identity as a moderate, tolerant 
nation," says Yudhoyono. "It enables us to prevent a clash of 
civilizations. "

SBY is likely to win re-election next year, but even if he loses, analysts 
don't expect any sharp change in policy, because all the major political 
camps in Jakarta agree on the current reform blueprint. Even India does not 
enjoy that kind of stable consensus on how to catch China.

With Greg Hunt in Hong Kong

Wassalam.

(Seno Pradono)

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