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Bulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies
ISSN: 0007-4918 (Print) 1472-7234 (Online) Journal homepage: http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/cbie20
In this issue: Notes from the editor
Ross H. Mcleod
To cite this article: Ross H. Mcleod (2006) In this issue: Notes from the editor , Bulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies, 42:1, 5-6, DOI: 10.1080/00074910600632328
To link to this article: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00074910600632328
Published online: 18 Jan 2007.
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Bulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies, Vol. 42, No. 1, 2006: 5–6
ISSN 0007-4918 print/ISSN 1472-7234 online/06/010005-2 © 2006 Indonesia Project ANU DOI: 10.1080/00074910600632328
IN THIS ISSUE
Notes from the editor
In their Survey of Recent Developments, Ari Kuncoro and Budy Resosudarmo
paint a picture that contains something for both pessimists and optimists. For the pessimists, there is a story of declining economic performance and government failure to meet its own targets. The global economy has been booming, and with it the demand for the natural resource commodities that Indonesia has in abun-dance. Yet output growth is trending down, and that of investment—on which future employment opportunities and incomes depend—is now near to
negli-gible. The high-profi le anti-corruption campaign continues, but the number of
convictions relative to the number of suspected corrupt offi cials at senior levels
remains minuscule. Nor has there been much progress with revising important legislation in areas such as taxation, customs, investment and mining.
More optimistic readers will focus on the future, taking heart from the presi-dent’s recent fi ne-tuning of his economics team in cabinet. The markets have
pro-vided initial positive feedback in the form of signifi cant appreciation of the rupiah
since early December. Moreover, Indonesia’s new democracy has passed a demand-ing test of its resilience, with the government havdemand-ing had suffi cient confi dence to cut
back heavily on wasteful and inequitable fuel subsidies in the face of widespread opposition. Finally, there is promise that progress with the rehabilitation of tsunami and earthquake stricken Aceh and Nias will accelerate signifi cantly in 2006.
While the latest economic data are always of interest, there is also much to be gained from looking at the development process over far longer periods. It is useful, also, to compare the performance of countries that were once at
simi-lar levels of development. Economic historian Pierre van der Eng’s paper
com-pares rice agriculture in colonial Java with that in Japan over the seven decades preceding World War II. It comes as a salutary reminder to see how similar Java and Japan were in 1870, for Indonesia has fallen far behind since then. Van der Eng argues that differences in taxation, public expenditure and agriculture poli-cies, land ownership arrangements and private savings behaviour go a long way toward explaining the very different experiences of the two economies in relation not only to agriculture, but also to their structural transformation away from agri-culture towards manufacturing and services.
My own paper in this issue is the third in a planned series of articles focusing on new economics legislation in Indonesia. It deals with a law introduced in 2004 to establish a new Deposit Guarantee Agency. In contrast with the slow-moving legislation mentioned above, this was enacted with little fuss, since no coherent political interest group felt threatened by it. I argue, however, that it does indeed pose a great threat to the public, because it codifi es a set of procedures to be
fol-lowed in the event of bank failures that bears a striking resemblance to the gov-ernment’s actions when the banking system collapsed in 1998–99. That episode
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6 In this issue: notes from the editor
cost the Indonesian people some $50 billion, creating a mountain of public sector domestic debt. The unsuspecting populace is reassured by the notion that bank deposits are guaranteed, but fails to appreciate that if there is another collapse in the future, the government will be forced, again, to raise taxes and/or cut back its expenditures to cover claims against this guarantee.
The third article in this issue also has a historical fl avour. Written by Gustav Papanek, a long-time adviser to the Indonesian government, it focuses on the popularly held view that small, indigenous businesses need ‘infant industry’ assistance if they are to prosper. This view informed various policies in the 1970s and 80s, and still carries considerable weight today. Although Papanek maintains some sympathy for it, here he presents two case studies from the 1980s that call it into question. One shows government assistance to have been counter-productive, in that it caused the atrophy of the very entrepreneurial skills it intended to promote. The other shows the fi rms in question prospering
in the absence of any assistance.
Tim Stapleton’s paper on the political economy of the sugar industry contin-ues the theme that governments’ economic policies often fail to achieve their nomi-nal objectives. He shows how policies claiming to assist deserving groups—in this case smallholder sugarcane farmers—may have quite different true objectives. The major benefi ciaries of the government’s sugar industry interventions seem to be
its own bureaucrats and sugar importers. Restricting total sugar imports generates rents for fi rms licensed as importers, and these are presumed to be shared between
them and their bureaucrat patrons. Stapleton draws attention to the lack of effec-tive mechanisms for inter-ministerial coordination of policy making in Indonesia. He notes the domination of the Sugar Council by benefi ciaries of the present
regu-latory regime, and goes on to urge its opening up to genuine representation of all of those affected by its recommendations—especially downstream industries for which sugar is an important input, household consumers, and cane farmers (as dis-tinct from the association that purports to speak in their name).
Finally, we come to a review article by another long-term Indonesia observer,
Stephen Grenville, on Soedradjad Djiwandono’s bookabout Bank Indonesia’s role in the fi nancial crisis that began in 1997. Djiwandono has told parts of his story
in the pages of this journal and elsewhere, but this book-length treatment allows him to cover many more issues, and in greater depth. His insider status, as gover-nor of the central bank at the time of the economic shock that brought an end to the three decades long Soeharto era, ensures that this book will provide an invaluable contribution to our understanding of that momentous episode.
This issue of the Bulletin also contains a large and eclectic group of book reviews, on topics extending from studies of the military, Islam, the ethnic Chinese com-munity, and reproductive health issues in post-Soeharto Indonesia to New Order policies toward population and economic liberalisation. Other books reviewed here take a Southeast Asian perspective, on issues as diverse as corporate governance and declining fi sheries. Finally there are two reviews that focus on the developing
world, or large parts of it: one a strong attack on the Jeffrey Sachs recipe for ending poverty, and the other recalling the famous Asia–Africa Conference held in Band-ung just over 50 years ago. Indeed, something for almost everyone.
Selamat membaca!
Ross H. McLeod
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