Monday, March 12, 2007

Idle funds threaten macroeconomic stability

Wednesday, March 07, 2007 Vincent Lingga, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta


The banks will publish their audited financial statements for 2006 within the next few weeks. The statements will mostly show bigger profits, but that doesn't mean the banks' managements should be commended for jobs well done.

The credit should instead go to Bank Indonesia, the nation's central bank, which had "been forced" to contribute more to banks' earnings.

Bank Indonesia Governor Burhanuddin Abdullah should indeed feel frustrated, since the new package of regulations he issued early last year to encourage bank lending has turned out to be ineffective. He should now work harder to soak up excess liquidity by issuing more Bank Indonesia Certificates (SBIs) and paying quite dearly for this instrument.

Even though many businesses are starved of finances, most major banks still prefer investing their excess funds in debt market instruments, notably risk-free SBIs and government bonds, instead of pumping them into the real economy.

It is unusual for a central bank governor to be so straightforward in airing a pessimistic outlook. But that was what Burhanuddin did last week. Apparently fed up with the slowness of the government's implementation of its reform policies, he sounded the alarm bell, warning of a weaker economy if banks remain inordinately risk-averse in their lending operations.

It is indeed a frustrating job for the central bank governor because, the more banks invest in SBIs, the higher the cost of Bank Indonesia's monetary market operations. He estimated the interest costs of SBIs this year alone at Rp 25 trillion.

While major banks pay only between seven to eight percent interest on time deposits, SBIs pay 9.25 percent. No wonder banks prefer investing their funds in SBIs. They can get more than 1.25 percentage points in interest revenue without doing anything. But investing in SBIs contributes nothing to economic growth.

As of last month, outstanding SBIs totaled almost Rp 240 trillion (US$25.8 billion). Burhanuddin estimated this amount could increase to over Rp 300 trillion by later this year if bank lending did not expand significantly.

The central bank governor certainly realized he could not jawbone commercial banks to expand their lending if business risks remain high and the overall investment climate remains highly adverse. Even the reduction of the central bank's benchmark short-term interest rate to 9 percent Tuesday will not be effective in prompting more lending.

It would be a suicide for banks to aggressively lend to businesses with unusually high risks, especially now the central bank is imposing higher standards of capital and overall credit risk management.

There is no a panacea to stimulate credit expansion. Bank lending cannot be accelerated by decree. The most effective way to stimulate bank lending is to improve the overall investment climate. Without significant improvements in the business climate the risk of bank credits turning sour will remain high.

Excess liquidity at banks is inflicting another cost on the economy. The huge sum of funds invested in SBIs and government bonds impose risks on macroeconomic stability. This is because idle money can immediately be used as ammunition for speculative attacks on the rupiah in the foreign exchange market.

Even more worrisome is the fact that, due to the unfavorable business climate, most foreign investment entering the country now consists of short-term portfolio capital. This hot money, currently estimated at nearly Rp 590 trillion, including Rp 505 trillion in stock holdings, Rp 55.5 trillion in government bonds and nearly Rp 25 trillion in SBIs, is another source of ammunition for speculative trading on the foreign exchange and stock markets.

The 3.5 percent decline in the Jakarta stock market composite index Monday had nothing to do with Indonesian economic fundamentals. The fall was due to changes in foreign investor sentiment caused by a perceived increase in the downside risk of the U.S. economy and a possible rise in Japan's interest rate.

This development is just more evidence that Indonesia's financial market and rupiah have become highly vulnerable to speculative attacks. This has been due to the steady increase in the amount of excess liquidity at the banks and in foreign portfolio capital inflows.

It should be needless to remind the government that the most effective way to push this excess liquidity into the real economy -- where it can finance the construction of factories and infrastructure -- is to reduce the country's high business risk by passing more reforms.

Friday, March 9, 2007

Let us cheer, not fear, the arrival of foreign banks

Wednesday, February 28, 2007 Vincent Lingga, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta

The dilution of the deposit insurance scheme to a maximum of Rp 100 million (US$10,500) per account next month will unleash stronger market forces to screen banks, as depositors will have to be more careful about choosing the financial institutions they deal with.

Depositors with savings of up to Rp 2 billion have often been influenced more by the level of interest rates or the location of the bank than the soundness of the financial institution. They can rest assured that whatever may happen to the bank, all their savings will be reimbursed by the government.

This narrower deposit-guarantee program and the higher capital standards -- minimum capital of Rp 80 billion this year and Rp 100 billion by 2010 -- as well as the tougher risk management imposed by Bank Indonesia will certainly speed up the consolidation of the banking industry.

Obviously, the consolidation process will reduce the number of banks, now around 130, either through mergers or acquisitions. If last year is any guide, more local banks will be acquired by foreign investors. Last year foreign investors bought seven small banks.

This trend will undoubtedly heighten the concerns about increasing foreign domination of the banking industry, whipping up nationalist sentiments against what is seen as outside control of a vital service industry.

However, there is nothing much to worry about, because the foreign banks must still operate by the rules of the central bank, Bank Indonesia.

Higher foreign investor interest in the financial services industry should instead be welcomed as a vote of confidence in the long-term outlook of Indonesia's economy. Foreign investors would not be willing to stake out more capital in the financial sector if the economic outlook were poor. The financial services industry can grow soundly only in an expanding economy.

Even more important, the experiences of most other countries have proven the great benefits of the entry of major international banks to the development of a sound domestic financial industry. Banks are the heart that pumps oxygen and lifeblood throughout the economy.

Strategic investors with good reputations will accelerate the operational restructuring of banks as they bring in expertise, technology, credibility and better risk management.

Look at how all the big nationalized banks -- Bank BCA, Bank Niaga, Bank Danamon, Bank International Indonesia, Bank Lippo and Bank Permata -- which were acquired by investors from the U.S., Singapore, Malaysia, South Korea, Germany and Britain, have improved by strengthening their governance. On the other side, state banks such as Bank Mandiri and Bank BNI are still struggling with large amounts of non-performing loans and remain vulnerable to interference from politicians and senior officials.

A bank is not just a business entity in the ordinary sense, given its fiduciary responsibility, the multiplicity of transactions it does and its key function within the economy.

That is why the principles for good corporate governance for banks are much more comprehensive than those for other commercial entities. Good governance and corporate responsibility are prerequisites for the integrity and credibility of market institutions.

For that reason, not everybody who has tons of money can have controlling ownership of a bank. Those who want to become majority owners and commissioners have to pass the central bank's fit-and-proper test to assess their technical competence and integrity.

Because of their special role, banks are put under a multi-layer supervisory mechanism. Banks are an institution of trust, and the domestic banking industry, which collapsed in 1998 under bad governance practices, badly needs to regain the public's full trust.

Foreign banks, which together now control almost 50 percent of the banking industry's assets, can help accelerate reforms in risk management, corporate governance and competitiveness. In return, these foreign players can tap the attractive growth opportunities the country offers.

Regardless of ownership issues, however, the most important step of all is for the Finance Ministry and Bank Indonesia to focus on further strengthening the systems that supervise and regulate the financial services industry.


MEET THE READERS: Fauzi Ichsan (center), a senior economist with Standard Chartered Bank, speaks Wednesday at a readers' gathering of The Jakarta Post, as BCA commissioner Cyrillius Herinowo (right) looks on. The event, moderated by the Post's senior editor Vincent Lingga and titled "An Evening with the Post: Fear of Foreign Banks Domination: Justified or Misguided?" was held at Blow Fish Cafe in Mulia Tower, Jakarta. (JP/J. Adiguna)

State minister dreams of cutting the number of SOEs

Monday, February 26, 2007 Vincent Lingga, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta

Judging by the government's privatization record over the past three years, the plan revealed by State Minister for State Enterprises Sugiharto last week to slash the number of state companies from almost 140 to 69 within three years is something of a pipe dream.

Sugiharto has never been able to meet the privatization target set in the annual state budget, let alone coming plans that have yet to be consulted with various ministries, the House and other stakeholders, including trade unions at state companies.

It was almost two years ago that Sugiharto launched a blueprint on the reform of state enterprises through mergers, divestments or outright liquidations, but nothing seems to have come of it.

Until last week, that is, when he suddenly came out with an ambitious target for government divestments -- plans to reduce the number of state companies by 37 this year, by 15 in 2008 and by 18 in 2009, while only one state company (PT Perusahaan Gas Negara) had been privatized over the past two years.

Even this gas company's initial public offering last year was fraught with allegations of insider trading and inadequate disclosure regarding income projection.

No one disagrees with the rationale behind the reform program. There are simply too many state companies. The government really does not have any reason to involve itself in so many different businesses that could be run efficiently by private firms.

The blunt fact is that most state companies have been grossly inefficient, with lax internal controls, poor accounting standards and practices and are highly vulnerable to arbitrary government interference. No wonder, as latest financial reports have shown, most state companies are less profitable than their private-sector competitors, and more than one-fifth of them are losing money.

However, not a single one of the successive governments over the past ten years has demonstrated any sense of urgency to reform state companies -- through privatization, mergers or liquidation -- not even during the height of the economic crisis from 1998 to 2002, when the government was having a severe liquidity crisis.

Every time a new government comes to power, it claims the reform of state companies is one of its top priorities, fully aware of the great benefits of privatization. But the promise is soon forgotten, and it is back to business as usual for officials and politicians -- retaining state enterprises as their cash cows.

The target set by Sugiharto is even more unfeasible because as, the minister himself said, the privatization, merger or liquidation plan will have to go through a complex process of consultations with the various technical ministries and the House of Representatives, as well as other stakeholders, such as employees.

True, privatization is fundamentally a political transformation and an uphill task for that matter, as it exacts a major change in the government's role in the economy and in society as a whole.However, there is no reason why every government divestment plan should be approved by all stakeholders, as long as its process is transparent and accountable according to the step-by-step procedures already agreed on by the inter-ministerial Privatization Committee and the House of Representatives.

Requiring the approval or support of so many different ministries and trade unions will only make the program vulnerable to sabotage by vested-interest groups bent on maintain state enterprises for their own financial benefit.

What is urgently needed is a broad legal and political framework for the reform program and clear-cut guidelines on which companies would be best privatized through the stock market, which through strategic sales (private placement) and which ones should be merged or liquidated.

This framework should be supplemented with standard operational procedures to secure transparency and accountability and to close any loopholes that may still be exploited by corrupt officials.

Admittedly, privatization, like other reform measures, may initially cause destabilizing impacts as redundant employees and complacent managers in inefficient companies are afraid of losing jobs, and many senior officials with political power over state enterprises are worried about losing their money trees.

This is where the executive leadership is needed to enlighten all the stakeholders of the benefits of the reform of state companies to the national economy. This is also the reason why we are pessimistic about Sugiharto's ambitious program, as the present government rarely demonstrates its leadership when it is needed to generate optimism and market confidence

Sunday, December 24, 2006

Bangkok's poorly designed capital control rocks stock markets

Friday, December 22, 2006 Vincent Lingga, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta

Thailand's imposition of foreign exchange controls that caused a drop of almost 20 percent in local stock prices and systemic, yet smaller falls in other Asian markets Tuesday, is an example of a well-intentioned, but poorly designed and ill-timed policy.

For Thailand to slam controls on its capital account less than three months after the military coup is certainly counterproductive, especially because the military-appointed government has yet to build up its credibility in the market.

The stock market in Bangkok and other Asian exchanges did rally back Wednesday, recouping most of their losses from the previous day, after the Thai government rescinded the capital controls.

However, the Thai attempt to control capital foreign exchange flows will nevertheless resurrect the debate on the merits and drawbacks of controlling short-term capital inflows.

It was strategic, though, for Indonesian Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati and Bank Indonesia Governor Burhanuddin Abdullah to immediately and repeatedly reassure the market on Tuesday and Wednesday of Indonesia's strong commitment to upholding its fully open capital account.

Bank Indonesia has issued several regulations to minimize the risks of currency speculation against the rupiah without compromising its open capital account. In 2005, the central bank moved to limit foreign exchange derivative transactions with foreign counterparts against the rupiah to a maximum of US$1 million and to cap dollar purchases in outright forward transactions and swaps at $1 million.

The central bank also imposed a three-month minimum investment hedging period on foreign exchange transactions. This means that investors with underlying investment in Indonesia must keep their funds in the country for at least three months. Hedging transactions subjected to this new regulation include outright forward transactions, swaps and call and put options.

These moves aim to prevent wild volatility of the rupiah by reducing the speculative element in the currency market, by among other things decreasing the inflow of hot money to the country.
The return in droves of foreign portfolio investors to the Asian financial market after the 1997
financial crisis has raised great concern about market vulnerability to boom and bust cycles. Thai authorities have been apprehensive over the steady appreciation of its currency, the baht, and worried about the threat of currency speculation.

The reasons for fully liberalizing capital flows were partly pragmatic, as technological innovations, such as new financial instruments, made it easier to circumvent capital controls.
In Indonesia in particular, controls on foreign exchange flows could be highly problematic and vulnerable to corruption, due to the inadequate institutional capacity and high level of venality within the government bureaucracy.

Most studies have also concluded that liberalizing foreign exchange flows could stimulate growth by reducing distortions and enhancing access to foreign financing, as Thailand and Indonesia have proven with the bullish sentiments in their capital markets.

An open capital account may improve economic performance over the business cycle by encouraging more prudent domestic macroeconomic and financial policies, as well as improving short-term access to financing.

Policymakers in countries such as Indonesia with an open capital account are forced to adopt prudent policies because investors are free to bring their money elsewhere, whereas policymakers in countries with capital controls can pursue less prudent policies without being afraid of facing sudden massive withdrawals of funds, at least in the short run.

The potential long-run benefits of an open capital account must, however, be weighed against immediate costs: a country's vulnerability to global shocks or to sudden changes in investor sentiment. Capital flows are subject to pronounced cycles that may induce boom and bust cycles in production and investment.

One source of vulnerability is a mismatching of maturities or currencies, which makes recipient countries illiquid. Such a severe liquidity shortage makes a system vulnerable to panics, while policymakers' options are severely restricted, as painfully apparent in Indonesia during the height of its financial crisis in early 1998.

With capital controls, a central bank can set both the interest rate and the exchange rate simultaneously, at the cost of limiting capital inflows that could finance productive activity.
The question is do the benefits of liberalizing outweigh the costs?

As Indonesia's experience since the early 1980s have proven, the benefits seem to far exceed the costs.

Chile tried to control short-term (portfolio) capital inflows in 1991 by imposing an unremunerated reserve requirement (URR), first on foreign borrowing (except trade credit) and later on short-term portfolio inflows (foreign currency deposits in commercial banks and potentially speculative foreign direct investment).
The reserve requirement was raised from 20 percent to 30 percent. A minimum stay requirement for direct and portfolio investment from abroad also was imposed.

But these controls seemed to be less-than effective because investors found ways to circumvent the controls. The problems lie mostly in the difficulties in the design and application of capital controls.

Capitalizing on the Hong Kong platform

Friday, December 08, 2006, The Jakarta Post

The Hong Kong Trade Development Council (HKTDC) invited journalists from Australia, Asia and Europe, including The Jakarta Post's Vincent Lingga, to attend the 7th Hong Kong Forum of business associations from around the world. The meeting discussed the future role of Hong Kong amid the astronomical growth of mainland China's economy, which will probably become the second largest in the world within three to four years. Below are his reports.
Its integration into the global supply chain, its strategic location in the center of Asia and its position as the gateway to the world's fourth largest economy, China, have been and will continue to be the main advantages Hong Kong offers investors.

But the fundamentals that will sustain and even increase Hong Kong's role as the leading trading and financial center in Asia, despite the fantastic growth of China's Shenzhen, Shanghai and Beijing, are what senior economist Helen Chan calls the Hong Kong brand.

Ms Chan, with the Hong Kong Finance Secretary's Office, describes the key components of the Hong Kong brand: a strong rule of law, good governance, first class infrastructure and a credible financial services regulatory system.

Hong Kong Trade Development Council (HKTDC) Chairman Peter Woo uses a slightly different term: the Hong Kong Platform.

The recent issuance of the world's largest initial public offering, US$16 billion worth of shares, on the Hong Kong stock exchange is another indicator of Hong Kong's growing global role.

The Hong Kong equity market is the second largest capital market in Asia and the fourth in the world. With a total market capitalization of over $1.5 trillion, it raised $50 billion in the first 10 months of this year alone.

"As of October, 355 mainland Chinese enterprises were listed in Hong Kong, representing one third of the total number of listed companies and 46 percent of the total market capitalization," Financial Secretary Henry Tang told the Hong Kong Forum. In addition, Tang said, Hong Kong also is a leader in asset management, with $580 billion worth of business last year.

Hong Kong's extensive financial and business service cluster is unique in Asia for its breadth, depth, sophistication and mix of international and local firms. This cluster includes private banking, fund management, corporate finance, currency trading, insurance, venture capital finance, direct corporate investment and stock brokerage as well as support services such as legal, accounting, management consulting, executive search, public relations, advertising, communications and information technology support.

"Hong Kong will remain the leading financial and trading center in Asia," says Bramono Dwiedjanto, general manager of the state-owned Bank Negara Indonesia (BNI), which has operated a full branch in Hong Kong since 1962.

Dwiedjanto told The Jakarta Post last week that a number of financial and trading companies had moved their offices to Singapore immediately after the 1997 financial crisis in East Asia. But most of them have returned to Hong Kong due to its advantages.

" I don't think Singapore will ever take over Hong Kong's position," added Dwiedjanto, who worked for two years at the BNI branch in Singapore.

"Our long international business experience and our knowledge of China make us the best partners for foreign companies to do business with or in China, and for mainland Chinese companies to do business with the outside world," said HKTDC Executive Director Fred Lam.
Lam acknowledged that several cities in China have also been developing as major financial and trade centers.

"But it is not a zero-sum game between Hong Kong, Shenzhen, Shanghai or Beijing. They will supplement each other," Lam said.

Hong Kong is thus poised to play a pivotal role in the modernization of the Chinese economy.
There has been lingering concern about the sustainability of China's economic miracle under its one-party authoritarian system.

But almost 30 years after the opening of China's economy to the outside world, and nearly ten years after Hong Kong's reunification with China, their economic integration is proceeding quickly and smoothly. The "one country, two systems" principle has allowed Hong Kong to retain its capitalist economy and its own legal system.

Clusters of industries

Today many manufacturing companies have moved out of Hong Kong in search of lower-cost land and labor, notably to the Pearl River Delta region in southern China. Still, many industries remain active in Hong Kong, operating their local offices as trading companies and business headquarters that support offshore production.

They mastermind and control the production process from their headquarters in Hong Kong, making the most of location advantages and division of labor.

The relocation of Hong Kong's industry should thus be viewed as an expansion of Hong Kong's industrial sector, according to a 2005 study by Sung Yun Wing and Chou Win Lin of the Chinese University of Hong Kong.

Hong Kong is also a favorite base for the Asian regional headquarters and offices of foreign companies.

" As of October, there were almost 4,000 regional headquarters or offices of foreign companies operating in Hong Kong," said Mark Michelson, an associate director of InvestHK, Hong Kong's investment promotion body.

Superb logistics

Hong Kong manufacturers and exporters have increasingly played the role of integrators, matching demand from North America or Europe with sources of supply throughout Asia and beyond.

Hong Kong can fill this need because it is home to a number of dynamic clusters of interrelated industries that draw on common skill bases and can reinforce each other's competitive positions.
This role was described by Michael J. Enright, Edith E. Scott and Ka-mun Chang in their book,
The Greater Pearl River Delta and the Rise of China. A Hong Kong company might help a garment company in the United States design its autumn collection, for example, and then organize purchasing, manufacturing and logistics to get the product onto retail shelves on time, meeting quality and budget specifications.

Hong Kong's infrastructure and real estate development cluster links property and construction groups with engineers, architects, surveyors and interior designers. Its seaport is among the world's busiest and most efficient container ports.
Hong Kong also offers legal expertise in the area of air and maritime regulations and dispute resolution, as well as finance and insurance for air and sea cargo.

Pearl River Delta

One of the regions that has benefited from Hong Kong's position as a financial and trade center is the Pearl River Delta (PRD), one of the most economically dynamic regions on the Chinese mainland.

PRD has developed into a manufacturing center of global importance and one of the world's fastest growing economic regions, thanks largely to the role of Hong Kong as an international financial and supply chain management center.

PRD, Hong Kong and Macao are now known as the Greater Pearl River Delta economic zone.
While Hong Kong, with a population of only seven million, has developed as a leading center for management, coordination, finance, information and business services, PRD, with a population of more than 60 million, has emerged as a manufacturing powerhouse.

"Greater Pearl River Delta, with a $410 billion gross domestic product last year, accounted for one-fifth of China's $2.2 trillion economy," said economist Chan.

The attractiveness of mainland China, especially its southern region, has shifted investor interest from Southeast Asia to Northeast Asia. Hong Kong has gained a bigger share of these investments, at the expense of Singapore, thanks to its infrastructure, clear and transparent rules and regulations, international access and proximity to large markets.

Since the 1997 Asian financial crisis, major international financial service companies have increasingly concentrated their regional activities in Hong Kong.

The emergence of the PRD region has allowed Hong Kong companies to decentralize many activities from Hong Kong into the surrounding areas. PRD thus accounted for the bulk of Hong Kong-mainland China trade, which totaled $265 billion last year.

Hong Kong has cumulatively invested more than $260 billion in the mainland, mostly in manufacturing plants in the PRD region.

"Some 75 percent of the estimated 80,000 factories established in the PRD region since the late 1970s have been owned by Hong Kong companies," said Michelson.

Future role

In this changing environment, Hong Kong firms may move further up the value chain, upgrading their services and assuming more front- and back-end roles, such as contributing to product design and development.

China's participation in the World Trade Organization and the development of industries in the Pearl River Delta region will provide a greater scope for high-value activities linking these industries through Hong Kong to the rest of the world.

These developments will also provide additional opportunities for foreign investment and the location of management activities for a wider range of multinational companies in Hong Kong. Hence, Hong Kong is positioned to perform high value-added managerial, financial, coordination and information activities across more industries.

"High-technology, research and development activities should be the next dimension of our economy to make Hong Kong not only the trade and financial but also the technology center in Asia," HKTDC Chairman Peter Woo said at the Hong Kong Forum last week.

Hong Kong's economy will likely grow to look more like those of other major cities in developed countries such as Tokyo, New York and London. These global centers thrive on handling flows of knowledge, information, goods and finance, acting as the nodes at which economic activities are managed and financed.

Monday, December 11, 2006

Agricultural revitalization key to cutting poverty

Monday, December 11, 2006 Vincent Lingga, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta

The findings of the latest World Bank study to the effect that almost 70 percent of the poor in Indonesia live in rural areas and 64 percent work in agriculture boil down to a central message: the fight against poverty should be waged mainly on the rural front.

This does not, however, mean that the focus should be entirely on agriculture as rural non-farm economic activities (micro and small enterprises) also play an increasingly important role as sources of livelihood for villagers.

Although agriculture's contribution to national gross domestic product has declined to less than 20 percent, its direct and indirect contributions to the national economy remain significant through its forward and backward production, distribution and consumption linkages.
Put another way, the agricultural growth multiplier quantifies the impact of an increase in income in the agricultural sector on income growth in other sectors.

However, despite the vital role of agriculture in poverty alleviation, it is quite difficult to see how the Agricultural Revitalization Program of President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, launched in July 2005, connects with the new poverty reduction strategy -- the Community Empowerment Program -- that Coordinating Minister for People's Welfare Aburizal Bakrie described at a national poverty conference here last week.

Disappointingly, not a single minister, not even the agriculture minister, has elaborated on the agriculture-revitalization concept after its introduction by Aburizal Bakrie, the then coordinating minister for the economy, almost 18 months ago.

The World Bank report Making the new Indonesia work for the Poor, which was launched last week, reemphasized the vital need for higher productivity in the agriculture sector and rural non-farm small enterprises.

The report endorses the conclusions of similar studies by other domestic and foreign institutions, which have concluded that farmers' incomes can no longer be improved significantly by focusing on such staple crops as rice, cassava, soybean, sugar and corn as such crops will do little to provide additional employment and income growth due to diminishing productivity gains, especially in Java, where most farmers till less than half a hectare.

The problem, though, is that shifting to higher value agricultural activities, such as forestry and horticulture requires high-yield seeds, agriculture extension services, better infrastructure (such as rural roads), up-to-date information flows, market facilities and electricity.
Rural infrastructure is quite vital as in both agriculture and the rural non-farm economy, opportunities for growth can be generated by greater linkages with the urban economy and export markets.

Future agricultural growth will depend largely on urban and international demand for high value agricultural produce. In other words, smooth transportation is vital to facilitating linkages with the farm economy and stimulating the development of rural small enterprises.

The sad reality, however, is that farmers' access to basic services and markets has sharply deteriorated as the result of an acute lack of maintenance of the rural road network since 1998. Likewise, the scope and extent of agriculture extension services has declined since decentralization.
No wonder, agricultural total factor productivity has declined steadily since 1993, according to the World Bank report.

Regional administrations, which under local autonomy play a key role in the provision of both basic services and rural infrastructure, often do not understand the nature and importance of linkages between agriculture and the non-farm economy.

There is nothing wrong with the Community Empowerment Program concept. It will be more effective as it promotes the empowerment and involvement of poor people in conceiving programs, as well as transparent budgeting rules, processes and procedures, good-governance practices and increased accountability.

The program, however, will be less effective in alleviating poverty if it is not supported by strong and competent institutions, and an enabling environment for the revitalization of agriculture and the development of agribusiness in its broadest sense. Yet more challenging is that fact that the responsibility for creating such an enabling climate rests squarely with local government.

The message that one can really draw from the main recommendations of the World Bank study is that poverty alleviation should incorporate the broad objective of empowering farmers (improving their incomes) and the rural community through the development of the farm and non-farm economy, the improvement of rural infrastructure and the provision of basic services.
The revitalization of the agricultural sector will require tight ministerial coordination and cooperation with local administrations in mobilizing resources for the development of such basic infrastructure as roads, markets, processing facilities, rural financial institutions, farm research stations designed to meet area-specific conditions, and technical farm extension services.
The agriculture extension service should be decentralized and be complemented by a conducive business environment to stimulate private investment in the propagation of high-yield seeds for high value crops.

The questions now are twofold: how will the revitalization of the agriculture sector be integrated into the Community Empowerment Program, and which minister will be responsible for coordinating the government functions in all of the multidimensional activities involved in the Community Empowerment Program? Will it be the coordinating minister for people's welfare, Aburizal Bakrie, or the chief economics minister, Boediono?

Wednesday, October 18, 2006

Advancing beyond macroeconomic stability

Tuesday, October 17, 2006 Vincent Lingga, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta
This is the second in a series of articles The Jakarta Post will publish to mark President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono's second anniversary in office on Oct. 20. The first article appeared Monday.
Almost two years into his five-year term and President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has yet to fully utilize his strong political mandate to transform the country's macroeconomic stability into improved living standards.

Macroeconomic downside risks have been reduced, fiscal management improved with a sustainable deficit and the government debt-to-GDP ratio halved to below 50 percent.
Macroeconomic stability has strengthened but the economy remains vulnerable to shifts in investor sentiment and occasional asset market volatility, because the bulk of foreign capital inflows consist of short-term, portfolio capital, which can fly out at the slightest sign of policy inconsistency.

The financial sector's performance has improved, though the largest two state-owned banks, Bank Mandiri and Bank BNI, remain fragile due to mountains of bad loans. Gross international reserves have increased markedly to enable the government to amortize all its debts to the International Monetary Fund four years ahead of maturity.

Exports have reached all-time records, expanding by over 17 percent in the first eight months of this year. However, most of this gain should be attributed to luck, as the increase was generated mainly by steep price rises in primary commodities such as palm oil, rubber, coal and oil, not by any improved economic competitiveness on the part of Indonesia.

Different from previous presidents, who were often associated with the abuse of power and rampant corruption, Yudhoyono still presents himself as an honest, hard working person with a great deal of integrity.

But his legitimacy and impeccable integrity will not mean much as people lose patience with his indecisiveness on badly needed reforms to reinvigorate the economy and create jobs.
The President failed to take advantage of his strong mandate and push through significant reforms at the start of his term. And he has failed miserably in the sector most meaningful to the majority of the people -- job creation. Unemployment has instead risen.

Poverty increased by 11.25 percent, or 3.95 million people, to almost 40 million people or 17.75 percent of the total population between February 2005 and March 2006, due to the devastating impact of the doubling of fuel prices in October 2005. This poverty incidence, though lower than that between 1998 and 2002, was the highest since 2003.

We don't mean to say the fuel policy was wrong. It should instead be praised as the boldest measure yet taken by the Yudhoyono government to strengthen the foundations of the economy. Its negative impact should be blamed on a poorly designed social safety net and anti-inflation measures.

Open unemployment and underemployment have reached as high as 40 percent of the 105 million total workforce because of persistently moderate economic growth (below 6 percent) amid an acute lack of new investment. Indonesia has failed to rejoin Asia's club of high-growth countries.

While the pace of economic reform announcements has been much slower than expected, the implementation of policy reforms is even more disappointing. The cascading impact of these problems is a disappointingly slow recovery of public and private investments.

Yet more worrisome is the trend whereby each percentage point of growth now generates fewer jobs in the formal sector than it did before the 1997 economic crisis, because of what most analysts see as the impact of too rigid labor regulations.

Things will not likely improve much in this labor market because the government has succumbed to demands of trade unions who oppose the amendments to the 2003 Labor Law, even though they represent no more than 5 percent of the total workforce.

The government apparently does not realize that in the long term, companies, workers and society as a whole will benefit from a more flexible labor market where workers have an incentive to invest in their own social capital and lifelong learning in the competition for better jobs.

Worse still, another set of important economic laws regarding taxation and investment, already several years behind schedule, will most likely suffer another delay. The only small consolation is the new customs law, which is scheduled to be approved by the House of Representatives tomorrow (Oct. 18).

The Infrastructure Summit held last November to woo new investment fell flat due to uncertainty about legal frameworks and lack of clear-cut provisions on government-private sector partnership and risk management. The second Infrastructure Summit, scheduled for next month, does not seem very promising either because of the delay in the formulation of a more conducive regulatory environment.

Promises and symbolic moves, though needed, are not enough to maintain the momentum of market confidence. The market requires concrete measures because only consistent and effective implementation will give credibility to government policies.

As long as the President remains hesitant to assert stronger political leadership to push through key reform measures and vital infrastructure projects, the pace of new investment will remain slow and the economy will continue to muddle through, unable to generate enough jobs for the unemployed and new entrants to the labor market, and lift the 40 million up from poverty.

However we define it, the high rates of unemployment and absolute poverty mean that our economy is languishing in critical condition. And a crisis requires strong political leadership and a fast, credible decision-making system.