Earlier this year, Bank Indonesia issued a package of nine
regulations that indicate the Indonesian government is taking a new
nationalistic approach to the financial sector.
The package provides more protection to domestic banks,
particularly public sector banks, by imposing more restrictions on foreign
banks. But will the new regulations help Indonesia?
The regulations will require foreign institutions to invest
in domestic businesses. The new capital equivalent maintained assets (CEMA)
regulation requires foreign banks to invest a minimum amount of capital in
their Indonesian branches. The regulations also require foreign banks to serve
small and medium enterprises (SMEs) and open up branch offices outside Java.
Additionally, domestic banks will stay in local hands. Foreigners used to be able
to own up to 99 percent of domestic banks; now the total share that can be
owned by foreigners will be limited to 40 percent. The stricter regulations end
the red-carpet treatment previously extended to foreign banks and investors who
do business and establish offices in Indonesia.
The CEMA requirement will serve as a kind of soft capital
control because foreign banks will have to provide additional liquidity to
local capital markets. The bond and capital markets in Indonesia are narrow and
shallow because in the financial repression era the corporate sector did not
need to use them to raise funds.
The new regulations are understandable because Indonesia
badly needs foreign banks to finance development. Domestic banks do not have
the capacity to raise long-term foreign currency from international markets,
but this is necessary if corporations and the government are to pay for risky,
long-term projects in mining and manufacturing. Foreign banks provide
contingency loans to BI and the Ministry of Finance in times of need and invest
in BI’s foreign currency reserves. The foreign banks come to serve large
multinationals from their home countries which are operating in Indonesia in
mining and large manufacturing. They also provide loans to large domestic
corporations, including state-owned companies such as Garuda, which cannot be
provided by domestic banks. Because of this, the suggestion made by the
Indonesia Banking Association (Perbanas) to convert the subsidiaries of foreign
banks into locally incorporated subsidiaries is counterproductive. The
financial help given to subsidiaries is more restrictive because it is subject
to the risk rating or premium of the recipient country, which raises the rate
of interest that the companies pay.
There are more problems with the new regulations. It is not
fair to require foreign banks to devote at least 20 percent of their loans to
SMEs and to open branch offices in remote places off Java. BI has divided
Indonesia into six zones based on how many bank offices there are per person in
each area. Jakarta belongs to Zone I and the less-developed and sparsely
populated areas with few bank offices — such as West Papua and Gorontalo — are
in Zone VI. Banks that operate in Zone VI, for example, will face a more
favorable regulatory environment.
However, apart from foreign cooperative and rural banks like
Rabobank of the Netherlands and Norinchukin of Japan, multinational banks do
not have the experience required to serve rural customers. Serving the
financial needs of SMEs in rural areas is supposed to be the responsibility of
companies like Bank Rakyat Indonesia and Bukopin. Local regional development
banks, not large multinationals, should help finance remote areas.
The regulation package of 2013 does relax restrictions on
cross-ownership by allowing holding companies to own more than one bank, and BI
can eventually grant permission for foreign investors to own more than 40
percent of a bank’s equity if they meet BI’s standards. But overall, BI is
trying to force foreign banks to perform functions to which they are not
suited. Instead, what Indonesia really needs is structural reform of its
financial industry.
East Asia Forum
Anwar Nasution is professor of economics at the University
of Indonesia and senior institution specialist at Support for Economic Analysis
Development in Indonesia.
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