Jakarta's policy makers have forgotten what attracted investors
in the first place
It is a tale too common among large emerging markets.
Just a few years ago, Indonesia was the latest darling of
the international business community. Its recipe: a large and fast-growing
consumer class with newfound eagerness to spend, blended with impressive
macroeconomic performance, a dash of political stability and a sudden penchant
for marketing.
Economic pundits hailed Indonesia as the new "I"
in the then-elite club of "BRICs," while consultancies and investment
banks played up the story. McKinsey garnered huge headlines with straight-line
predictions that Indonesia's economy would overtake Germany's in a scant 30
years. Heady stuff, and as Davos Man took notice, one could almost hear the
chest-thumping and high-fives in the presidential palace.
Little more than a year later, much has changed. Foreign investors no longer clamor to their embassies in
search of door-opening sessions with Indonesian ministers. One commercial
attaché lamented that his life has become far less interesting: "Inquiries
about how to do business here have gone from an all-time high to eerily quiet
in a few short months."
Success can breed hubris, and in Indonesia the government
has overplayed its hand. Policy changes in the mining, retail, horticultural
and oil and gas sectors have led foreign investors to reassess the risk of
doing business here. Boards of foreign multinationals question the direction of
economic policy. They ask, as presidential elections approach next year: Is
economic nationalism a permanent feature of the business landscape, or will the
current spike in protectionism give way to the more investor-friendly stance of
the recent past?
The circumstances of Indonesia's nationalist economic turn
shed some light on what to expect in the future. As Chatib Basri, an economic
straight-shooter recently installed as finance minister, likes to say, "In
Indonesia, bad times make for good policies and good times make for bad
policies."
In the late 1980s, the global slump in oil prices prompted
then-President Suharto to boost export revenues by liberalizing energy sectors
other than oil and gas. After dismantling barriers to trade, Indonesia had one
of the more open economies in the region.
Following the 1998 Asian financial crisis, Indonesia's
policy makers again rose to the challenge, revamping the financial sector and
beginning the path of corporate restructuring. These reforms paid off within a
few years. In 2008, with much of the world mired in recession, Indonesia found
itself in the warm spotlight of the international business community. When the
majority of emerging markets started to sputter and falter, Indonesia's economy
managed to maintain its growth momentum.
For a while, all boats rose with the rising reputational
tide. With its favorable demographics and economic stardom, multinational
companies flocked to Indonesia.
In 2012, A.T. Kearney's Foreign Direct Investment Confidence
Index put Indonesia at ninth place in the world. Indonesia had broken the top
20 just two years before. The survey measures future investment plans of the
globe's top 1,000 corporations, so it was clear that many executives expected
more good times ahead for Indonesia.
But hubris had already set in. Indonesian policy
makers seemed to have forgotten what brought investors to their shores in the
first place. International mining companies awoke to find deep
restrictions on exports and ownership. New laws forced them to play in
lower-profit parts of the value chain, and hopes faded that the central
government would help intervene and level the playing field in maddening
disputes with local power brokers. Nearly overnight,
Indonesia shifted from being one of the world's more promising mining
destinations to being one of the least desirable.
The curse of nationalism has also affected the oil and gas
industry. Officials forced ExxonMobil to replace its country manager. The
government initiated a nasty legal tussle with Chevron over bioremediation,
with courts eventually relying on a figure who stood to gain financially by
accusing the company of impropriety. In another case—in which it is harder to
tell the black hats from the white—the French giant Total is battling over a
lucrative gas block in the province of Kalimantan. As oil and gas giants ponder
the future, they are asking hard questions about their budgets for capital
expenditures in Indonesia.
A.T. Kearney's survey already shows some of the damage. In
the recently released 2013 index, Indonesia fell 15 places to 24th. Investors
say that Indonesia has dropped as a priority. While this is partly because of
the reemergence of the U.S. and other economies, Indonesia's economic
nationalism has been a major factor. Next year's foreign investment data may
reflect a further decline.
So what now? One milestone to watch for is next July's
presidential elections. In previous election years, nationalist rhetoric and
policies increased and then gently declined once a new government was
installed. Policy makers may also revisit recent policy changes as investment
in the affected industries continues to drop.
Thus Mr. Basri's words may offer some hope: While good times
made for some very bad policies, the recent spate of bad news may signal that
better policies are just around the corner.
Kurtz is the head of Asia-Pacific for A.T. Kearney, where Van
Zorge is a senior fellow. Wall Street Journal
Thank you Kerry for posting this article, and all the articles you post. Found it initially at WSJ site but couldn't read it without a monthly subscription. Next thought was that hopefully you would post it..and you did!
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