The 10
percent jump in Indonesia’s stock market this year is a case of investors’
hopes triumphing over experience.
The
coal, mineral and palm-oil exporter rode last decade’s commodities boom. Now
the Chinese demand that fueled it is fading. The economy’s other engine —
domestic consumption — is also slowing.
Financial
investors, though, are betting on a hard reset. They hope Jakarta Governor Joko
Widodo, the favorite to win July’s presidential poll, will restart stalled
reforms, making the world’s fourth most-populous nation a strong contender for
more investment.
Expectations
were similarly high when current President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono came to
power 10 years ago. He presided over the high-growth years, but accomplished
little in terms of reform. To fare better, Jokowi — as Joko is commonly known —
will need a tight grip on the legislature. Next month’s parliamentary polls
will determine whether he gets that wish. The party’s poor performance in 2009
is a reason to be cautious.
Besides,
there is a worrying lack of urgency for reform. Last summer’s
balance-of-payment wobbles have ceased. Higher interest rates have stabilized
the rupiah. Now that there is no immediate crisis, the liberalization of the
foreign investment regime promised late last year is also delayed.
Not only
is progress glacial, but the direction keeps shifting. Last year, DBS was
forced to abandon a bid to acquire control of an Indonesian lender after the
central bank in Jakarta came up with new ownership guidelines that seemed
tailor-made to block the Singaporean investor. This year, the government
slapped a mistimed ban on exports of unprocessed minerals. Now Jakarta wants to
cancel 60 bilateral investment treaties, the Financial Times reported on March
26.
Fulfilling
its growth potential requires Indonesia to eschew unhealthy
nationalism, check pervasive corruption and step up investment in infrastructure,
health and education. It took a collapse of 8 percent-plus growth for
policymakers in India to realize that it is harder to sustain a love affair
with investors than to start one. A win for Jokowi could see a surge of
optimism similar to the one that India witnessed five years ago. The
disappointment, too, could be equally painful.
Reuters
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