Indonesian
President Joko Widodo (Jokowi) has announced a comprehensive package of reforms
aimed at reducing inflation and stabilising the exchange rate, stimulating
demand through ‘deregulation’ and direct support, with a special focus on
creating more jobs in small and medium enterprises (SMEs) and across urban and
rural communities. The reforms will come into effect this Tuesday 15 September
2015.
The package is enormous in scope and encompasses many existing
government initiatives. It is to be part of a series of packages, so may be
only the icing on the cake. But one thing is clear: it is a different package
of ‘deregulation’ reforms from that first announced in the second half of the
1980s when the economy appeared similarly to be on its knees. Now the focus is
more on public sector support and increasing demand, rather than market
oriented reforms to improve competitiveness.
The reforms need to be placed in context. Indonesia is not suffering a
major economic meltdown. Growth is lacklustre but steady, inflation relatively
high but under control and there’s been no major shock to the labour market.
But economic growth is slower than under Jokowi’s predecessor Susilo Bamabang
Yudhoyono and the macroeconomic situation is weaker than when Jokowi came to
power almost 12 months ago.
Growth is running at around 4.5 per cent, not the 5 to 6 per cent of
earlier years. Annual inflation of almost 7 per cent in August 2015 is higher
than almost all Indonesia’s neighbours and trading partners, thus undermining
the potential competitive gains from the rupiah’s 12-month depreciation. The
fall below 14,000 rupiah to the US dollar in August has reminded people of the
trauma of the 1998 Asian financial crisis, the last occasion when the rupiah
hit such levels.
To reduce inflation and stabilise the exchange rate, Bank Indonesia
proposed a wide range of reforms. This included more collaboration with
regional governments in seeking to control local prices, controlling beef
prices and seeking to reduce rupiah instability through secondary and bonds
markets. The import bans and controls of a range of basic food commodities —
which have recently had the main impact on inflation — were not addressed
directly in the reform package. To improve the domestic supply of foreign
currency, foreign nationals will no longer need special permission to open bank
accounts in foreign currency up to a limit of US$50,000.
The ‘deregulation’ program announced appears massive, mostly aimed at
reducing regulatory overlap. Many of these measures have been in the pipeline
for several months. One test will be how quickly they can come into operation
given the time taken to draft new legislation in Indonesia.
Other direct government intervention is mooted to come from accelerating
and extending existing national strategic projects through administrative
reforms and boosting government investment in the property sector.
New efforts to stimulate spending and create more jobs are welcome, but
it’s unclear that the anticipated reforms will help solve layoffs in industries
affected by declining international prices or loss of competitiveness. By
mid-2015, signs of a rapidly weakening labour market were emerging. After years
of falling unemployment and recovering formal sector jobs, employment growth
began to increase by less than 1 per cent annually on average in 2012–14,
compared with labour force growth of closer to 2 per cent annually. There have
been substantial layoffs in the coal industry and also manufacturing near
Jakarta.
A short-term boost to demand can be expected from raising the tax free
threshold from 2.4 to 3.6 million rupiah, which is likely to now cover almost
all unskilled workers. Jobs and incomes will also receive a boost through
subsidised government credit to SMEs and exporters and subsidies to companies
threatening lay-offs.
At the community level, cash-for-work schemes are to be funded through
the large new Village Subsidy Fund (Dana Desa), recently proposed by
former finance minister Chatib Basri. Pro-poor initiatives include an extra two
months subsidised rice for poor households. The government has also promised
schemes to lower the cost of fuel for fishermen and government support for the
suffering shipbuilding industry.
The disarray in currency and stock markets on 24 August 2015 undoubtedly
spooked the government after months of stop-start policies. The new reforms are
ostensibly to improve both confidence and lure more investment. Yet there is so
far little evidence that the reforms reflect the government’s commitment to
more openness and deregulation rather than more of a knee jerk reaction to
short-term problems of financial instability.
What can this first package be expected to achieve? It will give money
markets and investors some confidence in the new cabinet after the August
reshuffle, especially the economics team under Darmin Nasution. But there are
worries. Efforts to improve international competitiveness seem absent, for now.
Old, popular remedies that have not been easy to implement in the past have
also resurfaced, such as subsidised credit for SMEs and support for
cooperatives.
The government has been stronger on announcements than implementation, so this will be
the thing to watch. Investors will need more signs of a committed and
consistent program of reform if the government is to begin to turn things
around in the medium to longer term. It has tended to buckle in the face of
criticism, such as backsliding on its plan to undertake regular price
adjustments of fuel in line with international price movements in early 2015.
Other examples are wildly fluctuating quotas for beef imports, and chopping and
changing regulations on foreign workers and mineral ores. Hopefully, Jokowi’s
first package is just the beginning, as the government gears up to turning
things around in Indonesia.
Chris Manning is former head
of the Indonesian Project and adjunct associate professor at The Australian
National University.
No comments:
Post a Comment