Despite the dominance of security issues
and geopolitics in the media, on the business side of things Indonesia and
Australia are long-standing economic partners.
In fact, it was symbolic that the new Australian Prime
Minister Malcolm Turnbull, like one of his predecessors Paul Keating, visited
Indonesia first rather than the tradition of Australian prime ministers past to
go to London or Washington as their first port of call after assuming the
highest office in the land.
If you go back in history, there is strong evidence of
Australia supporting Indonesia in the past as an economic partner and vice
versa.
After all, Indonesia was probably the Australian
continent’s first trading partner and in the 1940s, in the early struggles for
Indonesian independence, Australia was there working together with Indonesia on
trade, investment and education ties. This is the recollection of an early
instigator of Indonesian-Australian trade relations, the famous Australian labor
economist and arbitrator, Joe Isaac, who was honored in Sydney recently.
According to Professor Isaac, who went on MacMahon Ball’s mission to what was
then called Batavia (Jakarta) in the Dutch East Indies, in November 1945
Australia’s ties were strong right from the start of the Indonesian
independence struggle against the Dutch soon after the Japanese surrender in
World War II. As Isaac recalls: “We were able to meet Sukarno soon after our
arrival, and we met twice thereafter […] Mac outlined the purpose of his
mission […] and that Australia was sympathetic to the political aspirations of
the Indonesians; and he canvassed Sukarno’s reaction to the dispatch by the
Australian government of a boatload of medical supplies.
There are only 250 Australian companies with a
presence in Indonesia, as against 3,000 in other markets like China.“No doubt
thinking of the action of the Australian waterside workers [who refused to load
Dutch ships hostile to Indonesian independence] Sukarno expressed gratitude for
the support of the Australian people.”This support was a big deal at the time
for the new independent nation in Southeast Asia. As Isaac notes, two famous
Indonesian specialists from Australia, Tom Critchley and Jamie Mackie, “attribute
the Indonesian government’s confidence in nominating Australia to the Good
Offices Committee to the action of the waterside workers in banning the loading
of Dutch ships and to the support Australia had shown for Indonesia in the UN
Security Council”.
These close Indonesian-Australian economic ties also
continued 50 years later during the Asian financial crisis of 1997-1999 when
the Reserve Bank of Australia, particularly thanks to Deputy Governor Stephen
Grenville, who had been a diplomat in Jakarta, clashed with the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) and the administration of then US president Bill Clinton in
their analysis of the Indonesian economy. The then treasurer Peter Costello
took Grenville’s and Governor Glenn Stevens’ advice on Indonesia and stared
down the IMF and the Clinton administration’s economics team and took a very
different tack to the Indonesian economy than Washington. As a result, the
Indonesian economy fared much better, recovered quickly and avoided the
pitfalls of other developing economies that took the IMF prescription.
As a result, in 2015 Indonesia is a vital trade
partner with Australia (with two-way trade worth US$16 billion) and is also a
vital education partner. In fact, in the greater scheme of things, Indonesia is
a much underrated economic partner. As well as big names like ANZ, Leightons,
Commbank, Orica and Bluescope, more than 2,400 Australian businesses export
goods only to Indonesia and many corporations have received rates of return
four times that offered by China and India. But there are only 250 Australian
companies with a presence in Indonesia, which compares to more than 3,000 in
other markets, like China’s.
There is indeed much more to be done. This week
Australian Trade and Investment Minister Andrew Robb is being accompanied by a
360-strong business delegation to Indonesia for Indonesia-Australia Business
Week 2015. The businesses are diverse, representing various industries
including infrastructure, advanced manufacturing, agriculture and food
sustainability, premium foods and beverages, health and seniors care, resources
and energy, education and tourism. As Mr. Robb said: “Indonesia-Australia
Business Week is an opportunity to build the relationships needed to sustain
and grow our business links and to explore ways to tap into the rapidly growing
market of more than 250 million people right on our doorstep, which includes a
rising middle class.”In addition, economic diplomacy toward Indonesia is also
bipartisan, as even the Shadow Treasurer Chris Bowen is learning the Indonesian
language as a tribute to how important Indonesia is to Australia’s present and
future in terms of economic relations. We can only conclude that in terms of
economic diplomacy, Indonesia and Australia have had strong trade ties in the
past, but we can be confident that they will expand, widen and deepen in the
years ahead.
The writer Tim Harcourt is the JW Nevile Fellow in
Economics at the University of New South Wales Business School, UNSW Australia.
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