More money
is needed. This is the oldest story in the world. Health workers need vaccines.
Farmers need wider access to water. Children need education. What has changed
is our mind-set. All stakeholders — government, businesses and communities —
have roles and responsibilities for improving human development. To
tackle those needs, it will require innovative financing.
Indonesia’s
growth has been impressive, averaging over 5 percent for the past five years
despite a global environment weakened by an economic slowdown. Indonesia’s
financial market is getting stronger. Reaching over 5 percent growth per year
is not an achievement that governments can take on alone. Indonesia’s
performance will depend on the government’s ability to improve the business
climate and its effort to attract private investment.
The key to
financing development lies with engaging the private sector. Private investment
is a powerful and essential source of long-term financing for infrastructure
and other sectors to generate growth, create jobs and promote sustainable
development. $500 to 600 billion is needed to build Indonesian roads, railways,
and ports. Three million more jobs per year could be created, halving the
22 percent of youth unemployed in Indonesia. To the 13 percent Indonesian
households with no access to electricity, private investments in solar and wind
energy can be decisive. The private sector can make the difference building
upon the foundations laid by the government.
Businesses
“have enormous power to create decent jobs, open access to education and basic
services, unlock energy solutions and end discrimination” according to UN
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon. There is a significant capital
available that lies with private sector, which is far greater than what
donors, local financial institutions, official development assistance in
developing countries, are able to provide.
We must work
on finding ways to combine available financial instruments into new packages
and scale up investments. With a huge untapped potential, innovative finance is
key for a stronger growth. From big investors to small holders, the interface
between those who want to invest money and those who need it should be
simplified.
With only 22
percent of Indonesians possessing bank accounts, micro-finance is crucial to
improve access for people in remote areas and small islands. Meanwhile,
peer-to-peer finance or crowd funding provide needs of funding to the growing
number of small and medium-sized enterprises in a digital age where 82 million
Indonesians are Internet users.
The United
Nations is already at the vanguard of those growing movements. In many places,
increasing development will have to start with extending access to clean water.
One out of eight Indonesians do not have access to clean water. With its first
ever online Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) crowd funding campaign “Bring
Water For Life,” the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) in Indonesia is
aiming to raise $25,000 to support the purchasing and installation of a solar-powered
water pump in an East Sumba village.
Innovative
financing has leveraging effects. Consider the bond market. Green bonds are
from a global perspective growing dramatically. They have provided the
opportunity for wider investment essential to not only confront climate change
but to achieve better sustainability in many sectors. With an estimated value
of almost $130 billion, the bond market in Indonesia holds tremendous
potential. This is why we support climate-friendly investments like REDD+ aiming
at financing sustainable land use in Indonesia.
Philanthropic
activity keeps growing in Indonesia. Partnerships with philanthropic
foundations provide a much needed boost to the SDG agenda. In Indonesia, UNDP
has partnered with Tanoto Foundation to support collaborative work with the
Riau provincial governments in piloting sustainable development goals
implementation at provincial and district levels. The Ford Foundation meanwhile
is working with the Indonesian government and UN to support the implementation
of the SDGs on the national level.
And yet,
though promising efforts are underway, they fall short of what is needed. More
work can be done. We know that stakeholders in Indonesia can, and must, do
more.
More
companies and entrepreneurs must take more responsibilities for those most
marginalized. The challenge is to channel these funds toward poverty
alleviation and sustainable development that is attractive to investors. It can
finance the growth of small enterprises and give an appropriate return to shareholders,
boost employment, and improve the lives of poor people. Meeting those needs
will require fostering a trusting, reliable and credible environment for
enabling innovation.
As Indonesia
looks to seize the opportunities ahead in terms of investments, continued
reform implementation will be essential. Stronger commitments and sufficient
budget allocation for development combined with efficient policies could fasten
project implementation such as Village Fund, to improve service delivery at the
local level and reduce inequality and poverty. Government investment in UN
agencies as a development partner will ensure a greater access to technical
expertise and lessons learned from other countries.
A new story
is being written. The world needs investment for development. The money is here
already. The total cost of the SDGs is estimated to be over $4.5 trillion
per year while the world economy amounted to $77 trillion in 2014.
Looking at
those numbers, if we make all the right choices, it won’t cost more to make
those smart investments for the next 15 years. Instead, it will help sustain
the world for generations to come. This will be a matter of finding the right
innovative financing to work together to end poverty.
Douglas
Broderick is the United Nations resident coordinator in Indonesia.
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