Indonesia celebrated its 71st anniversary of
independence on Aug. 17. Australia’s support was instrumental for Indonesia’s
formation in 1945.
In November 1945, then Indonesian prime minister
Sutan Sjahrir thanked the Australian nation through a radio address. “I am
unknown to most of you, and yet I call you my friends.
The workers who refused to load Dutch ships with
arms and munitions, which would be used against our republic, the thousands
holding demonstrations, the thousands who sympathize with our struggle for
freedom, you are all my friends.”
While the young republic engaged in four years of
tough diplomatic negotiations and fierce fighting, the Australian government
worked to secure the UN’s support for Indonesia.
A long time ago, my teacher
taught me that history was inescapable. It is through history that we can
connect ourselves to the past. History inspires us for tomorrow.
It is important to understand
the forces and events that may shape our environment and thus our possible
decisions. In the next few decades, Australia and Indonesia will face some of
their biggest challenges and opportunities.
The world in 2030 will look
different, partly due to changes in demographic composition.
Today, the world population
stands at 6.6 billion, while in 2030 it will grow to 8.3 billion.
The Indonesia of the 2030s
will be dominated by a young and productive age population living in one of the
top 10-biggest economies in the world.
Australia too will undergo
significant changes. The Australian Bureau of Statistics projects that its
population will grow to almost 26 million by 2030. Social researcher Mark
McCrindle forecasts that the average household income will grow from US$50,000
today to $200,000 in 2030.
One common challenge for
Australia and Indonesia is obviously increased population pressure. Australia
will have to respond to the challenges of an aging population resulting in
declining labor force participation, falling average work hours and slowing
economic growth.
Indonesia too will need to
address the pressure brought by 285 million Indonesians on the nation’s
resources. The government will need to maintain a high and steady rate of
growth that creates quality jobs and can absorb the millions of new job seekers
coming into the pipeline over the period.
Designing policies that
provide solutions to those challenges would then be the main preoccupation of today’s
and future national governments.
Development planning, policies
and regulations have to be designed to unleash productivity, connect people,
create economic opportunity, to ease the doing of business, open markets and
slash unproductive practices.
Government policies will also
need to be targeted to narrowing the development gap between provinces and
cities.
Another challenge is promoting
a culture of innovation and science across Indonesia to help sustain growth and
escape from the possible middle-income trap.
By the 2050s, Australia and
Indonesia will live in a region that is much bigger than it is now,
economically, demographically and militarily. Bilateral trade and investment
will be significantly larger.
More Indonesians will be
studying in Australia and many more tourists will be crossing our borders. In
the last two months, Indonesia became the top destination for Australian
vacationers. Over the next decades, we will be more interdependent with each other.
It is quite natural and
expected that two neighboring countries will have differences and
misunderstanding from time to time. But I am happy to see the consistent
commitment and work by all stakeholders in both countries is adding to the
resilience of the relationship. It is unproductive and damaging to let the
three B’s of Bali, beef and boats define our overall relations.
Australia and Indonesia are
following through on their commitments to forge strong partnerships, including
by addressing the challenges of people smuggling, counterterrorism and drafting
a high-standard comprehensive economic partnership.
In the 2030s, ASEAN will
transform from today’s seventh-largest economy in the world to the fourth
largest. While ASEAN will continue as one of the global hubs of manufacturing
and trade, with 67 million consumers and predicted to double to 125 million by
2025, it would also boast one of the largest consumer markets in the world.
The challenge is to diversify
ASEAN’s export destinations to ensure that it does not depend too heavily on a
single international market. Another challenge is to ensure the unity of ASEAN
in the face of strong external pressure and to put the members firmly behind
the driver’s seat.
As in the past, Indonesia will
continue its partnership with Australia in ASEAN and other regional
organizations.
The next few decades are a
defining period for Australia-Indonesia and their role in the region. Our
partnership should continue to focus on finding solutions to today’s problems
and preparing the foundation for future opportunities.
Early in our history, leaders
of Indonesia and Australia realized that both nations have many mutual
interests. Australia’s early support was crucial for Indonesia’s future. In
turn, Prime minister Sutan foresaw the future when he ended his address in 1945
by saying: “We can and we will certainly establish close relations as good
neighbors.”
___________________________ Nadjib Riphat Kesoema | Canberra
___________________________ Nadjib Riphat Kesoema | Canberra
The writer
is Indonesian ambassador to Australia.
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