http://asaa.asn.au/academic-interest-indonesias-economy-accelerates-china/

China, Indonesia
Academic interest in Indonesia’s economy accelerates in China

BY PIERRE VAN DER ENG <http://asaa.asn.au/author/pierre-van-der-eng/>

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The Social Sciences Academic Press, the publishing arm of the Chinese
Academy of Social Sciences (CASS) in Beijing, has published two annual
yearbooks in Chinese with analyses of Indonesia’s economy. The December
2017 issue appeared with the title *Indonesia Economic Development Report
<https://www.ssap.com.cn/c/2017-12-05/1063913.shtml>* and the December 2018
issue with the revised title *Indonesia Economic and Social Development
Report <https://www.ssap.com.cn/c/2018-12-18/1074705.shtml>*.

This is a significant development for two reasons. Firstly, there are few
publications that offer a profound and up to date analysis of Indonesia’s
economy in Chinese. For example, Google Scholar yields 307 publications in
English with the keywords Indonesia and economy in the title during
2014-2018, compared to just 16 in Chinese. Professor Wu Chongbo’s 2012
book *Contemporary
Indonesian Economic Research <https://book.douban.com/subject/10593582/>* is
possibly the last published on Indonesia’s economy in Chinese, while
several books have been published in Chinese in recent years on the other
‘Asian giants’, India and Japan.

Secondly, the yearbooks are published in the CASS Blue Book series on
economic topics. The Blue Books – together with their yellow and green
variants on respectively international relations and
population/environmental policy issues – are better known in China as
*pishu* (皮书, literally ‘cover-books’), analytical reports to guide
policymaking.

These *pishu* have been published since 1991. Over the years they comprised
an increasing range of subseries with annual yearbooks on an increasingly
diverse range of topics. Initially the yearbooks were based on research at
CASS, but increasingly they are based on research at research institutes
endorsed by CASS. The Blue Book series are highly regarded in China because
of their academic prestige. For Chinese academics, publishing in the series
is an achievement.

The yearbooks are traditionally used by policymakers. They are made
available to government ministries, where they are a standard reference on
any given topic. The books are also stocked in Xinhua book shops across all
cities in China, and PDFs of books and individual chapters can be ordered
online from Pishu, the Academy’s online retailer of its books. At a price
of less than 100 yuan, or A$20, the books are not unaffordable for
individuals interested in Indonesia and for university libraries.

Indonesia is not the only country covered in the Blue Book series.
Subseries on many other countries have been in existence for years. Several
of the recently initiated subseries are the result of university
departments lobbying CASS to allow them to take responsibility for a
subseries. This requires departments to guarantee the editing of annual
volumes with contributions of academic quality to satisfy CASS’s
expectations, and according to the Academy’s style and manual
<https://www.ssap.com.cn/upload/resources/file/2016/08/19/12430.pdf>.

The subseries on Indonesia was initiated in 2016 by the Center for
Indonesian Studies (印度尼西亚研究中心, literally Indonesian Research Center) at
Guangdong University of Foreign Studies (Guangwai for short) in Guangzhou.
According to its website, the Center was established in 2016, although
Guangwai had been teaching Indonesian language since 1970.

The Guangwai Indonesia Center is embedded in the 21st Century Maritime Silk
Road Collaborative Innovation Center in Guangzhou. This is indicative of
the broader significance of the Center of Indonesian Studies. The latter is
supported by the Ministry of Education and the business community in
Guangdong province. Support from the business community may be sizeable
given that the province is the hinterland of Hong Kong and has been an
early beneficiary of China’s opening up since 1980. It is also the location
of many of the private companies that have invested in Indonesia as part of
the Chinese government’s 1999 ‘Go Out’ policy.

The founding of the Guangwai Indonesia Center fits a trend in China for
universities to establish country-focused study centres. For example, there
are no less than 36 Australian studies centres. By contrast, Indonesian
studies centres are still thin on the ground in China. Bahasa Indonesia has
been taught at universities in China since the 1950s. In 2017 11
universities offered courses in Bahasa Indonesia
<https://www.antaranews.com/berita/669188/jurusan-bahasa-indonesia-di-china-bertambah>.
But few fostered research of Indonesia’s society and economy.

The study of Indonesia was since the 1950s the realm of particularly the
Centres for Southeast Asian Studies at Xiamen University and Jinan
University in Guangzhou. Academics at both centres tended to focus on the
ethnic Chinese in Southeast Asia and developed an understanding of the
region through that prism. In recent years, colleagues there, respectively
Associate Professors Lin Mei and Li Wannan, have increasingly studied
Indonesia’s economy on its own merits.

During recent years several centres have been added to these two
traditional hubs of Indonesia research. Starting in 2012 with the Indonesia
Research Center at Hebei Normal University in Shijiazhuang, near Beijing.
Followed by 4 other centres, in 2016 the Indonesian Research Center at the
Fuzhou Qishan campus of Fujian Normal University, the Indonesia Research
Center at the Xiamen campus of Huaqiao University, the Research Center for
China-Indonesia People-to-People Exchange at Central China Normal
University in Wuhan, and in 2017 the China-Indonesia Humanities Exchange
Research Center at Beijing Foreign Studies University.

Most of these centres were established after China’s vice-premier Liu
Yandong and the Indonesian Coordinating Minister of Human Development and
Culture Puan Maharani commenced an annual meeting of ministers in May 2015
under the moniker ‘Cultural and People-to-People Exchange Mechanism’. These
annual meetings in turn had their origin in the 2012 visit of Indonesian
President Yudhoyono to Beijing and the bilateral agreement he signed with
Chinese President Hu Jintao that among others aimed to establish a
‘cultural and people-to-people exchange mechanism’. In other words, the
establishment of the research centers indicates that China is living up to
its commitment to encourage exchanges.

The centres may not only serve the purpose of academic exchanges and
research. The establishment of each of the last four centres was laced with
due references to Chinese President Xi Jinping’s Belt & Road Initiative,
the Maritime Silk Road, and Indonesia’s participation in both. A further
indication of the purpose of the centres is the fact that all are members
of the China-Indonesia University Think Tank Alliance (中国-印尼高校智库联盟),
established in June 2016. An accumulating number of think tanks
<http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/a/201902/01/WS5c53bcd2a3106c65c34e7c3c.html>
emerged
in China in recent years to inform public policy formulation. It seems
likely that the alliance will coordinate new Indonesia-related research to
inform the development of these initiatives.

Two important linchpins for the centres and the Alliance appear to have
been the financial support from the Ministry of Education in Beijing and
the advisory role in each of Dr Xu Liping. Xu is a Peking University
graduate and a senior research fellow with the National Institute of
International Strategy, as well as the director of the Southeast Asian
Studies Center, both at CASS in Beijing. Since 2010 he published on
decentralisation in Indonesia and on Indonesia’s international relations.
He is often quoted in the press in China and Indonesia on China-Indonesia
issues and seems to be a semi-official spokesman on these matters.

The online sites of the five centres suggest that research interests of
associated academics focus on various branches of the humanities,
particularly international relations and more specifically Indonesia-China
relations in the context of China’s Belt & Road Initiative. Only the
Guangwai Indonesia Center ventured into the field of economics by editing
the Blue Books subseries.

The editors of the 2017 and 2018 Blue Books on Indonesia’s economy are
economics professors associated with the Guangwai Indonesia Center. The
2017 editor was Zuo Zhigang, a professor of international finance and
investment, and the director of the Guangwai Indonesia Center. Professor
Zuo’s research interests focus on venture capital syndication in China. The
2018 editor was Yan Guangjun. Professor Yan is known as a key member of the
Communist Party Committee of Guangdong University of Foreign Studies and
the executive vice president of Guangdong Institute for International
Strategies (广东国际战略研究院). Neither seems to have published on the Indonesian
economy before 2017.

Nevertheless, both editors have done Chinese readers a great service. The
2017 and 2018 yearbooks follow the standard format of the Blue Books
series, starting with an overview chapter, followed by thematic sections.
Professor Zuo is the most prolific contributor to both Blue Books,
authoring 10 of the 24 chapters in both volumes. The remainder are from a
range of colleagues, generally his colleagues at Guangwai University. The
2018 volume also has three chapters from Indonesian academics on
China-Indonesia economic relations, Indonesia’s ‘Manufacturing 4.0’ plan,
and the rapid growth of Chinese tourism to Bali.

While the 2017 yearbook focused on economic themes, the 2018 issue also
covered Islamic politicisation in Indonesia, Indonesia’s labour laws and
their impact on foreign (especially Chinese) investment, Chinese companies
and their difficulties with land tenure in Indonesia, and a comparative
study of primary education in China and Indonesia.

Most chapters are descriptive and discuss what happened in the previous
year, explaining trends in sectors of Indonesia’s economy on the basis of
quantitative data from BPS and from Bank Indonesia. References are
generally to sources in Chinese, some to Indonesian media, in only a few
cases to relevant international publications such as in the *Bulletin of
Indonesian Economic Studies*. In line with the Academy’s intentions with
the Blue Books, both volumes offer ample reflections on Indonesia-China
economic relations.

Altogether, the new Blue Book subseries, the establishment of five new
Indonesia-focused research centres, new funding from the Ministry of
Education in Beijing, as well as the guidance from CASS and coordination of
activities through the China-Indonesia alliance of university-based think
tanks, indicate that academic interest in Indonesia’s economy has
accelerated in China in recent years.
About Pierre van der Eng <http://asaa.asn.au/author/pierre-van-der-eng/>

Pierre van der Eng is Associate Professor in International Business at the
Australian National University, currently visiting Tsinghua University and
Peking University for research on respectively Chinese entrepreneurship and
Chinese investment in Indonesia.

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