Quoted dari
http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edition_id=1&categ_id=2&article_id=97616.

One of good news. Mudah2an benar dan menjadi kenyataan.
Rgds,
Yuta

**
*Indonesia - why there is no recession in the world's leading Muslim economy
**By Terry Lacey

Wednesday, November 12, 2008*



*Report by Terry Lacey*

Following the election of US President-elect Barack Obama there is likely to
be a slow recovery in confidence in the United States financial and banking
system. A recession is unavoidable in the US and EU, but with only a
downturn in developing countries. This crisis of confidence in the Western
banking and financial system comes during the dying days of the most
unpopular American presidency in living memory. Financial mismanagement and
weak regulatory frameworks have devastated the US economy, making the rich
richer and the poor poorer. Two million Americans may lose their homes.
Millions in the US and Europe will lose their jobs.

Yet the devastating legacy of the Bush presidency leaves open great
opportunities for Indonesia, the Muslim world and the developing countries
of the South.

Indonesia can play a key role in leading the Muslim world toward economic
recovery, and help minimize the impact of global recession.

First, by managing its national economy to maintain growth, demand, imports
and exports. The nominal Gross Domestic Product for 2009 is projected at
$547 billion. Indonesia is already in the top 20 economies of the world.

Indonesia is currently overtaking Belgium and Sweden. It will soon overtake
Turkey, the Netherlands and Austria as it enormous size, resources and
population come into play. It is a strong candidate to join the top 10
economies in the world within two decades.

Second, by mobilizing investment for oil, gas, energy projects, biofuels,
infrastructure (roads, railways, ports), manufacturing and retailing
sectors. It needs over $40 billion for electricity alone, to finance an
additional 40,000 MWe of power by 2025. Indonesia will become a nuclear
power, and plans four power stations. Total foreign investment needed
overall during the next 15 years exceeds $100 billion.

Investment is still coming from the US and EU (including Eastern Europe) but
increasingly from the BRICs (Brazil, Russia, India and China), and also from
Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation countries like Canada, Japan, Korea,
Taiwan, and from Association of Southeast Asian Nations member states
(including Brunei, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand). Investment
is also coming in greater volume from the Gulf Arab states, Israel and South
Africa.

Third, Indonesia can help lead Muslim economies by using its economic size
and prestige as a member of the United Nations Security Council to join
Brazil, Russia, India, China and Southern countries to bring about changes
in policies and in the balance of power in world organizations dealing with
trade, finance and development, especially the World Bank, the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Trade Organization (WTO).

Indonesia has major reservations about the IMF following its own experience
in 1998. German Finance Minister Peer Steinbrueck said that the world should
not slip into creating a shadow world economic government run by an inner
IMF council. Indonesia is also tired of being kept on the fringes in the
WTO.

Asia and Southern countries want a new deal. Muslim countries collectively
represent an increasingly important source of capital, while Western
liquidity has partly dried up. Muslim economies represent important
investment sources as well as investment destinations. The collective size
of Muslim economies represents significant demand for Western goods and
services, relatively unaffected by the recession in the West.

Indonesia can still deploy export credits, sovereign funds, Islamic finance
and other non-traditional financial sources, such as environmental funds and
carbon credits. Despite the global downturn Indonesia is still pulling in
some bank finance.

A $140 million syndicated loan for Excelcomindo for telecommunications
expansion was announced recently.  Low-cost airline Lion Air is buying 12
Boeing 737 planes even though the required local cash contribution for the
last four has risen to 30 percent. Lion Air will use its own cash to carry
on expanding. St. Miguel Corp. of the Philippines is competing with a US-led
consortium to clinch a $1.3 billion coal supply deal, to buy PT Bumi
Resources from Bakri Brothers. There is money here and money coming in.

Standard and Poors is holding Indonesian credit ratings stable and its
credit rating may even be raised. Singapore could slip into recession but
Indonesia will not, and the reason is mostly sheer size plus improved
financial and economic management.

Indonesia is in a key position as the largest Muslim country in the world
with a population of 230 million and a land area of 1.9 million square
kilometers.

The Indonesian Gross Domestic Product was $843.7 billion in terms of
purchasing power and $432.9 billion in terms of official exchange rates in
2007.  It has fixed foreign investment of $57.6 billion and holds $9 billion
of investment in other countries. It has more than 3,500 millionaires
holding over $100 million each, of whom 70 percent live in Jakarta.

Its current economic growth is 6.5 percent and may fall below 6 percent in
2009 due to reduced exports. Government will stimulate growth using the
national budget which already reached $100 billion in 2008. Government is
confident it can hold growth at 6 percent. The World Bank has set aside a $2
billion standby loan for 2009 only to be triggered if growth falls below 5.8
percent.

In 2007 Indonesian exports were $118 billion and imports $86 billion, a
trade surplus of $32 billion, and foreign exchange reserves as of this month
were $50 billion.

Indonesia has already lost some jobs in sectors like textiles. Some exports
to the US and Europe fell in the fourth quarter. The stock market,
government bonds and the national currency also fell in value during the
global financial crash in the first week of October.

The government launched a securities buy-back program spearheaded by
state-owned enterprises and defended the rupiah currency by intervening in
the currency market via the Bank of Indonesia. The government also took
steps to increase liquidity and focused on getting inflation under control
and on maintaining growth.

The government has increased guarantees on personal deposits to 2 billion
rupiahs ($190,000), which covers 100 percent of deposits for over 99.7
percent of 81 million bank accounts.

Indonesian banks are strong, with adequate reserves, low non-performing
loans and almost no exposure to subprime losses. Only a small group of
investors lost money on Lehman-related instruments purchased via
international banks.

The Indonesian inflation rate is declining from a high of 12 percent to
maybe 9 percent by January with reductions planned to between 9 percent and
7 percent for the rest of 2009. The bank rate is being stabilized at 9.5
percent after six months of consecutive rises. It will be held for a while
and then reduced to 7.5 percent in 2009.

Indonesian bonds are recovering from their recent nose-dive and the stock
market is stabilizing. *Local economists say the stock market was
over-valued and more normal values and returns will be restored as part of
the local share trading cycle.   *

The government is now focusing on trying to mobilize its massive $115
billion dollar national budget for 2009, up from $100 billion in 2008, to
push projects and overall spending forward and help substitute local demand
for declines in exports, with every hope of keeping economic growth for 2009
at between 5.5 and 6.0  percent.

Despite the collapse of the Bank of Indonesia subsidiary Indover Bank in the
Netherlands, there is no sovereign default. Indonesian Finance Minister Sri
Mulyani Indrawati and the new central bank governor, Boediono, have taken a
stand against previous mismanagement.

In contrast to the kid-glove treatment of failed bankers and financial
managers in the West, who took imprudent and possibly illegal risks, the
Indonesian government is directing the work of its Corruption Eradication
Commission and Corruption Court against corrupt central bankers and
parliamentarians who took bribes.

The Indonesian government also says it will pursue legally those who misused
its name and dragged it into the Indover collapse, by implying there were
sovereign guarantees backing Indover borrowing when there were none. It also
intends to pursue allegations of short trading and fraudulent practices in
the stock exchange.

Indonesia lost 10 years as a result of the 1998 banking crash when it put
its fate in the hands of the IMF, which initially failed to understand local
strengths and exaggerated local weaknesses. An historical photo shows
President Suharto sitting at his desk, signing his own political
death-warrant while the IMF representative stood over him, as he signed the
IMF agreement.

A lot has changed between the Asian banking crash of 1998 and the Wall
Street crash of 2008. The economic balance of power in the world has changed
and the balance of global power has shifted to the South and East. British
Prime Minister Gordon Brown recognized this when he urged the Gulf states
and the G20 to help stabilize the world economy.

In the 1998 bank crash Indonesia had no freedom and no choice. This time in
2008 Indonesia has freedom and is stronger, and can chose to tread its own
path. Hopefully its greater strength and determination will inspire Muslim
and Southern countries not to panic in the face of recession in the West,
but to work together to avoid the spread of recession to the South and to
build and strengthen a new world economic order.

*Terry Lacey** is a development economist who writes from Jakarta,
Indonesia, on modernization in the Muslim world, investment and trade
relations with the European Union and Islamic banking. This article is
published with permission from the author.*

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