20205 1996 s.. INDONESIA IN PERSPECTIVE: A COUNTRY BRIEFING East Asia and Pacific Region, Country Department III t'4. INDONESIA DISCUSSION PAPER SERIES NUMBER 5 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC REGION * COUNTRY DEPARTMENT 111 SUMMARY INDONESIA IN PERSPECTIVE: A COUNTRY BRIEFING East Asia and Pacific Region, Country Department III Staff from the World Bank's Indonesia Operations and Policy Division worked with sectoral specialists and the resident mission in Jakarta to compile this comprehensive briefing for World Bank President James D. Wolfensohn's 1996 visit to Indonesia. This abridged version offers a thorough overview of the country, outlining the Bank's perspective on the country's economic, political, and social situations; taking a look at the various sectors; and examining key issues facing the country. DISCUSSION PAPERS PRESENT RESULTS OF COUNTRY ANALYSIS UNDERTAKEN BY THE DEPARTMENT AS PART OF ITS NORMAL WORK PROGRAM. To PRESENT THESE RESULTS WITH THE LEAST POSSIBLE DELAY, THE TYPESCRIPT OF THIS PAPER HAS NOT BEEN PREPARED IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE PROCEDURES APPROPRIATE FOR FORMAL PRINTED TEXTS, AND THE WORLD BANK ACCEPTS NO RESPONSIBILITY FOR ERRORS. SOME SOURCES CITED IN THIS PAPER MAY BE INFORMAL DOCUMENTS THAT ARE NOT READILY AVAILABLE. THE WORLD BANK DOES NOT GUARANTEE THE ACCURACY OF THE DATA INCLUDED IN THIS PUBLICATION AND ACCEPTS NO RESPONSIBILITY FOR ANY CONSEQUENCE OF THEIR USE. Table of Contents KEY COUNTRY DATA Indonesia at a Glance Resources and Expenditures Priority Poverty Indicators Bank Group Activities Selected Indicators of Portfolio Performance and Management COUNTRY PERSPECTIVE Country Background The Economic and Political Situation Civil Society World Bank Group Country Perspective Political Perspective IFC Country Perspective World Bank Group Country Assistance Strategy IMPACT Project Implementation Issues OED Evaluation Findings SECTOR NOTES Agriculture/Rural Development/Agribusiness Urban Education Health and Population Transportation Telecommunications Trade and Privatization Natural Resources and Conservation Energy Mining Financial IFC: Detailed Financial Sector Brief IFC: Chemicals, Petrochemicals and Fertilizers moo_ RELATIONSHIPS WITH OTHER ORGANIZATIONS IMF Other Donors NGOs NGO Activities KEY ISSUES Poverty Gender Education and Training Labor Urban Environmental Management and Industrial Pollution Natural Resource Management and Conservation Land Acquisition and Resettlement Labor Markets and Policy Legal Development Improving the Financial System Macroeconomic Stability Trade and Foreign Investment Policy External Debt Privatization Private Provision of Infrastructure Strategic Industries and Competitiveness/Comparative Advantage Debate -- - -- - - - -- -- -- - -- - -- - -- - -- - -- -- - -- - - -. - - - Viva AIIINflO) A])I Indonesia at a glance Lower- POVERTY and SOCIAL East middle- Indonesia Asia income Development diamond' Population mid-1994 (millions) 190.1 1,735 1,097 Life expectancy GNP per capita 1994 (USS) 880 890 1,680 Average annual growth, 1990-94 Population (%) 1.6 1.4 1.4 Labor force (%) 2.2 1.6 1.6 GNP Gross Most recent estimate (latest year available since 1989) per primary Poverty: headcount index (% of population) 14 capita enrollment Urban population (% of total population) 34 26 54 Life expectancy at birth (years) 63 68 67 Infant mortality (per 1,000 INS btrths) 56 34 36 Child malnutrition (% of children under 5) 39 18 Access to safs water (% of popuatibn) 42 67 78 Access to safe water Illiteracy (% of population age 15+) 23 24 Gross primary enrollment (% of school-age population) 114 116 104 Indonesia Male 116 119 105 Lower-mniddle-income group Fernale 112 115 101 KEY ECONOMIC RATIOS and LONG-TERM TRENDS 1976 1986 1994 1996 el Economic ratios' Gross domestic investment/GDP 23.7 26.2 30.1 31.5 Exports of goods and non-factor services/GD 23.2 22.6 25.2 25.9 Openness of economy Gross domestic savings/GDP 25.9 29.1 31.5 31.8 Gross national savings/GDP .. 24.2 27.6 28.0 Current account balance/GDP -3.5 -2.1 -1.9 -3.5 Interest payments/GDP 1.0 2.3 2.5 2.7 Total debtVGDP 35.8 42.1 55.3 53.6 Savings Investment Total debt service/exports 15.1 28.8 31.5 30.7 Present value of debt/GDP .. .. 51.3 Present value of debt/exports .. .. 181.8 Indebtedness 1976584 1986-96 1994 1996 el 199604 (average annual growth) GDP 7.2 7.1 7.5 8.1 8.0 -/ndonesia GNP per capita 4.5 5.5 5.4 6.4 6.2 -Lower-middle-income group Exportsofgoodsandnfs -0.6 7.5 7.7 7.2 11.1 _ STRUCTURE of the ECONOMY (% of GOP) 1971 1986 1994 1996e Orortw rates of output and lnvestnent I%) Agriculture 30.2 23.2 17.4 .. 20 Industry 33.5 35.9 40.7 . Is. Manufacturing 9.8 16.0 23.9 .. Servies 36.3 40.9 41.9 .. Private consumption 65.1 59.1 60.2 57.9 so ' 90 9 n 3 General government consumption 9.0 11.8 8.2 10.2 Imports of goods and non-factor services 21.0 19.8 23.2 24.0 -GD -GDP (average annual growh) 1976-84 1986-95 1994 1996el Growth rates of export and imports #% Agriculture 4.3 3.4 0.3 4.0 25 Industry 7.1 9.4 10.3 7.4 Manufacturing 14.4 10.9 13.0 12.0 20 Services 9.5 8.1 7.5 8.2 ': Private consumption 9.1 6.5 7.6 10.4 s General govemment consumption 11.4 4.8 2.9 3.0 o Y , , Gross domestic investment 14.5 9.6 12.1 13.5 Be 90 91 92 93 95 Imports of goods and non-factor services 9.9 7.6 12.7 17.9 Gross natinal product 6.7 8.0 7.3 8.2 -soport Imporb Note: 1995 data are preliminary estimates. * The diamonds show four key indicators in the country (in bold) compared with its income-group average. If data are missing, the diamond will be incomplete. Indonesia PRICES and GOVERNMENT FINANCE 1976 1NS 1994 1996 el Domestc pifcls (% Change) Q2 Consuner pnces 19.1 4.4 9.6 9.0 ._ lmpli GDPdeflator 11.5 4.3 6.0 6.0 Govwnment finance 4 (% of GDP) 2 Current revenue .. 192 15.9 15.9 o Curren budget balance .. 6.0 6.8 6.5 '3 e4 a Overal surplusidetfct .. -32 0.3 0.6 -GDP det --CPI TRADE (Aii1lnas US$) 1976 1986 1904 1996 el Exportand buptot lvmill..L US1) Total exports (fob) .. 18,823 42,00 46,518 50000 Fuel 12,iz04 10,344 9,749 "" Rubber .. 714 1,316 1,554 40.000 Manufatures .. 2,287 20,272 24,135 30o000 TOal mports (cit) 14,056 37,736 46,173 25or Food 8. 12 782 984 20.000 Fuel and enrgy 2,870 3,988 3,845 15.000 Capita goos . 5,394 15,062 18,948 10,000 Expod price hdex (1987=100) .. 120 131 135 0 pripo e idex (1987 100) as 85 s8 90 u o0 SI 02 3 *4 5 Temis of trade (1987100) .. 141 147 150 LDEPofM mimpoft BALANCE d PAYMENTS 1975 1986 1994 19916el COtaaeoieunt ba oGDP bl%l (nEns USS) Exports of goods and rdnon-facor se e 6,981 19,371 46,899 52,043 o Imports of goods and non-fator seNvbe 6,775 17,840 43,392 52,379 Resource balanre 206 1,531 3,507 -336 [II;M.. Net factr incore -1,342 -3,542 -6,994 -7,540 Notcurrenttrans1ers 0 88 0 0 Current account balance, before official transfr -1,135 -1,923 -3,488 -7,876 -3 Fwancig Roenm (net) 284 962 2,233 10,429 Chbanges in not resrves(+wicesse) 8S1 961 -1,255 2,553 -4 Reseves wirdg gold (m& USS) 592 5,794 12,290 - Conversion rate /bOcaUSS) 415.0 1,110.6 2,160.8 2,248.6 ENAL DEBT and RESOURME LOWS 1976 196 1993 1904 (nwb USS) Ca f dt.al ddt, 194 J UI | Totadebt ouandVb Nd dWxned 11,507 36,709 89,477 96,500 G G IBRD 57 3690 11,283 12,008 17109 12 _ a IDA 318 84 796 776 (7 Total debt service 1,060 5,824 14,267 14,792 / IBRD 2 384 1,620 2,156 IDA 2 12 24 26 Comfpositin of not resawrce lov Ollcial grans 9 136 219 218 Ofcial creditors 615 1,003 2,339 1,467 Prat croedtos 1,749 154 -3,365 1,627 Forign d*el itestnmt 476 310 2,004 2,109 Portdio equiqy 0 0 1,836 3,672 E/n Vorld Bank pmgmrm 2 3 Commitment 311 1,068 924 1,538 A-IBRD E -B |eR Disburment 164 777 1,195 1,184 B-IDA D -Omermu_Iterl F-itnb | Princialrepaymet 0 133 782 1,259 C-IMIF G-_he Net1bwa 164 644 413 -76 neret payments 3 262 861 922 Nd transfer 160 382 -448 -998 Internional Economics Dpabne 420f96 Note: 1. Governntn finane an trd bseul yr (Aprl to Mach). 2. New National Accounts Sries has bee used 3. ed indicates eatittes for 1996 Indonesia Most SMW MnLM7 grep New Latest_singk_ ____ _ L_e__- higer Unit of t EAst md. in_co Indwator measure 1970.75 1980485 1989.94 Asia income POuP Resources and Expenditures HUMAN RESOURCES Population (mre-1994) thousands 132.589 163,036 190.389 1.734.703 1.096.8S1 472.807 Age depesaency rtio ratio 0.82 0.73 0.62 0.53 0.63 0.62 Urban * of pop. 19.4 26.2 33.6 31.9 55.9 73.7 Population growth rate annual % 2.4 1.8 1.6 1.3 1.3 1.7 Urban 4.8 4.9 3.6 2.8 2.7 2.5 Labor force thuands 52.166 69.179 88.651 977,170 488,647 198.841 Agriculte %oflaborforce 62 56 55 67 36 21 Industy I 1 13 14 16 26 27 Fcmale 33 37 39 44 40 34 LAbor paricaparon rtes Total * of pop. 39 42 47 56 45 42 Female 13 16 18 51 36 29 NATURAL RESOURCES Area thou. sq. km 1,904.57 1,904.57 1,904.57 16367.16 40.594.43 20,668.74 Desity pop. per q. km 69.62 85.60 98.41 104.65 26.66 22.49 Agricnuralland % oflandamu 21.12 21.72 24.76 44.90 41.05 41.49 Change ingicultul laWnd annuai -0.11 6.20 -4.60 1.2 -138 0.02 Agricultural land undeription * 10.19 10.93 10.74 13.14 11.40 9.28 Forests and woodland dwu. sq. km .. 1216.69 1.095.49 4,057.84 5,96925 7,520.52 Deforestation (net) % change, 1980-90 .. .. 1.04 _ _ INCOME Houslwod income Share of top 20% of househlds * of inoome 52 .. 41 Share of bottom 40% of households ' 17 _ 21 Share of bottom 20* of househods 7 .. 9 EXPENDrrURE Food %ofGDP .. 30.2 .. Staples .. 13.1 .. Meax fish, milk. cheee, eggs p* 6.4 .. Cerel imports thou. mietnc tonves 1,424 1,447 3,105 29,997 68,936 43,633 Food aid in cereals 301 270 40 447 5.771 67 Foodproducuonpercaptte 1987.100 78 98 114 1IS 102 102 Ferdizerconsumption kih& 12.8 50.1 61.4 74.5 46.3 68.9 ShareofagricltureminGDP * ofGDP 30.2 23.2 17.4 18.1 14.0 8.0 Housng % of GDP _ 8.2 _ . Averge housebold size ponsu Fr nhold 5.0 4.8 4.5 4.2 .. Urban ' 5.0 5.3 . 33 Fxed invetment housing of GDP .. 3.5 .. _ _ Fuel id power of GDP .. 4.2 _ _ Energymnsumptionpercaptta kg of oil equiv. 102 191 393 659 1.602 1,618 Househods with electicity Urban * ofhouseholds b 46.7 __ Rural .. .. . Tanport and efimuaieas Vof GDP . 2.6 _ 6.0 Fixed inveuneslC transport equipment ' 1.9 - Total road length oIu km 105 207 244 DIVFSTENT IN HUMAN CAPfTAL Health Popuation per physician parsons 26,988 9,412 7,028 1,063 3,064 Population Fr e 4,805 1.255 _ 1,490 - - Popultion per hopital bed 1.222 1,796 1,503 612 592 402 Old hydyrtio tberpy (under-S) %of m _ 7S 32 _ 51 Education Gros enrollment ratos Secondary % ofachoolaSepop. 20 41 43 56 63 59 Female 15 23 39 52 62 Pupil-tacher rti primary pupils per teaber 29 25 23 23 . 25 Pupil-teacher ratio: seondary 16 17 16 16 , Pupils eaChinggrade 4 %.of aot 78 39 91 92 Repeaterrte: primay % of totealm oll 11 11 10 6 ulitry % of pop. (age 15+) 43 28 16 16 . 13 Female % of fem. (age 15+) .. 37 22 24 . IS Newspaper circulation per thou. pop. 17 1S 25 .. 236 135 World Bank International Economics Departnent, April 1996 Indonesia Mert S roA v N& Lestsig*e ymer M Unof . Ert Md- luc inicator re M9707M 1980S 1989.9 Ask inme growp Priority Poverty Indicators POVERT Upper povery line local cuff. Headcount*nd" l of pop. _ 45 17_ Lower povert line local cur_. .. .. Headcout i*du l of pop. .. 29 15 GNP per cpuA USS 230 520 880 £90 1,670 4,710 SHORT TERM INCOME DDICATORS Un .kil uban wages local ewC. 315 1176 . _ Unsilled rml wages . _ Rual tams of trade _ . _. -_ .. _ Consumer price inex 1987=100 28 86 174 _ Lowerm_o.. .. _ Fooe' _ 83 71 _ urban Rural SOCLALINDICATORS Public expenditus on basic soca services * of GDP _ 3. ..- - Gross enroilnet rados Primay % school sgepop. 86 117 114 116 104 107 Male 94 120 116 119 IOS - Female 78 114 112 115 101 _ Motliq lnanmontlity perthou. hlve burh 114 so 53 35 36 36 Under 5 mxN*ty - 74 49 47 43 inrminiadon measles baggroup .. 15.0 0.0 93.0 77.4 82.9 DPT *. IS.0 86.0 95.0 12.0 74.7 Chid mlnutxition (under-5) * _ 31.7 16.9 _ Life expecuncy Total YCS 49 56 63 68 67 69 Female advantage 2.5 3S 35 3.6 6.4 5.8 Total ferilty raw birhs per wmn 5.4 4.1 2.7 2.2 2.7 2.8 Materal mortality Ir per 100,O0 live biths .. 450 .. Supplementary Povet Indicators Expenditures on social secrity lb of toal povt exp. - Socia scuity covrege b ecom. acive pop. _ . _ _ _ Acesstosafewater total lbofpop. 11.0 37.8 41.6 67.2 .. 16.2 Urban M 41.0 43.0 65.0 83U S 94.0 Rjr] * 4.0 36.0 31.7 61.4 _ 64.8 Acces to heath caue Population growth rate GNP per capita growth rate Development dlamondb (average maL p ) l04 ( t pew) lif ____1_ [1_&1 Go*e_ _s 4~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ III -w~~~~~~~~~~~~pr-- iu -2 1 19994 -10w 1970-75 1908 16.4 9075 1960.8 199-94 Acorn tao wae r-I Indoneda l~~~~~~~~~- ndomae" - Lower-mddle4-o Lowa6ide4wous L See the tecia mob, p387. b. lbe developmtdmodbased on for key indicao so t vge lvd of d mt intbe y compaed with its meK gop Se the imtodcLm Bank Group Activities in Indonesia US$ Millions FY94-95 (Avemage) FY96 Actual Proj. IBRD Administrative Budget Lending 7.7 9.4 Portfolio Management 5.2 5.7 ESW 3.7 3.5 Other 5.2 5.0 Total 21.8 23.7 HO Budget 15.0 17.6 Field Budget 6.1 6.1 IFC Administrative Budget 4.3 4.5 FY93-95 FY96-98 # projects $US million % of total # projects SUS million % of total IBRD Lending Agr., Nat. Resources 8 571 15% 10 546 15% Human Resources 8 575 15% 12 780 21% Industry, Finance, Telecom 5 1,395 37% 7 1,061 29% Power, Energy, Prvt Sect Dev Infrastructure 9 1,235 33% 11 1,243 34% Total 30 3,775 100% 40 3,630 100% IBRD Portfolio under Implementation 74 76 GEF/MP Approvals 2 $24 100% 5 $68 100% IFC Investments Agribusiness 1 9 3% Capital Markets 9 43 13% Chemicals, Fertilizers 2 47 14% Manufacturing 12 234 68% Infrastructure 1 9 3% Total 25 342 100% IFC Portfolio Loans 232 Equity 109 MIGA Guarantees 2 65 (est.) INDONESIA: SELECTED INDICATORS OF PORTFOLIO PERFORMANCE AND MANAGEMENT Idicator FY93 I/ FY94 1/ FY9S FY96(Proj.) PorfolioPe,fonrmwce Number of projects under implementation 75 72 75 76 Averg Age of Projesb in Portfolio (yeas) 4.2 3.8 3.7 3.5 Percent of problem projects Development objectives 1.3 4.2 21 4.0 5.3 Implementationpgress 2.7 5.6 12.0 11.8 Canceled duringFY inUSSm 65.2 57.6 336.1 Y 73.1 Disbursement ratio (%) 22.7 24.4 22.7 20.0 Disbusement lag (%) 14.7 19.5 18.6 19.0 Memorandwn item: % completed projects 27.0 8.0 29.0 25.0 rated unsatisfactory by OED PortfilioMaagemnt Total supervision resources (USS'000)4/ 3329.1 3569.3 3421.0 3648.0 Average supevision (USS '000/project) 44.4 49.6 45.6 48.0 Supervision resources (USS000) for. Projects rated KS or S 44.7 47.8 44.5 43.2 Projects rated U or HU 51.5 80.2 53.8 79.6 Supervision resources by location (in %/) Peracent headquartes 65.4 66.2 73.7 60.0 Percent resident mission 34.6 33.8 26.3 40.0 Memorandum item: date of las/next CPPR Last: Feb/Mar 1994 Next: May 1996 1/ Compans across yeas not possible becase earier data (FY93/ FY94) based on saff-weeks not on S-budget 2/ In FY94, EA3 adopted more stringet critei for ratings which resuled in downgrading several projects. 3/ in FY95, several projects experienced considerable sxvir-s due to lower than expected prices in prcurement of project input. Among these were Power Transmission Project ($104 mil)l Rua Zlectrificaton ($55.5 mil) Industrial Restuctuing (S45 ml). 4/ Direct cots only. * Since the 1994 CPPR, Government and Bank have focused on improving implementation and resuts on the ground. * Facial audits are being supplemented with tecbnical audits for atl projects to better measure development outcome. * RSI procurement/supervision team has been strgt ed with locally hired Bahasa Indonesian speaking personnel. * Projects are being restnuctred and unsuccessful components dropped during implementation in a timely manner. PERSPECTIVE I DI COUNTRY BACKGROUND Republic of Indonesia Geography - @ Indonesia is the largest archipelago in .. .. .F the world, consisting of more than 13,600 islands stretching across 3,200 ' miles of sea and comprising an area of - - 1,919,443 sq km. Its largest city is : Jakarta, the capital. The country is divided into 27 provinces and two major . s- - regions: Western Indonesia, comprising the islands of Sumatra and Java; and Eastern Indonesia, including ~ Indonesia has over Kalimantan (Borneo), Maluku, Nusa 1 0 a N E A one tenth of the Tenggara, Timor, and Irian Jaya (New L _ tropical rainforest Guinea). . area in the world Population and between 10 Climate Indonesia is the fourth most populous and20 percent of The climate of Indonesia is tropical, with country in the world, with an estimated the world's coral two monsoon seasons - a wet season from 190.4 million people in 1994. reefs. November to March and a dry season from Ethnic Groups June to October. Humidity averages about 80 percent; the daily temperatures range The most distinct ethnic groups are the from 200 to 320 C (70° to 900 F) in Jakarta. Javanese (40 percent of the population) and the Sundanese (15 percent) on Java; the Resources Balinese on Bali; and the Bataks and The rich volcanic soil, tropical tempera- Acehnese on Sumatra. Other minority tures, and monsoonal rains prevalent in groups include the Madurese, the Dayaks Bahasa Indonesia Java and Bali are ideal for growing crops. (on Kalimantan), the Ambonese (on is based on Malay, These areas together support 65 percent of Maluku), the Timorese, and numerous the market Indonesia's people on only 7 percent of the indigenous groups in Irian Jaya. The country language of land. By contrast, the sparsely populated also includes a sizable Chinese population. coastal towns. eastern islands are characterized by a drier climate and poorer soils. Indonesia has Language over one tenth of the tropical rainforest area More than 100 languages are spoken in in the world, located primarily on the Indonesia, but Bahasa Indonesia is the islands of Sumatra, Kalimantan, Sulawesi, official and most widely spoken tongue, and Irian Jaya (New Guinea). These areas containing elements of Chinese, Indian, contain some of the richest biodiversity on Dutch, and English. earth. Indonesia also has between 10 and 20 percent of the world's coral reefs. In an Religion effort to halt the degradation of these Freedom of religion is guaranteed by the resources, Indonesia plans to set aside 10 constitution. Islam is practiced by 87 percent percent of its land and marine areas as of the population. Other religions include protected sites. Major mineral resources Christianity and Buddhism. Hinduism, once include tin, bauxite, petroleum, natural gas, a major influence, is confined primarily to copper, nickel, and coal. Bali. %:K E P U 8 L I C 0 F I N D 0 N E S I A ............ ......... .. ............ . _._ .. ... . _._........ ........... _ . ._ .. ...........I.... ___!!! Government social justice for all people. Every Indonesia is a ~~~~~~~~decision, law, or policy is evalu- constitutional ated in terms of how well it republic headed ~~~~~~~~~reflects, or how it will affect, republicded these five prin-tciples. Soeharto. The History president, elected for a 5-year term Southeast Asia's long history of The Indonesian by the 1,000 extensive mnigrations has created state philosophy is member People's Pura Besakih, on the slopes of Mount Agung, i the present mixture of more than embodied in five Consultative one of the largest and most socred Hindu temples one hundred ethnic and linguis- principles of Assembly on the island of Bali. Source: Embassy of Indonesia. tic divisions in the archipelago. Princaiples ofR,isbt In the early centuries of the Pancasila: (MPR), is both Crsinea-bfr h head of state and Christian era-before the * Belief in one head of government. Half of the members penetration of Indian influences - many God; of the MPR are elected through general people on these islands lived in political parliamentary elections, while the other groups rarely larger than family-based tribal * Belief in a just half are appointed directly by the presi- units. Irrigated wet rice (sawah) cultivation is and civilized dent. The MPR meets once every five years believed to have originated two thousand humanity; to approve the State Policy Guidelines. years ago amongst coastal people, and such cultural expressions as the wayang (shadow i Unity of Cabinet ministers are appointed directly by puppet) theater, the gamelan orchestra, and Indonesia; the president. Legislative power in Indone- batik techniques may also predate Indian sia is vested in the parliament (the MPR), influences. * Democracy and which also approves the annual budget. commitment to The president is not directly responsible to Indian culture, however, later exerted a the process of the parliament. GOLKAR, the ruling powerful influence on the states that devel- consensus and political party, which has close ties to the oped in the archipelago. By the 7th century, government by Army, has dominated elections since 1971. two principal types of political units had wise policies; The other two political parties are the emerged: the maritime trading states along and United Development Party (PPP), an the coasts of Sumatra, North Java, Borneo Islamic group, and the Indonesian Demo- (Kalimantan), Sulawesi, and some of the *Sociaijustice for cratic Party (PDI), a nationalist and social other eastern islands; and the rice-based all people. ist group. inland kingdoms, particularly of East and Central Java. Indonesia's 27 provinces are subdivided into 243 rural districts (kabupaten) and 51 Sri Vijaya, a Mahayana Buddhist kingdom urban districts (kotamnadya), subdistricts on Sumatra's southeast coast, was the center (kecamatan), and villages (desa). Both of trade with India and China, and for provincial and district governments have approximately 500 years monopolized much their own legislatures. The heads of the of China's trade with the western archi- provinces (governors), rural districts pelago. (bupati), and urban districts (walikota) are Indian culture had a profound influence on elected by local parliaments for a period of the religious and political organizations of five years. the Hindu-Buddhist kingdoms of Central Pancasila, the Indonesian state philosophy and East Java, as evidenced by the temples, is embodied in five principles: Belief in one buildings, and inscriptions that still exist, God; belief in a just and civilized human- including the Borobodur temple in Central ity; unity of Indonesia; democracy and Java, built in the mid-9th century. In 1293, commitment to the process of consensus King Vijaya repelled a Mongol invasion of and government by wise policies; and Java and founded the greatest Javanese empire, Majapahit, which claimed sover- _E_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ eignty over much of what is now Indone- of entrepreneurs and Westem-educated sia and parts of Malaya. Indonesians that this policy helped to create came increased resentment of colonial rule, Islam arrived in northern Sumatra in the contributing to the rise of anti-Dutch nation- late 13th century and was propagated by alist movements from 1912 to the 1940s. coastal merchants. The first major Islamic center was the sultanate of Malacca Sukarno, who founded the Indonesian (Melaka) on Malaya's west coast, which Nationalist Party in 1927, was among the became a major diffusion center for spices major leaders of this movement. He and to the West and for Islam through contacts Muhammad Hatta, another nationalist with coastal Javanese merchants. Follow- leader, proclaimed the Republic of Indone- ing the fall of Malacca to the Portuguese in sia's independence on August 17, 1945 at the 1511, several competing Muslim states end of World War II- the Japanese, who arose to capture the trading routes: Aceh in had occupied the country since 1943, had Islam arrived in northern Sumatra, Makassar in southwest surrendered to the Allies just two days northern Sumatra Sulawesi, Bantam in South Sumatra, and earlier. Sukarno and Hatta were chosen the in the late 13th the new Muslim kingdom of Mataram in country's first president and vice president. century and was Central Java. In 1949, the Netherlands agreed to transfer propagated by The Dutch East India Trading Company sovereignty to the new republic. coastal merchants. expanded into the Spice Islands in the Under Sukamo's Guided Democracy (1959- early part of the 17th century. The com- 1965), which extended broad authority to the pany established its headquarters in president, the country pursued an active Batavia (now Jakarta), creating a mo- foreign policy, including the annexation of nopoly of the spice trade by limiting clove West Irian from the Dutch in 1962. However, cultivation to Ambon and nutmeg and the domestic economy declined, resulting in Dutch trading mace to the Banda Islands in Maluku. growing tensions between the army and the rights were easily Dutch trading rights were easily converted Indonesian Communist Party (PKI). On converted into into effective political control when the September 30, 1965, General Soeharto, head effective political company was dissolved in 1799 and the of the army's strategic command, sup- control when the Dutch govemment assumed control of its pressed a coup attempt and then himself company was East Indian possessions. The Dutch ousted Sukamo and took over as head of dissolved in 1799 annexed large areas of Central Java in the state. In the aftermath, army units and some disle int79 early 1800s and by 1858 had taken a large Muslim groups killed an estimated 300,000 and the Dutch part of Sumatra as well. to 1 million supporters of PKI and arrested government hundreds of thousands more accused of assumed control As oil, tin, and rubber replaced coffee, involvement in the coup attempt. of its East Indian sugar, and tobacco as the main exports to possessions. Europe, the Dutch took over areas outside Assuming a basically pro-Western stance, Java - including Sulawesi, the Moluccas, Soeharto's New Order ended confrontation the Lesser Sundas, and with Malaysia and has most of Bomeo. since been a major At theinigofpromoter of and partici- 20th ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~pant in the regional tcentury, the Dutch Association of Southeast introduced their Ethical Asian Nations (ASEAN). Policy, which led to the Advised by W n development of limitedtrieecnms,th health and educational tarmy-led government sion of railways, roads, Indonesian communiies rely on boots, such as these has encouraged direct sndiontofraislways,roads,ip bamboo rafts in Java, for tronsporlation, communi- foreign investmnent and ping. With the new class cation, and commerce. procured Westem loans. - P U B L I C 0 F I N D 0 N F S I A j In 1975 the state-owned oil enterprise, Indonesian performing arts are rich in Pertamina, was unable to meet repayments tradition. The wayang kulit, or shadow of $10.5 billion in debts, and the crisis puppet shows, include different puppets for threatened Indonesia's financial structure. each character in the play. The dalang Only through project cancellations, renego- (puppet master) brings these puppets to life tiations of loans, and help from the United by adjusting his voice to the character's States and other Western governments was mood, while weaving an atmosphere of Jakarta able to salvage the situation by late passion, anger, friendship, or forgiveness. 1977. Subsequently, world oil prices and increased oil production and exports aided Of all the drum-and-song ensembles of Indonesia's economic recovery. Another Indonesia, the gamelan is the best known. In crisis that arose in 1975 was Indonesia's Java and Bali, Hindu-Buddhist influence The greatest long- invasion and annexation of the former resulted in the development of unusually term danger to the Portuguese colony of East Timor, where, large musical cycles, sometimes comprising Soeharto regime human rights organizations claim, the army more than 500 beats. The largest and best- has been the may have killed more than 100,000 people. quality gamelans require about 30 musicians; growing social and such ensembles were once owned by economic Most opposition to the Soeharto regime has regional kings. The multiplicity of tunings in inequality, come from Muslim groups who have never the gamelan ensembles is designed to reflect particularly accepted the government's authority and happiness, bravery, or melancholy, depend- increasing from university students alienated by the ing on the ensemble. Ia _,sses regime's corruption and human rights ,andiessnes reim' corpto an huargt Indonesian dance has three main traditions: among the violations. The greatest long-term danger to Indonesin eastee main traditions: amaong te the Soeharto regime, however, has been the the Javanese in eastern Java; the Sundanese Javanese growing social and economic inequality, in western Java; and the Balinese. Javanese pseasantry. particularly increasing landlessness among and Sundanese dances include both folk and the Javanese peasantry. This has been courtly styles, but Balinese dances are exacerbated by population growth, despite shared by all social classes. In general, a relatively successful family-planning Indonesian dances are slow in tempo, with program in Java. In response, the govern- controlled, reserved motions. The dance ment has launched extensive thransmigra- dramas often portray episodes from Hindu tion programs, and more recentlyr has epics such as Ramayana. In Bali, ritual often begun to focus on regional development in consists of dance, and spirit possession is tegu et parts of Indionaldesia A recent believed to occur in ceremonies such as the poversty partogr (Inpresia. AT) a Icut barong dance drama. Other important forms aodeary twog decaes f .s t ule of Indonesian dance include the wayang progress in .allvtin pover in rral orang (the large-scale staged dance adapta- areas. Running unopposed, Soeharto won tion of the puppet theatre), and the wayang reelection in March 1988 and again in topeng, or masked dance, a solo interpreta- March 1993. tion drawn from Hindu legends. Culture Indonesia handicraft tradition includes woodcarving in Bali, the Sumatran region of Indonesian culture is an intermixture of Lake Toba, and Irian Jaya; silver artifacts in many diverse civilizations. The Hinduism Bali and in Kota Gede, Yogyakarta; and Sources: and Buddhism of India exerted a profound batik fabrics produced throughout the Microsoft Encarta, influence on Indonesian architecture and archipelago. sculpture. Arabic influence in Indonesia Embassy of Indonesia. since the 13th century is evident mainly through the teachings of Islam. The islands have also been affected by Southeast Asian and Polynesian cultures, as well as by the influx of Chinese and Dutch peoples. I~ ~ f _I f :~~~~~~~~~~~~:i The Economic and Political Situation 1. The Economic Situation has risen sharply, and the adult illit- . . ~~eracy rate has fallen by almost two After a quarter century of steadily rising incomes thirds to 23 percent. (the economy grew at an average rate of 6.7 percent a year during 1965-1995), Indonesia has Most regions have shared in the benefits become: of growth. In 1983-93, per capita GDP, per capita consumption, and social * more diversified: nonoil and gas exports now indicators improved in all provinces. account for almost 80 percent of total exports, Sources of growth, however, have up from only 25 percent a decade ago; differed across the regions. In Java/Bali, * more industrialized: manufacturing now first rice-based agriculture and subse- accounts for around 21 percent of GDP, up quently manufacturing and tourism from 12 percent in the early 1980s ; the share have been the engine of growth, com- of manufactures in total exports rose from pared to resource-rich Kalimantan and only 8 percent in 1983 to 48 percent in 1993; Sumatra, where natural resources (for- estry, oil, gas, mnining) have been critical * more urbanized: the urban share of to growth. Some resource-poor outer is- Indonesia's population increased from 22 lands have depended heavily on fiscal percent in 1980 to 31 percent in 1990; transfers, and may suffer in the future if . increasingly driven by private initiative: the budgetary constraints limit such trans- share of private investment in total fixed fers. investment increased from 57 percent in 1985 Short-Term Challenges to 67 percent in 1995; and While the economy continued to grow * more integrated into the global economy and rapidly in 1995, with real GDP growth prominent in the international arena: Its of 8.2 percent and nonoil GDP growth chairmanship of the Non-Aligned Movement of 8.6 percent, short-term economic ended in October 1995. It chaired APEC in stability is threatened by several factors: 1994, is a critical member of ASEAN, and occupies a revolving seat on the UN Security First, there are signs of overheating in the Council. economy. This was reflected in: Indonesia's poor have benefitted from a grow- * inflation of 9 percent in 1995, and ing economy. By any international measure, In- . a widening current account deficit, donesia's record on poverty reduction is estimated at $8 billion (4 percent of impressive: GDP) in fiscal year 1995/96. Rapid * The incidence of poverty has declined from private consumption growth spilled over into sharp increases in nonoil around 60 percent (70 million persons) at the impors, e mports, shifting the trade balance into beginning of the 1970s to around 14 percent deficit for the first time in many years. (26 million persons) today; and Nonoil imports grew at 25.5 percent, * Universal primary education has been while the estimated nonoil export achieved, secondary and tertiary enrollment growth was only 15 percent. E P U B L I C 0 F N N _ _ ,__ ..~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~....... .. . .......... .............. ................... .. ... .. . ....... .1 .... ...... . .. ................._ ........ ._ While Government has tightened mon- etary policy in response to these indica- human resource development, environmental tors, its fiscal policy, as reflected in the next concerns, regional issues and institutional per- fiscal year's budget, is not considered formance. The longer-run development chal- contractionary enough to cool the lenges facing Indonesia are being shaped by economy. fundamental structural transformations underway in the country and the coexistence Second, the picture forfinancial flows is of very different development dynamics in mixed. Investment increased by 15 percent various regions. At a broad level, three transi- in 1995. Directforeign investment inflows tions are underway: amounted to about $5.7 billion, up from $2.5 billion in 1994, and approvals in 1995 * The shift from a primarily natural resource- surged to $40 billion. Foreign direct based economy (oil/gas, minerals, forestry, investment and other capital inflows easily agriculture) to a more human capitallpro- financed the current account deficit and ductivity-based economy; increased international reserves by $2.1 . The transition from a largely rural economy billion. However, there are three areas of to a more urban society, primarily in Java, and the consequent environmental * Indonesia's relatively high debt stock management, social, and infrastructure chal- (the Bank estimates US$96.5 billion at lenges; and end 1994) the servicing of which takes . A political transition featuring more open up 30 percent of export earnings. debate of public policy issues and a * An open capital account with a sizable rethinking of the role of government, private amount of short-term debt. The last few sector, and community organizations. years have seen a greater volume of The pace of the transition differs from region short-term, relatively volatile funds go- to region, reflecting differences in endowments ing in and out of the Indonesian stock and comparative advantage. In the more market and banking system. As the industrialized, urbanized, densely populated recent experience of Mexico shows, such Java/Bali regions, issues of industrial/urban flows can move with great rapidity and pollution, quality of health and education, generate severe macroeconomic private provision of infrastructure and problems. services, and access to urban land dominate * Despite the central bank's gradually the agenda. In resource-rich Kalimantan, tightening control and prudential Sumatra, and Irian Jaya, the major develop- legislation, Indonesia's banking system ment issues are sustainable exploitation of is weak, with over 10 percent natural resources and greater participation by nonperforming assets at end-1995, due indigenous groups in the management of these in large part to crony-related lending resources. The resource-poor eastern islands and other unsound practices in state pose yet a different type of challenge: these commercial banks. remain heavily dependent on agriculture but cannot benefit from agricultural technology Long-Term Challenges improvements that have been successful in With rising incomes have come new chal- Java/Bali; at the same time, they lag behind lenges that require greater attention to the rest of the country in basic education, health, and infrastructure. assessing the size, skill mix, and incen- tives of the civil service, and by decen- The major long-term challenges emerging from tralizing or privatizing functions when these transitons in a country of rising income this will enhance efficiency and effective- levels are: ness. Special attention needs to be given (i) Maintaininggrowth with macrostability to ministries whose functions have through appropriatefiscal and monetary policy, changed or are expected to change sig- careful debt management, and a stronger domes- nificantly (e.g., Industry and Trade as tic savings effort. During 1996-99, real GDP is a result of deregulation, Public Works as expected to grow at around 8 percent. This is a result of decentralization), and to predicated upon continued strong growth of the interagency coordination as a result of nonoil, nonagricultural sector, led by rising do- environmental and other issues (e.g., mestic and foreign private investment. Opti- water resource management and land mism with regard to rising private investment markets). is justified by several indicators, including: (a) a (iv) Reducing poverty through in- continuing emphasis by Government on trade creased access of the poor to basic ur- and investment deregulation; (b) a receptive of- ban, education, and health services; tar- ficial attitude toward private investment in in- geted programs for the hard-core poor; frastructure, especially in telecommunications raising agricultural productivity in the and power; and (c) a tremendous increase in eastern islands; andgreater involvement foreign investor interest (as shown by rising in- of the poor in program design and im- vestment applications). plementation. Indonesia's impressive (ii) Enhancing competitiveness through in- record on poverty reduction is attribut- creased deregulation, reduced cost of finance, able to sustained employment-intensive and provision of better infrastructure services. growth in agriculture and industry as Indonesia remains committed to further well as expansion of basic infrastructure deregulation: it undertook a major liberalization and health and education services. But of its foreign investment regime in June 1994 and a large fraction of the population still announced a rules-based, pre-programmed lives just barely above the poverty level trade liberalization schedule in May 1995 which, and remains vulnerable to shifts in over- if implemented as planned, will cut average all economic performance. Some social tariffs to 7 percent by 2003. Further financial indicators, such as infant and maternal reforms and prudential regulation aimed at re- mortality, have not improved propor- ducing banking system risk should help cut the tionately to real income gains. Further relatively high cost of capital in Indonesia. The reduction of poverty will require: (a) tar- Government is also committed to reducing in- geting programs to reach the hard-core frastructure bottlenecks through both private poor; (b) allowing poor communities, and public investment. households, and especially women to have a greater role in specifying the serv- (iii) Making public institutions more effective ices they need; and (c) developing a pro- to deal with the major structural changes ductivity-enhancing agricultural growth underway in the economy. Improving public strategy for the resource-poor outer is- sector management involves adapting to changes in the functions of government by re- * N S~~~~~~~~~~~~ONI-7 lands. management of forests, fisheries, and coastal (v) Enhancing human resource develop- ment through improvements in the deliv- 11. The Political Situation ery, efficiency, and quality of health and The next parliamentary elections are education services. First, meeting the tar- scheduled for April 1997; the president will be gets of increasing compulsory education selected soon thereafter and the inauguration from six to nine years over the nextl5 will take place in March 1998. It is widely ex- years, enhancing quality at all levels, and pected that President Suharto will be a candi- expanding education to poorer groups and date once again and that he will win; the op- remote regions will require cost-effective position to him, while growing, is still weak policy interventions to ensure maximum and subject to serious electoral disadvantages. enrollment and adequate quality. Second, to upgrade labor quality and provide suffi- Four main interest groups influence political cient skilled labor to meet the needs of a developments in Indonesia: more complex economy requires greater attention to improving the quality of pri- * the Armed forces, which have traditionally mary and secondary education, in order supported Suharto but may be concerned to provide a foundation for subsequent about his efforts in recent years to undercut training. The emphasis is now on improv- their power and privileges; in December ing the efficiency of public institutions 1995, Suharto put his son-in-law in charge through increased autonomy, upgrading of the elite Special Forces Command the quality and relevance of education and (Kopassus); training institutions through accreditation . Golkar, the ruling political party, which rep- and performance-based funding, and in- resents primarily bureaucrats (both central creasing access to higher education. and local level), retired army officers, and a (vi) Managing resources sustainably broad mass of farmer, business, intellectual through more effective policies for land, and political groups that have benefitted water, andforest resources; strengthening from Suharto's policies and patronage; of institutional capacities in environment * Religious parties, including the well-estab- conservation activities; and reducing ur- lished Nahdlatul Ulema, which have a so- ban and industrial pollution. The grow- cial/religious development agenda on the ing attention to environmental quality and surface but a political anti-Suharto agenda sustainability in the Government's devel- below the surface. It is widely thought that opment strategy reflects an increased its official sponsorship of an organization of awareness of the costs and risks of the Muslim intellectuals (ICMI) is a way of curb- worsening environmental conditions due ing the influence of other religion-based par- to past growth, and the potential for con- ties; and tinued environmental degradation in the future. Three areas of concern have been * Opposition political parties (three are identified for urgent attention: (a) water legal), such as the one led by the daughter supply, environmental sanitation, and of former President Sukarno; these parties solid wastemanagement; (b)vehicle emis- are weak but have attracted increasing sion and industrial pollution control support in the last decade or so, especially (maionlyonJa and (c)nthedsustaia tio onaole from intellectuals, students, and urban labor. (mainly on Java); and (c) the sustainable Recent years have seen a rising level of unrest There is a perception that nepotism and among workers, students, journalists, and non- cronyism are becoming more entrenched in mainstream groups. Serious riots took place in Indonesia; the President's family or cronies, Medan in 1994 in which Chinese-owned busi- in particular, have been involved in almost nesses were attacked by workers and others. The every major business transaction in recent frequency of strikes and other forms of indus- years. The most recent example involves trial unrest has been rising; students and jour- the award of significant tax exemptions to nalists have been increasingly supporting more a car manufacturing joint venture control- openness with respect to the right of expression led by one of the President's sons. (e.g., in the print media), the functioning of courts and the judiciary, and the quality of gov- In many respects Indonesia today is like ernance. Nonmainstream groups (e.g., tribes, Korea in the mid 1980s; despite substantial forest dwellers, environmentalists) have economic progress and sharing of gains, the mounted several protest actions, including seri- lack of democracy and transparency and ous disturbances at the site of the Freeport mines the perception of rising inequality are fos- in Irian Jaya. The situation in East Timor also tering both an increasing sense of resent- continues to be marked by unrest. ment and expressions of unrest; Indonesia has been likened to a "smoldering volcano" (Far Eastern Economic Review). 1*4 E P U B L I C 0 F I N D 0 N E S I A Republic of Indonesia Civil Society Background has been upheld twice and now awaits Su- * Indonesia is (still) a society dominated by tra- preme Court ruling. ditional polarized relations between a domi- * Restrictive environment for NGOs. Non- nant state and a passive society. profit sector is hampered by unclear legal sta- * GOI is not accountable to the legislature tus of organizations and bureaucratic con- trols. Arbitrariness furthler aggravates con- (DPR), only to the People's Congress (MPR), fusi environent for Ngsracces to which convenes only when a new govern- f .sn eniomn fo NGs cest whntich lcnvenesdonly. when anewgovern- funding is subject to GOI approval and pro- curement of GOI contracts by NGOs is prob- * Private sector influence on governance and ac- lematic. Income tax exemptions for private countability is limited. foundations were abolished in the latest tax law. • Up to the late 1980s, the "security approach" aimed at stability to allow economic growth. Government Position In the 1990s, officially sanctioned "openness" * Stability is still paramount requirement for emerged but has been inconsistently applied. development. * Approximately 11,000 NGOs (some 3,600 reg- * Development still focused on economy, but istered) are becoming more outspoken, but . . remain weak and fragmented as a force (pas- moet participtor gover n i. sive society). ~~~~~~ciety iS the main player" ). sive society). - In November 1994, GOI established the inde- * NGOs (and by implication "civil society") must all adhere to the government's policy p)endent National Human Rights Commission of collective good, Pancastla , and profess "na- which has won careful praise both locally and t.oalicticism isnseen as going .ag abroad. tionalism"; criticism iS seen as going against abroad. these, in particular if vented in international Key Issues fora. * Elections (mid 1997): more open opposition World Bank Position to GOI's dominance of procedures; an inde- * GOI should establish better working relations pendent nongovernmental "watchdog com- with NGOs and involve them more in devel- mittee" was established in March 1996 con- opment activities. sisting mainly of NGO activists. * Freedom of expression. Printed media are * GOI should make legal framework more con- ducive to development of nonprofit sector veryhmucht under GOI icenscrutineriod iegals and abolish distorting bureaucratic restric- tions (deregulation of nonprofit sector). * GOI accountability. NGOs have been push- * NGOs should be more professional. ing for this and have taken GOI (mcl. the Presi- dent) to court; most efforts are unsuccessful, * GOI should improve accountability as a way but appeal by the banned TEMPO magazine to enhance the scope and quality of service delivery. rFE P U B L I C F IN D 0 N E S I A: World Bank Group Country Perspective Background concession process, however, has sometimes been * Indonesia is the world's fourth most populated uncompetitive. country, spreading over more than 13,000 islands and * Corruption. Members of the President's family and 3,200 miles. Java and Bali account for 60 percent of associates are heavily involved in nontransparent the population. The urban population has grown rap- deals involving concessions (forestry, telephones, idly from 22 percent in 1980 to 34 percent today. infrastructure), and special protection (automobiles, * Indonesia's GNP per capita was US$980 in 1995; it petrochemicals, airplanes, shipbuilding). Corruption was classified by the Bank as a middle-income coun- reaches to lower levels with the need to pay for petty try in 1993. In the last 10 years, per capita income licenses. growth (6 percent) ranked among the top 10 percent * Civil society. Freedom of expression is limited; gov- of all developing countries. ernment is not accountable to the legislature; the en- * Dependence on oil and gas has fallen to just over 20 vironment for NGOs is restrictive. percent of exports and government revenues (com- Current Challenges pared to around 80 percent in the mid 1980s). Manu- . Overheating of the economy, reflected in a 9 per- facturing accounts for 21 percent of GDP, up from 12 cent inflation rate, and a widening current account percent in the early 1980s. deficit estimated at close to $7 billion (3.5 percent of * Labor-based growth has reduced absolute poverty GDP) in FY95/96, as rapid private consumption to 14 percent, but economic growth has lagged in growth spilled over into sharp increases in nonoil some regions of Indonesia, particularly in East Timor, imports. Irian Jaya, and Nusa Tenggara. * Need to improve the competitiveness of private In- - Universal primary education has been achieved, sec- donesian firms so they can prosper in a more open ondary and tertiary enrollment have risen sharply, business environment. and the adult illiteracy rate has fallen to 23 percent. * A relatively high debt stock (estimated at $96.5 bil- Health indicators, however, are low for Indonesia's lion in 1994) and sizable amount of short-term debt income group. in the context of an open capital account; and a weak * Indonesia's business environment continues to de- banking system with nonperforming assets amount- velop strongly, with inflows of foreign direct invest- ing to over 10 percent in 1995, in large part due to ment (FDI) of $5.7 billion in 1995, up from $2.5 bil- crony-related lending and other unsound practices lion in 1994, and 1995 approvals totaling $40 billion. by commercial banks. The FDI framework is one of the most attractive in * Regional disparities and growing gap between parts the region. of the country despite broad-based economic growth. * As of January 1996, Indonesia had investment grade * Environmental degradation, especially in key urban ratings of Baa3 from Moody and BBB from S&P. As areas, arising from unsafe disposal of human and of December 1995, the Jakarta Stock Exchange (JSE) sold waste, vehicle emissions and industrial pollu- had more than 230 listed companies, capitalized at tion, particularly on Java, and the unsustainable $66.6 billion. management of natural resources and ecosystems * Financial access. Tight monetary policy and high (groundwater aquifers on Java and forests, fishery costs of financial intermediation have pushed local and other marine resources in the outer islands). interest rates to about 20 to 22 percent. Major busi- *Rising social tensions due to increasing competition ness groups borrow at lower rates offshore, but mid- for land and other scarce resources (especially when dle- and smaller-tier companies still have difficulty traditional community rights are not respected), as accessing offshore credit. well as pollution from mining and industrial sources, * Indonesia has partially privatized its domestic and often compounded by ethnic and religious differ- international telecommunications companies ($1.2 ences and perception of special privileges for "out- billion and $2.9 billion). It has also offered conces- siders" and well-connected businessmen over local/ sions in the power and transportation sectors. The indigenous people. 1X; E P U B L I C 0 F J N D 0 N E S I A Political Perspective * Indonesia's development record over the past 25 Soeharto's rural roots and near-obsession with rice years has earned it a place among the elite "Asian self-sufficiency led to one of the world's more suc- Miracle" grouping of countries. As late as 1966, how- cessful agricultural investment programs. Since ever, Indonesia was poor (per capita income less than most Indonesians were - and still are - rural, this $50), its govemment bankrupt, its economy spiraling emphasis on food production had the added ben- out of control (inflation hit 635 percent that year), its efit of spreading Indonesia's growth widely among over 100 million people hungry (average consump- its people, leading to one of the best poverty reduc- tion 1,650 calories from mainly cassava and maize), tion records of the past 50 years (from 60+ percent its social fabric ripped apart by one of the great do- poor in 1970 to around 14 percent today). mestic bloodbaths of modern history (it is said that Breaking with its successful past is, in many ways, more than 400,000 people died in the aftermath of Indonesia's greatest challenge. From a natural-re- the aborted 1965 coup), and its govemment in disar- source-based, centrally managed economy, the coun- ray. Indonesia hardly qualified as a country: 13,000 try now needs to continue its push to strengthen its islands (7,000 inhabited) stretching over 3000 miles, private sector, and to streamline and decentralize containing in excess of 300 diverse ethnic, linguistic its public administration. This challenge is perhaps and religious groups drawn together more by his- best illustrated by Soeharto himself. One of the most torical accident than by natural grouping. Few ob- underrated national leaders alive today (he made servers at that moment in history would have bet on virtually all the final decisions that produced the Indonesia's survival as a nation let alone on its as- Tndonesian miracle), Soeharto must now undertake cension into the ranks of Asian success stories, the most difficult task of his career: managing his * Indonesia's rise from among the world's poorest own succession. Having controlled Indonesia for countries to the ranks of the lower middle income more than half of its independence his mark is eve- countries came about by its govermment's system- rywhere, except where it may be most needed, on atic application of conventional neoclassical eco- the succession issue. There is little doubt that he will nomic policy: to grow well a country needs a stable run again. But how he will eventually disentangle macroeconomic environment, high saving rates, himself from government while protecting his fami- heavy investment in human capital, a desire to work ly's huge financial interests remains unclear and the with its comparative advantages and, above all, a source of great speculation. reasonable level of stability. * Soeharto's record of development management un- * How was Indonesia able to apply this recipe when derscores his extraordinary decision making and most others could not? Part of the answer lies in a judgmental capabilities. Soeharto does, however, unique relationship between its president for the past have his weaknesses. Two of the most critical are 30 years, Soeharto, and a small group of "techno- his children and B.J. Habibie, Indonesia's Minister crats" who shaped economic policy and sold it to of Technology. the president. This group, led quietly and effectively . President Soeharto's willingness to ensure his chil- by Prof. Widjojo Nitisastro, is largely responsible for dren's business success has long been a source of Indonesia's success. Widjojo and his team sought irritation among Indonesians; more recently, the advice widely (from the World Bank, among others), President torpedoed old business alliances to favor while the policy advice they gave the President was his family, in the process raising concern interna- uniquely Indonesian. tionaly. As to Mr. Habibie, the President seems will- * Indonesia did more than just manage its ing to expend considerable public resources to un- macroeconomy well. It also did a good job of derwrite the minister's vision of a high-tech Indo- channeling its resources into two key investment ar- nesia. No one has been able to convince the Presi- eas: rural infrastructure and human resources. Un- dent to rein in either the First Family or Mr. Habibie like many developing countries, Indonesia promoted and both are costing Indonesia efficiency and repu- rather than taxed its agricultural sector. President tation. Republic of Indonesia IFC Country Perspective Business Environment * Macroeconomic stability. Proceeding from over 20 years of prudent macroeconomic policies and a 6 percent p.a. growth rate in the last decade, Indonesia attained lower middle income country sta- tus in 1993 with per capita income of $880 in 1994. The objective of GOI's current development plan for 1995-99 is to sustain a 7 percent economic growth rate by (i) increasing productivity and effi- ciency in the private market-based economy, (ii) providing better infrastructure, and (iii) strength- ening human resources. Short term, Indonesia has to contend with signs of overheating (see sepa- rate brief). * International competitiveness. The APEC Bogor Declaration, resulting from meetings chaired by Indonesia in November 1994, envisions free trade in the region by 2020, with substantial liberaliza- tion set to occur by 2010. GOI is implementing an appropriate policy framework focusing on the need for competition with imports and among local manufacturers to encourage a more efficient private sector and spur nonoil sector growth. However, there have been recent setbacks, as dis- cussed below (see Deregulation). * Foreign direct investments. In the 1995-99 development plan, the capital investment requirement is estimated at US$360 billion, of which about 65 percent is expected to come from the private sector. Indonesia now has foreign investment regulations that are among the most attractive in the region. This has yielded a record FDI approvals of US$23 billion in 1994, surpassed again by US$40 billion FDI in 1995. * Infrastructure. The GOI has encouraged the growing interest among foreign and domestic private investors in the infrastructure sector. Twenty-four power BOO schemes totaling 9,175 MW have been committed, and 9 projects totaling 4,305 MW have been signed with the independent power producer (IPP). In telecoms, 2 million of the 5 million planned new lines have been awarded to 5 private sector consortia under a joint operating scheme (JOS) with GOI's Telkom. In toll roads, GOI has offered 19 toll road projects covering 770 km with a total investment of $2.15 bn. For 4 toll road projects in West (3) and East Java (1), covering 143.5 km and with a total cost of $481 mn, awards are expected in August 1996. * Privatization. Since late 1994, GOI has successfully partially privatized Indosat (international telecom) for US$1.1 billion, Tambang Timah (tin mining) for US$130 million, and Telkom (domestic telecom) for US$2.9 billion. * Debt reduction. Foreign debt stands at close to US$100 billion. Over the last 2 years, GOI has uti- lized proceeds from the above privatizations to prepay US$1.04 billion of the US$2.15 billion loans with interest higher than 10 percent a year from IBRD and ADB. GOI's COLT (Commercial Offshore Loan Team) will now closely monitor private sector foreign borrowings, in addition to GOI-related and bank borrowings. This is expected to result in a greater scrutiny of foreign projects, and given IFC's scrutiny of projects, a bigger role for IFC to ensure that foreign borrowings are well spent. * Capital Markets. The domestic stock market has been depressed for the last year and a half with the general withdrawal of foreign funds from emerging markets. With the recent privatizations, E tJ B L 3 C 0 - N D 0 N E S 3 A N stock market capitalization increased to about US$66.6 billion by the end of 1995, representing 238 listed companies. The JSE index rose marginally in a dull market year from 460 to around 500. In terms of total market capitalization, in 1994 Indonesia was ranked 27th in the world and 10th in Asia. The New Company Law and the Capital Markets Law are in place. The regulatory framework for fund management has recently been issued. Open-end mutual funds are now allowed and may be 100 percent foreign-owned, but no one shareholder may own more than 1 percent. * Financial access. The domestic banking sector is able to take care of the short-term financing re- quirements of industry. However, for medium-term project financing, domestic rates are high (20- 22 percent). In the last three years, major business groups and state enterprises have successfully tapped the international debt and equity/quasi-equity markets. Second-tier entities still have lim- ited access, mainly via bank loans. * Multilateral and bilateral institutions. IFC remains the most active multilateral institution in project financing. Bilaterals continue to be active in medium-size project financing and in extending credit to financial institutions. They generally welcome IFC leadership in large-scale financing. AFIC, the ADB-affiliated regional merchant bank, is an active participant in IFC syndications. * IFC pipeline. IFC's project pipeline in Indonesia continues to develop strongly. Projects are in general manufacturing (second-tier companies), capital markets, agribusiness (including the poul- try and palm oil sectors), infrastructure (including power, telecom, ring-road in Jakarta), chemicals and petrochemicals, treasury and advisory sectors (including privatization of electricity utility). While Indonesia's credit standing has improved, there are serious problems raising large amounts of long-maturity debt, without full recourse to the sponsor's balance sheet, due to the continued perception of high country risk. However, under IFC's umbrella, most of the commercial banks agree to lend longer term. IFC's ability to provide and to syndicate longer maturity loans makes projects more competitive by reducing funding uncertainties. IFC's presence as a neutral organiza- tion helps these companies to overcome the lack of confidence in and experience with foreign in- vestors and to prepare for international markets. * IFC rupiah bond issue. IFC has over the past year been in active discussion with Indonesian au- thorities (MOF, the securities commission Bapepam, the credit rating agency Pefindo) on the merits of allowing multilateral institutions to float rupiah-denominated bonds, which would help establish a benchmark in the nascent local bond market. An IFC rupiah bond floatation would be the maiden issue. The Minister of Finance, the Governor of the Bank of Indonesia (BI), and the Chairman of Bapepam are in principle supportive of this IFC initiative. Technical issues, in particu- lar the tax status and rating of IFC bonds, have to be resolved. Private Sector Issues * Strengthening banks and the financial sector. BI will encourage bank mergers to overcome sys- temic problems and to enhance competitiveness. To reduce the overhang of bad debt and the high cost of borrowing, bank restructuring efforts will require political will at the highest levels to im- prove collection, upgrade supervision, raise provisioning, and meet international capital adequacy standards. There is also significant scope for mobilizing long-term finance, through pension funds and other contractual saving industries, by addressing regulatory and tax barriers. * Deregulation. The May 1995 trade deregulation package was a rules-based,package reducing the average tariff to 15 percent, with a pre-announced schedule to reach a 7 percent average tariff by 2003. A new reform package was unveiled in January 1996 to boost exports by way of a 5-20 percent tariff reduction on 428 items, mostly capital goods and raw materials for export manufacture (6 percent of those subject to tariff). The package fell below the business sector's expectations, how- ever, particularly in terms of reducing the high informal cost of doing business. Recent events have dealt a major blow to the deregulation program. A 20 percent import surcharge on propylene and ethylene, on top of an existing 5 percent duty, has been granted to Chandra Asri, the US$1.7 billion olefins project associated with President Soeharto's second son Bambang. In the automotive sector, a new ruling conferred to 100 percent Indonesian-owned companies a pioneer status and exemption from tariff for components (up to 125 percent) and luxury sales tax (30 percent). The ruling immedi- ately benefits only the KIA (Korea)-Timor joint venture of the President's youngest son Tommy, but may also benefit the Hyundai Bimantara of Bambang in the near future. iE P U B L I C 0 F I N D 0 N E S I A World Bank Group Country Assistance Strategy The major features of Indonesia's development strategy are: Maintaining growth with macroeconomic stabil- grams for the hard-core poor, raising agricultural pro- ity through appropriate fiscal and monetary policy, ductivity in the Eastern Islands and greater involve- careful debt management, and a stronger domes- ment of the poor in program design and implementa- tic savings effort. During 1996-99, real GDP is ex- tion. pected to grow at around 8 percent a year, based . Enhancing human resources development through on continued strong growth in the nonoil, nonag- improvements in the delivery, efficiency and quality ricultural sector, led by rising domestic and for- of health and education services. eign private investment. eignhprivancingvcpestieness through.increased de- Managing resources sustainably through more effec- tive policies for land, water and forest resources, regulation, reduced costs of finance, and provision strengthening of institutional capacities in environ- of better infrastructure services and education. ment conservation activities, and reducing urban and * Reducing poverty and improving social equity industrial pollution. through increased access of the poor to basic ur- ban, educational, and health services, targeted pro- The Bank Group is helping Indonesia meet development objectives in the following ways: Bank: mental management, labor, and regional development * Continuing the 25-year tradition of lending and issues. of policy dialogue with GOI on a broad range of ' A portfolio management approach that features in- macroeconomic and sector issues. GOI continues creasing government involvement, increased attention to be interested in a Bank presence (through both to results on the ground, and more cost-effective meth- lending and advisory work) in all major sectors. ods of supervision and procurement in some 76 ongo- * A lending program of about $1.2 billion a year ing projects. (limited by Bank exposure constraints) address- * Increased attention to environmental and social im- ing critical needs in infrastructure, agriculture, hu- pact issues in policy dialogue, economic and sector man resources, and public sector management. As work, and lending operations. A substantial pipeline private sector participation increases in the indus- of Bank-supported, Montreal Protocol, and GEF trial, finance, telecommunications, and power sec- projects is under preparation as Indonesia addresses tors, Bank lending in these areas is expected to various facets of natural resource management and decline. renewable energy. * A technical assistance program (including the use * Working increasingly with community groups, foun- of IDF resources) aimed at improving the capa- dations, and NGOs to improve project design and bility of the public sector to plan, prepare, and im- development impact. The extent and quality of our plement development projects. In recent years, the outreach to such groups is improving over time and is focus of our technical assistance program has proving valuable, especially in projects involving re- shifted increasingly to building local government settlement, participation, and other social impact con- capacity. siderations. * An Economic and Sector Work (ESW) program * Setting poverty reduction as the primary objective of designed to analyze increasingly complex issues; almost two-thirds of the Bank's program in Indonesia Bank advice is being sought, inter alia, in the de- through promotion of an outward-oriented, employ- velopment of (a) macro strategies; (b) sector strat- ment-intensive growth strategy, more targeted deliv- egies; and (c) a suitable framework for private pro- ery of services, and the development of more region- vision of infrastructure, financial sector, environ- specific interventions. E E P U B L I C 0 F N D 0 N E S I A . ... .. . ... ........... . ...... ...... .. . . ........... ........ ........... . . ...... ........ ......... ...... . ... . ... . . . . ¢ .. _ ......... _ ..................... .......... .. ....... .... IFC ized institutions such as depositories. IFC has of- fered its assistance to BAPEDAM (the Indonesian Strengthening private sector activities through an ex- fEC) in thistcext. pected $225 million program in 1996 ($790 million in- SEC) in this context. cluding participants); Indonesia is IFC's sixth largest * Investing in agri-business projects where coun- exposure in the world and the third largest in Asia, try has a significant cost advantage or which con- with a portfolio of $460 million held for its own ac- tribute to development of rural areas. count and $443 million for the account of participants. * With the objective of introducing new financing * Working with second-tier, smaller, family run com- products and develop the domestic bond market, panies and helping them access international finan- IFC has discussed permission to float Rupiah cial markets. denominated bonds. The Indonesian Govern- ment is supportive, but technical issues remain to * Proactively seeking viable projects in lesser devel- be resolved. oped areas of the country and assisting private sec- M rGA tor into nontraditional sectors such as health care (e.g. MIGA Siloam Gleneagles Hospital). * Supporting the development of the private sector * Introducing Indonesian companies to innovating fi- through political risk insurance to foreign equity nancing sources with the objective of diversifying the investors and financial institutions through a cur- borrowing sources and reducing overall cost of fund- rent portfolio of $101.5 million which is expected ing (e.g. Commercial Paper program). to increase significantly. 3 Working with larger companies in sectors that in- * Completed projects include (a) P.T. Freeport In- creasingly rely on private financing, such as infra- donesia, a guarantee signed in 1/90 covering risks structure, power, telecommunications, industry and of war and breach of contract with maximum finance; seeking transparent transactions with objec- guarantee of $50 million; (b) P.T. Hokuriki United tive to create a "second force" of competitive compa- Forging Industry, a $1.4 million guarantee to nies to compete with protected cartels. Komatsu Ltd, which manufactures and exports * IFC also intends to strengthen the banking sector by forged machinery parts for construction equip- selectively upgrading the private banks through the ment and commercial vehicles; (c) P.T. Paiton En- introductio of foreign technical partners, introduergy Company (first Indonesian privately oper- introducond offreting tlchicsald partners, introd- ated power project), a guarantee of $50 million to ing sound operatng policies and guidelines, improv- the General Electric Capital Corporation of the -ing capital adequacy and lengthening the maturities U.S. for its equity investment. Of liabilities. * IFC would like to support the development of the capital market's infrastructure by establishing special- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~S U IS i IMPACT Republic of Indonesia Project Implementation Issues Our experience with project implementation in Indonesia over the past twenty-five years has been good, as reflected in OED ratings of lending operations - 87 percent satisfactory in dollar volume, compared with a Bank-wide average of 73 percent. Both the Bank and GOI, however, want to do better. Accordingly, we have redoubled our efforts in recent years to ensure that only high-priority investments are selected, and that projects are implemented efficiently and achieve their develop- ment objectives. The last CPPR, in February 1994, was a pathbreaking exercise for both GOI and the Bank, and resulted in a heightened appreciation of the respective roles and responsibilities of the borrower and the Bank, and a shift of attention from disbursement issues to those of effective and sustainable development. The key recommendations of the action plan included: * greater involvement of GOI agencies at all levels (and other stakeholders) with project selection, preparation, and implementation, including the specific requirement of effective ownership; * increased attention to the need for monitoring both implementation progress and development effectiveness, and a quicker response in restructuring projects and canceling loan funds whenever they are not likely to be used effectively; * simpler project design, with fewer but better defined objectives; * less onerous procurement processes and other initiatives to reduce delays in the hiring of consult- ants on GOI's side (a major source of delay in project implementation), and more delegation of authority and responsibility to resident mnission (RSI) staff for no-objection letters on the Bank's side (initiated in FY94 for all local procurement, and working extremely well); and * a conscious effort by both GOI and the Bank to reduce the overall level of technical assistance while making it less costly and more effective. While there has been significant progress in many of these areas, more remains to be done. We have, therefore, accelerated the timing of the next CPPR. There have been discussions between GOI line agencies and Bank sectoral managers, and there was a Plenary Meeting the week of May 20, 1996. Other initiatives underway on the Bank's side include: * further strengthening of our Portfolio Management and Environmental and Social Impact Units in RSI, focusing on both upstream project preparation issues (especially for our provincially focused regional development projects) and downstream implementation issues; * continued support to GOI for capacity building in key areas, including two highly successful IDF grants, one to help establish a National Procurement Resource Center for improved policy and guidelines on implementation, and another on Performance Evaluation as a key input for improv- ing development effectiveness; and * increasing attention to "quality at entry," including GOI ownership, clear and simple project objec- tives, careful consideration of alternatives, clearly defined performance indicators (and M&E ar- rangements), sound economic analysis, participation of stakeholders, etc. E P U B L I C 0 F I N V 0 N E S I A IFC Implementation Issues IFC is facing the following issues in Indonesia: * Lack of transparency, especially in the bidding process for large (infrastructure) projects, continues to be of primary concern. IFC has refrained from financing a number of major projects in Indonesia where it could have a significant role to play due to lack of transparency in the bidding process and award of concessions/licenses. Typical examples are projects in power, transportation, and telecom- munications sectors. * Another equally important issue is favoritism. The President's friends and family get better treat- ment from the government which results in reduced efficiency and higher economic cost. This un- fair competition also creates a lack of trust and shakes investors' confidence. The most recent exam- ple is the case of the national car, where the President's second son's car company will get a tax holiday. * Substantial increase in foreign debt has resulted in GOI more closely scrutinizing foreign borrow- ing, including by the private sector. This could be the first step towards a "pre-borrowing-approval," which would not only add yet another hurdle and increase the hidden cost but could also result in significant delays with back-and-forth on terms of the loans. • At present, financial institutions, (in particular, banks), are required to obtain an annual pre-ap- proved borrowing limit from PKLN. The limit tends to be very small (the typical limit for most banks for 1995/96 is US$5 million). This is inconsistent with the treatment of the corporate sector, which has no borrowing limit. This partial control of foreign borrowing is, in effect, fairly meaning- less and should be scrapped. * Although the Bank Indonesia and the Ministry of Finance in principle like the idea of IFC rupiah bond issue, IFC still hasn't received formal approval, especially on the issue of IFC immunity on withholding taxes and rating of the proposed bond by Pefindo, the rating agency. OED Indonesia: Evaluation Findings * The Bank's Operations Evaluation Department (OED) has evaluated a total of 167 loans to Indone- sia, amounting to $11.3 billion. The outcome of 87 percent of the lending amount was rated satisfac- tory, much above the Bank-wide average of 73 percent. Sustainability ratings are high (75 percent likely), and institutional development is also high (56 percent substantial). These latter ratings are also well above Bank averages (55 and 37 percent, respectively). * OED findings show that the Bank has been closely associated with several elements of Indonesia's remarkable economic and social transformation. Five sectors (agriculture, power, transport, human resources, and structural adjustment) make up 80 percent of the evaluated portfolio. The propor- tion of satisfactory project outcomes is high for all sectors, ranging from 100 percent in power and structural adjustment to 95 percent in human resources, 94 percent in transport, and 75 percent in agriculture. Even the low ratio for agriculture compares favorably with the Bank-wide average of slightly below 65 percent for agricultural projects. Struictural Adjustment * Indonesia's economic stabilization and adjustment program started in 1983 and intensified after the collapse of oil prices in 1986. The main areas of policy reform have included public expenditure restraint, judicious exchange rate management, trade reform, and liberalization of the financial markets and of the foreign investment regime. Bank lending for adjustment, evaluated by OED, consisted of two trade policy loans and two private sector development loans (totaling $1.2 billion). The outcome of all four operations was rated as satisfactory. An important distinguishing feature of these loans was that the policy measures they supported were announced prior to loan appraisal. This procedure of "ex post conditionality" was justified because: (a) the prior consultation between the Bank and GOI resulted in agreement on the measures to be taken, (b) it was agreed at the begin- ning that these measures were part of a medium-term adjustment program, and (c) GOI's initial policy steps and commitment to their continuation made it clear that the reform was an ongoing process. In short, GOI fully owned the reform program. Agriculture * The Bank has been lending for agriculture since 1968. Sixty-two projects have been evaluated, rep- resenting $2.9 billion in lending. By value, the proportion of satisfactory project outcomes is 75 percent. However, in absolute numbers one half of the unsatisfactory project outcomes in Indonesia are in the agricultural sector. * Lending for irrigation has been substantial, accounting for about 40 percent of the projects evalu- ated. This program has been largely successful: the outcome of 19 out of 22 evaluated projects was rated satisfactory. However, OED audits frequently noted inadequate operation and maintenance (O&M), wrong assumptions about upstream water control and distribution and about farmer group efficiency, and, until recently, ineffective cost recovery. Recent Bank initiatives to devolve responsi- bility for O&M and cost recovery to water user associations appear to be working. * The Bank participated in Indonesia's transmigration program through five projects, financing about 10 percent of total investments during the 1979-1989 period which covered less than five percent of IXw E P U 8 L I C 0 F I N l) 0 N E S 1 A the families settled. Nevertheless, the Bank's role has been controversial. An OED review of five Bank-supported projects found that, in general, settler incomes increased, women's participation and roles expanded, and social infrastructure improved. However, little attention was paid to the indigenous people who lived in the resettlement areas and were adversely affected by the projects. Also, attention to environmental aspects was weak, and the inconsistent application of Bank and government guidelines was a concern. The outcome of two of the five projects was rated unsatisfac- tory. (Country Department Note: The Bank stopped supporting transmnigration projects in 1987.) * The Bank's involvement in multipurpose dam and irrigation works at Kedung Ombo has also pro- voked controversy. Farm incomes increased substantially, but the program to resettle displaced people was poorly planned and badly managed. * The Bank also provided considerable support to develop estate and smallholder tree crops. The benefits of these projects were substantial: of the sixteen projects only three had unsatisfactory out- comes. The main purpose of many of these projects was to use an existing estate and/or manage- ment organization as the nucleus to develop outlying areas for cultivation by landless people, hence creating employment and raising incomes. This model worked well during implementation. But for benefits to be sustained, more attention is required to rehabilitate substandard plantings and provide efficient extension to the smallholders (the intensive project unit support system during the investment phase cannot be maintained during the operation phase). * Bank support improved the country's agricultural research capacity considerably. Extension cover- age expanded through the training and visit system but needs to be improved and adapted to the diverse cultural and socioeconomic environments in Indonesia. Also, further funding of these pro- grams, which have relied heavily on external financing, poses a challenge. Infrastructure e In highways, the Bank has been instrumental in developing a capable highway administration and has provided substantial assistance in physical improvements. Recently, the Government, with Bank support, initiated a restructuring of the highway administration, whose main aim is decentraliza- tion of decisionmaking. The Bank also assisted in implementing an up-to-date management sys- tem. In addition, the Bank has now expanded its involvement in multi-mode and urban transport issues, both of which are crucial. * In the urban sector, a series of projects has contributed significantly to long-term development of urban settlements and local municipal structures. A housing sector project assisted the housing mortgage bank to streamline management systems and introduce automated operations. It also helped GOI revise existing regulations and policies that restricted access to mortgage bank loans and expand the role of private developers in low-cost housing. Projects focusing on kampung im- provement programs (KIP) - very dense low-income settlements in urban areas - reaped very high economic rates of return. KIPs also upgraded the quality of life of kampung residents through infrastructure improvements and were replicated through successive operations in urban areas throughout Indonesia. * In water and sanitation, the outcome of four of the five evaluated projects was rated satisfactory. The devolution of implementation responsibility to the provinces through local agencies was an important achievement of the projects. The projects found that poverty alleviation strategies can be POW m~~~~~~~~~~ addressed through both careful targeting and project design, including location of public taps, favorably priced house connections, and well-directed incentives to water agencies. * In ports, good timing and policy reforms were responsible for project achievements. The promulga- tion of regulatory reforms accelerated port efficiency improvements that might have been harder to achieve with a project alone. But weak institutions required more Bank resources than in other sectors for the supervision of technical assistance. * The outcome of all fifteen evaluated power projects (US$2.2 billion in lending, representing a fifth of the Bank's total evaluated portfolio) was rated satisfactory. Through these operations, the Bank has made a substantial contribution to the financing and institutional strengthening of the sector since the 1960s. These projects-carried out through the late 1980s-supported the rapid expansion of the system (with a tripling of generating capacity during the 1980s alone) and helped the state utility (PLN) to improve its project management and operational capacity. Policy dialogue in that period focused mainly on sector planning and tariffs, with reasonable success. More recent (ongo- ing) operations have also dealt with private sector participation and sector restructuring. Education • Out of the economic and social chaos of the mid 1970s, Indonesia has achieved one of the most significant transformations in education in the developing world. The Bank has lent more for edu- cation to Indonesia than to any other country, committing more than $2.2 billion for 35 projects since FY71. All 19 evaluated projects in this diverse portfolio had successful outcomes. * Early Bank assistance was designed to educate and train the future work force through secondary and post-secondary vocational and technical training. With Indonesia's rapid economic develop- ment, the scope of these investments has broadened over the years to include professional and scientific research training in polytechnics and universities, supported by reforms aimed princi- pally at improving quality, cost effectiveness, management efficiency, and a greater involvement of the private sector. - A second generation of Bank projects began to focus on widening access and improving quality in primary and general secondary education, following the country's success in building primary schools across the nation. Ongoing operations target the children of the poor in rural areas. A nota- ble success story is the ongoing assistance to poor and illiterate adults who have benefitted from nonformal programs designed to impart income-generating skills along with literacy. * Evaluation findings show that the objective of expanding access at all levels has been achieved. Policy, structural, and institutional reform has succeeded unevenly and more slowly, but there have been some notable successes (e.g., in teacher training). The increased participation of girls in poly- technic training was noted in a recent audit. Health and Population * Indonesia is among the most active clients in the population, health and nutrition sectors, reflecting the country's strong political and administrative conmnmitment to improving human resources and to equity in the distribution of social services. * The lending program in population shows a strong record of success, with the outcome of all four completed projects rated as satisfactory and sustainable. Factors contributing to this success in- clude the strong institutional capacity of the lead implementing agency (the National Family Plan- 1' E P U B L S C 0 F I N D ) N E S I A n ning Coordinating Board, or BKKBN) and the development, over time, of effective systems for stimulating and maintaining community involvement in family planning and health activities. A fifth population project to train village-level midwives and target services to hard-to-reach populations is nearing successful completion. * Projects in the health sector present a good example of development learning. The first two projects produced mixed results, and their outcome was rated unsatisfactory, due largely to implementa- tion difficulties resulting from construction delays, and difficulties in strengthening local and dis- trict-level capacity and accountability. A subsequent project overcame these difficulties by setting more explicit institutional development goals and adapting community development lessons from the family planning program to health program design. • The nutrition project, the first stand-alone project in the Bank's nutrition portfolio, produced valu- able lessons on organizational arrangements for the management of nutrition education efforts, which are now incorporated into ongoing health projects that include nutrition objectives. Two ongoing projects in the health sector focus on improving the quality of local health services and on resource mobilization for the sector. Microenterprise and Small-Scale Industry Lending * While the outcome of several financial intermediation projects was rated satisfactory, three projects addressing small-scale enterprises (SSE) were designed to increase capacity and employment, as well as improve the administration of the SSE program, but they failed to do so. Credit subsidization undermined the borrowers' financial discipline. Many of the funds ended up refinancing existing loans rather than increasing capacity. The project outcomes were thus rated unsatisfactory. Having learned from this experience, however, the Bank designed a new type of project (KUPEDES, ap- proved in FY87), which provides unsubsidized credit to small borrowers, thereby encouraging sav- ing by poor small entrepreneurs. The KUPEDES project outcome was highly satisfactory and is now being replicated by the private sector. OED contacts: Director, OED, Francisco Aguirre-Sacasa Division Chief, OEDD2,.Manuel Penialver W (202) 4734380 H (202) 244-4442 W (202) 458-4400 H (202) 244-0566 S __ S SECTOR NOTES Agriculture/Rural Development/Agribusiness Sector Summary Key Sector Data (1993) *Cultivable land: 55.4 million ha (28 % of land area -0.29 ha/capita) *Share of GDP: 17% *Cultivated land: 37.5 million ha *Irrigated land: 6.5 million ha *Estate crops: 12.1 million ha *Area under shifting cultivation: 11.8 million ha. *Farm families: 21.8 million *Rice production: 45.6 million *Share of labor force: 55% *Other important agricultural products: palm oil, rubber, fish, coffee, cocoa Net Sector Lending FY No. of Projects IDA IBRD Total Share of Total (US$ million) (US$ million) (US$ million) Lending 1969-80 22 334.4 369.4 703.8 19.3% 1981-90 15 - 826.5 826.5 7.7% 1991-96 6 - 342.5 342.5 4.3% 1997-98 (est.) 5 - 308.0 308.0 12.3% Key Sector Issues * Maintaining rice self-sufficiency. * Deregulation of price and trade regimes (bans, taxes, licensing) for key commodities and livestock trade. * Reduction of agricultural productivity gaps between Java/Bali and Outer Islands. • Development of nonrice technology packages. * Decentralization and progress on privatization of key agricultural services and input supply systems. * New approaches to develop rural financial services. * Commercialization of agribusiness. Sector Work, FY90-96 E Various deregulation studies on: sugar, cocoa and coffee (FY95 & FY96) * Eastem Islands Rural Sector Strategy Review (FY95) Report on Govemment Estate Companies (FY94) r Agricultural Transformation: Challenges and Opportunities (FY93) - Land Resources Management and Planning (FY91) Major Sectoral Targets and Achievements Development of decentralized agricultural services, improvement of regional planning and implementation, and targeting public investments to poorer areas with low agricultural productivity. a Continuing deregulation of price and trade regimes to set up framework for private sector participation in agriculture and agribusiness development, and make progress towards privatization of parastatals. * Introducing integrated approach to water resource management, and strengthening participatory irrigation manage- ment. Comments * Despite significant growth in other sectors, agriculture continues to be a vitally important sector from the point of view of employment, output, and export generation. Also, since poverty remains predominantly a rural phenomenon in Indonesia, the agricultural sector is important for the objective of poverty reduction. * The Bank has launched a major effort (involving both lending and analytical work) in this sector which emphasizes: promotion of income-eaming opportunities for rural communities, especially in the remoter and less-developed regions; development of nonrice agricultural technologies, deregulation of price and trade controls on important commodities, and innovative approaches to providing finance. Active Lending Operations FY Project Name Total Lending (US$ million) 1989 Tree Crops Processing Project 118.2 1989 Agriculture Research Management Project 35.3 1991 Yogyakarta Upland Area Development Project 15.5 1992 Agriculture Financing Project 106.1 1992 Tree Crops Smallholder Development Project 87.6 1993 Integrated Pest Management Training Project 32.0 1995 Second Agriculture Research Management Project 63.0 1996 Nusa Tenggara Agriculture Area Development Project 27.0 Proposed Future Operations FY Project Name Total Lending (US$ million) 1996 Southeast and Central Sulawesi Rural Development Project 26.8 1997 Maluku Regional Development Project 45 1997 Sumatra Regional Development Project 120 1998 Micro Credit Project 25 1998 Decentralized Agricultural Extension 50 1998 Jambi/West Sumatra Regional Development Project 68 IFC's Agribusiness Strategy in Indonesia IFC's agribusiness investments in Indonesia emphasize the following elements: * Improving efficiency and competitiveness in production and marketing (technology transfer, infrastructure improve- ment, etc.); * Strengthening competitiveness of traditional crops (e.g., palm oil, rubber) while supporting production diversification, particularly toward products with high-income demand elasticity (poultry, livestock, dairy products) and good export potential (banana, seafood products); * Supporting broad-based rural income growth, with employment- and smallholder-intensive projects, particularly in less-developed islands where off-farm work opportunities are limited; * Regional development, with specific emphasis on the less-developed islands. IFC Operations FY Project Name "A" Loan US$ million Equity/Quasi Equity "B" Loan Approved Projects 1991 P.T. Agri Muko 10.5 2.2 1996 P.T. Dharmalo Agri Food 20 15 Pipeline Projects 1996 P.T. Asian Agri 40.0 40.0 1996 P.T. Kalimantan 20.0 15.0 5.0 (KSP Agri) rsector Note L ..... Urban Sector Summary Key Sector Data Urban population > 55 million, > 30% of population, 6% growth p. a. Urban poverty: 17% Urban infrastructure service levels: only 20-25% of urban population has access to piped water supply, 40% to adequate sanitation. Estimated investment backlog of over $5 billion for the five major subsectors of piped water supply, sanitation, solid waste, urban roads, and drainage. Net Sector Lending FY No. of Projects IDA IBRD Total Share of Total (US$ million) (US$ million) (US$ million) Lending 1969-80 5 - 171.2 171.2 4.7% 1981-90 8 - 832.4 832.4 7.8% 1991-96 10 - 1,267.1 1,267.1 15.9% 1997-98 (est.) 4 - 457.0 457.0 18.2% Key Sector Issues * Serious infrastructure service level deficiencies and O&M backlogs. * Need to manage water resources in an integrated fashion taking into account domestic, industrial, and agricultural needs and protection of water quality. * Need for much greater focus on sanitation issues, both human waste and solid waste. * Complex relationships among local, provincial, and central agencies. l Need for economic pricing policies for services and adequate cost recovery. * Need for a proper policy framework for private sector participation in the provision of services. Sector Work, FY90-96 * Urban Public Infrastructure Services Report (1993, 12154 - IND). * Management of Options and Private Sector Participation in the Delivery of Water Supply and Sanitation Services (Seminar in Bandung, April 1995). * Jabotabek Strategies, Urban Water Supply Policy Framework, Composting (under preparation). Major Government Actions and Events * Emphasis on sustainable urban development in the Sixth Development Plan (1994-99) and the Second 25-Year National Development Plan. * Increased decentralization of urban infrastructure planning and implementation of projects to provincial and local governments. * Plans for greater role for private sector in service delivery (advanced for Jakarta water supply). * Enactment of improved legislation for environmental impact assessment, mitigation, and monitoring measures; issuance of presidential decree for land acquisition for development of public facilities. Comments * GOI's evolving urban policy agenda is closely linked to issues highlighted in the 1995 CAS (improving service delivery to the poor, greater decentralization of responsibilities, and improved environmental management). Policy dialogue with GOI is critical on key sectoral issues such as: strategy for managing the development of Jabotabek, economic provision of water supply and sanitation services, framework for private sector participation in urban service delivery. It is imperative to develop capacity in GOI for much faster development of investment projects, speedier implementa- tion, and improved O&M. Bank program includes one ongoing and one planned operation (Village Infrastructure) with specific poverty focus. Active Lending Operations FY Project Name Total Lending (US$ million) 1990 Second Jabotabek Urban Development Project 190.0 1991 Third Jabotabek Urban Development Project 61.0 1991 East Java and Bali Urban Development Project 180.3 1991 Sulawesi-Irian Jaya Urban Development Project 100.0 1994 Surabaya Urban Development Project 175.0 1994 Semarang-Surakarta Urban Development Project 174.0 1995 Kalimantan Urban Development Project 136.0 1995 Village Infrastructure Project 72.5 Proposed Future Operations FY Project Name Total Lending (US$ million) 1996 Second Sulawesi Urban Development Project 145.6 1996 Second East Java Urban Development Project 142.7 1997 Second Village Infrastructure Project 162.0 1997 Bali Urban Infrastructure Project 150.0 1998 Lombok Urban Infrastructure Project 50.0 1998 Jabotabek Waste Management Project 95.0 Sector Note Education Sector Summary Key Sector Data Gross Enrollment Rate No. of Students Public/Private (%) Primary school 1II % 29.7 million 83/17 Junior secondary 54% 7.8 million 59/41 Senior secondary 34% 4.2 million 47/53 University 10% 1.9 million 33/67 Government Expenditures on Education: 2.9% of GDP, 14.5% of total spending Distribution: 66% for basic education/12% for senior secondary/12% for higher education/9% for administration Net Sector Lending FY No. of Projects IDA IBRD Total Share of Total (US$ million) (US$ million) (US$ million) Lending (%) 1969-80 8 73.3 105.0 178.3 4.9 1981-90 17 - 1,320.2 1,320.2 12.3 1991-96 12 836.6 836.6 10.5 1997-98 (est.) 5 - 400.0 400.0 15.9 Key Sector Issues * The education system suffers from low quality despite impressive achievements in enrollment. With universal primary enrollment, overall retention and repetition rates are very low, with wide variations among provinces and between urban and rural areas. * Quality problems are pervasive and not easy to solve. They include uneven teacher training and distribution, insuffi- cient financing for materials/books, insufficient community and parental support, and the difficulties faced by chil- dren who are raised in a variety of local languages but must study in Bahasa Indonesia. * The Bank has advocated greater autonomy and decisionmaking at lower levels and continued involvement of private institutions. = The private sector, encouraged by Government policies, is now the largest provider of training. The challenge for GOI is to move into accreditation, licensing, and school/work experimentation.Sector Work, FY90-96 Sector Work, FY90-96 Indonesia - Basic Education Study, 1989 Secondary Teachers in Indonesia: Supply, Demand and Initial Preparation, 1992 Indonesia - Public Expenditures, Prices, and the Poor, 1993 Training and the Labor Market in Indonesia, 1996 Sectoral Achievements and Targets Achievements * Universal primary enrollment, including girls education, was attained within 10 years (from 1973 to 1983). Targets * Universal junior secondary enrollment by 2010. * Free provision of textbooks to all primary and secondary students by 2000. * Upgrading of teachers, both pre-service and in-service. * Restructuring of universities to achieve greater autonomy and improve quality and relevance of public and private education. * Maintaining private sector involvement in education, especially in the secondary and tertiary levels. * Increasing public spending on basic education, without crowding out the private sector. Comments The Bank is advocating both expansion and quality improvements in basic education. Difficult issues of distance and geographic remoteness in service delivery and teacher distribution are being addressed, but progress has been slow and uneven. Lending Operations FY Project Name Total Lending (US$ million) 1990 Ministry of Public Works Institutional Development Project 36.1 1990 Second Secondary Education and Management Project 154.2 1992 Third Non-Formal Education Project 69.5 1992 Primary School Quality Improvement Project 37.0 1992 Primary School Teacher Development Project 36.6 1994 Skills Development Project 27.7 1995 University Research for Graduate Education Project 58.9 1995 Second Professional Human Resources Develop. Project 69.0 1995 Book and Reading Development Project 132.5 1996 Secondary School Teacher Development Project 60.4 Future Operations FY Project Name Total Lending (US$ million) 1996 Higher Education Support Project 65.0 1996 East Java/ NTT Secondary Education Project 105.0 1997 Central Indonesia Secondary Education Project 100.0 1997 Human Resources Capacity Building Project 20.0 1997 Sumatra Secondary Education Development Project 100.0 1997 Higher Education Quality Project 60.0 1998 West Java Basic Education Project 60.0 1998 Child Development I 60.0 Health and Population Sector Summary Key Sector Data Population (millions) 193 Contraceptive prevalence rate 55.0% Infant mortality/1,000 live births 57 Percent of children <1 immunized (DTP3) 85 Crude birth rate 24 Percent of children <5 malnourished 46 Crude death rate 8 Maternal mortality rate/100,000 births 390 Total fertility rate 2.9 Public health expenditures (% GDP) 0.7% Private health expenditures (% GDP) 1.3% Net Sector Lending FY No. of Projects IDA IBRD Total Share of Total Lending (US$ million) (US$ million) (US$ million) (%) 1969-80 4 12.9 56.7 69.6 1.9 1981-90 5 - 169.6 169.6 1.6 1991-96 4 - 310.1 310.1 3.9 1997-98 (est.) 2 - 120.0 120.0 4.8 Sector Work, FY90-9 Planning and Budgeting, 1991 Family Planning Perspectives in the 1990s, 1991 Public Expenditures, Prices, and the Poor (Health Chapters), 1993 Health Work Force: Issues and Options, 1994 Key Sector Issues - Key health indicators remain poor relative to Indonesia's development status. * Disparities in health status and distribution of health work force remain across regions and economic groups. * Deficiencies in quality and efficiency of services. * Inadequate financial resources (public and private) in the sector. There has been some private investment in the sector, however, and IFC has recently approved an investment in a hospital in Indonesia. * Existing health financing system provides inappropriate incentive structure for providers. Major Sectoral Targets and Achievements * Decline in infant mortality rate from 142 to 57 over the last thirty years. * Decline in total fertility rate from 5.2 to 2.9 over last twenty years * Immunization coverage (DPT3) has increased from less than 10 percent to 85 percent over twenty years. * National coverage has been achieved with community-based primary health services (posyandu). * New budgeting, management, and planning policies are supporting decentralization efforts. Comments * An internationally recognized family planning program, the world's first expanded program of immunization, and government-supported, community-based primary services have contributed to gains in health. GOI is taking some first steps to move away from hierarchical expenditure programs and toward greater reliance on the private sector, more commnunity control, and decentralization. A program of contracting doctors for rural areas is having some success at redressing the poor distribution of health workers, but it needs strengthening. * More spending is needed on the poor and on services in rural communities. Critical areas for support are nutrition and services for maternal and child health, administrative improvements, and institutional changes in health finance and service delivery Active Lending Operations FY Project Name Total Lending (US$ million) 1989 Third Health Project 43.5 1991 Fifth Population Project: Family Planning and Safe Motherhood 104.0 1993 Third Cornmunity Health and Nutrition Project 93.5 1993 Water Supply and Sanitation for Low Income Communities 80.0 1995 Fourth Health Project: Improving Equity and Quality of Care 88.0 1996 AIDS and STDs Prevention and Management Project 24.8 Proposed Future Operations FY Project Name Total Lending (US$ million) 1997 Safe Motherhood and Family Development 80.0 1998 Micro Nutrient Project 40.0 IFC Operations FY Project Name Total Lending (US$ million) 1995 P.T. Gleneagles Hospital Corporation 25.8 Sector Note Transportation Sector Summary Key Sector Data * Roads are the predominant mode of land transport for both passengers and freight. Road density is low (130km/1,000 km2; 1.5km/1,000 population), with large regional variations. * Railways (one network on Java; three smaller ones on Sumatra) account for only an estimated 4% of total transport. * Sea transport accounts for 56% of freight movements, mostly bulk oil and coal by producers. * Traffic demand is growing rapidly (7% per year, slightly faster than the economy). Net Sector Lending FY No. of Projects IDA IBRD Total Share of Total Portfolio (US$ million) (US$ million) (US$ million) (%) 1969-80 10 89.0 449.3 538.3 14.7 1981-90 11 1557.6 1557.6 14.5 1991-96 6 - 943.5 943.5 11.8 1997-98 (est.) 3 422.0 422.0 16.8 Key Sector Issues • Need for transparent and consistent framework for public/private transactions in roads/ports/airlines/railways. * Highways: increasing congestion in high-growth areas; ineffectiveness of road investments in outlying regions; deficiencies in implementation and quality of public works. * Railways: excessive government interference; growth in traffic constrained by capacity. * Intermodal transport- development stymied by inconsistencies in regulatory regimes across different forms of transport. Sector Work, FY90-96 * Railway Investment Review (1990) * Road Sector Study (1996) * Private Sector Participation in Indonesia Public Ports (1994) Major Sectoral Targets and Achievements * GOI is likely to achieve its 5-year plan target of 100% of national/provincial roads in good condition by 1999, but unlikely to achieve it for district roads (60% target, currently 45%). * The Public Works Department has developed (with Bank assistance) and is using a state-of-the-art road management system. * GOI has decided to tum the railways into a financially autonomous enterprise, and to obtain greater private participa- tion. Comments * Capacity expansion and road development, in the context of regional development, represent major challenges which could justify a 30% increase in sector expenditures. * Sector agencies, at the central and local levels, need to be better equipped for dealing with challenges in a coordinated manner, including building up a pipeline of sound and well-prepared investments. * There are considerable opportunities for efficiency improvements in the allocation of funds. Active Lending Operations FY Project Name Total Lending (US$ million) 1988 Jabotabek Urban Development Project 150.0 1992 Third Kabupaten Roads Development Project 215.0 1993 Eastern Indonesia Kabupaten Roads 155.0 1993 Flores Earthquake Reconstruction Project 42.1 1994 Second Highway Sector Investment Project 350.0 1994 Fifth Kabupaten Roads Project 101.5 Proposed Future Operations FY Project Name Total Lending (US$ million) 1996 Strategic Urban Roads Infrastructure Project 79.9 1997 Railway Efficiency Project 72 1997 Regional Roads (Sumatra) 100 1998 Second Regional Roads Project (Kalimantan) 100 1998 Strategic Urban Roads II 150 Sector Note Telecommunications Sector Summary Key Sector Data Country Call Completion Main Lines per 100 Main Telephone Telephone Faults 100 Rate (in %) Inhabitants Lines/Employee Main Lines per Month Indonesia 43 1.0 45 2.6 Thailand 55 3.7 71 4.3 Malaysia 50 12.6 80 6.5 Singapore 70 43.5 172 1.1 Japan 84 45.4 258 0.5 Net Sector Lending FY No. of Projects IDA IBRD Total Share of Total (US$ million) (US$ million) (US$ million) Lending (%) 1969-80 1 12.7 - 12.7 0.3 1981-90 2 - 326.9 326.9 3.1 1991-96 2 700.0 700.0 8.8 1997-98 (est.) - - - IFC FY No. of Project "A" Loan US$ million Equity/Quasi Equity "B" Loan 1996 1 50 300 18.8 Key Sector Issues * Bring telecom service standards and choices throughout Indonesia up to the levels of competitor countries. * Establish effective regulatory oversight to ensure high quality at lowest possible cost. * Mobilize the capital needed for massive investments to accelerate network expansion and technology upgrading. * Develop PT TELKOM into a modem, efficient, and business-oriented company. Sector Work, FY90-96 * Telecommunications Sector Study Report, June 1990 Seminar on Strategic Options for Telecommunications Sector Development, December 1991 * Workshop on Telecommunications Sector Restructuring, June 1992 * Seminar on Financing Options For Telecommunications Sector Development, September 1993 Major Sectoral Targets and Achievements * Corporatized the domestic telecommunications operator (TELKOM), September 1991. * Separated management responsibility from sector regulatory and oversight functions, 1993. * Allowed entry of private operators in the provision of telephone service, 1993. * Listed international telecommunications carrier in both domestic and international stock exchanges, November 1994. * Awarded concessions to five intemational consortia to provide basic telephone service in all of Indonesia outside Jakarta and Surabaya, October 1995. * Opened the cellular segment to competition, 1995. * Listed domestic telecommunications carrier in domestic and international stock exchanges, November 1995. Comments The Indonesian telecommunications sector is going through a period of structural transformation from almost total state monopoly to a competitive, multi-operator environment, a predominance of private investment, elimination of unmet demand, and dramatic improvements in operational efficiency and customer service with declining prices. Indonesia's telecom sector is the most deregulated in East Asia and has the highest participation of private investment. During the current five-year development program, about 50 percent of new investment in the sector will be private. It is expected that the telecommunications law will have been overhauled to eliminate the requirement for TELKOM or INDOSAT to have equity stakes in basic service operators. Active Lending Operations FY Name of Project Total Lending (US$ million) 1990 Third Telecommunications Project 350.0 1992 Fourth Telecommunications Project 375.0 1995 Telecommunications Sector Modernization Project 325.0 IFC's Telecommunications Strategy IFC's investments in the telecommunications sector will emphasize: * Continued reform of the telecommunications sector, leading to full liberalization. * Increased private sector participation. * Existence of an independent regulatory body with transparent procedures for granting licenses, setting tariffs, and resolving disputes, particularly about interconnection. - Development of telecommunications systems on off-Java regions. - Upgrading and expanding telecommunications networks. Structuring and mobilizing funds for large projects on a limited recourse basis. Sector Note Trade and Privatization Sector Summary Key Sector Data Trade Sector: * Total merchandise exports rose from $28.1 million in 1990/91 to $46.5 million in 1995/96, as a result of strong manufacturing exports that offset the gradual decline in oil and gas exports. * Total imports rose from $25.8 billion in 1990/91 to $46.2 billion in 1995/96 following recent acceleration of nonoil import growth. * Current account deficit fluctuated around 2.5% of GDP in last five years, but has widened to $7 billion (3.5%) in 1995/96. * Deregulation measures in May 1995 and January 1996 resulted in reduction of average import tariffs and sur- charges to 14%, and a commitment to reduce them further in line with multilateral and regional trade liberaliza- tion initiatives. Privatization: * Progress has been slow: of 180 state enterprises, only 4 have been partly privatized through stock market listings. * Concessions for some private toll roads, ports, water supply, and two power generation plants have been negoti- ated since 1990. * Advances in telecommunications have been greatest, with partial international listings of the PT TELKOM (do- mestic telephony) and PT SATELINDO (intemational telephony), a concession for basic telephony to 5 intema- tional consortia under a private/public operating scheme in all areas outside Jakarta and Surabaya, and licensing of a private operator for intemational telephony and various private/public operators for wireless telephony. Net Sector Lending FY No. of Projects IDA IBRD Total Share of Total (US$ million) (US$ million) (US$ million) Lending (%) 1969-80 0 0 0 0 0 1981-90 3 - 950.0 950.0 8.9 1991-96 3 - 308.0 308.0 3.9 1997-98(est.) Key Sector Issues Trade Sector: * Following increasingly liberalized trade and 1995 announcement of 5-10% tariff reduction by 2003, the unfinished agenda includes elimination of NTBs on imports (in particular in agriculture and manufacturing) and of export restrictions (affecting two-thirds of agricultural exports as well as other sectors). * Ad hoc Government interventions in favor of connected firms affect transparency of the trade regime (e.g., recent favorable treatment of car manufacturer and upstream plastics producer). Privatization: * Lack of a political consensus and strategy for privatization of public enterprises. * Lack of a transparent and competitive framework for the sale of equity and concessions, and for the sectors themselves. * Lack of an institutional focal point for developing a privatization program. Sector Work, FY90-96 Trade Sector: * Trade sector report, 1991 * Selected papers for Deregulation Conference, 1995 * Regular reviews of extemal trade sector in CEMs, annual Privatization: * Conference on deregulating the telecom sector, 1992 * In-country workshop on private participation in power, 1993 * Privatization of industrial public enterprises, 1993 * Framework paper on private participation in ports, 1994 * Framework paper on private participation in solid waste management, 1994 * In-country workshops on private participation in water supply, 1995 and 1996 * Road sector report reviews private participation in toll roads and state construction firms,1996 Major Sectoral Targets and Achievements Trade Sector. * Government committed to reducing import tariffs down to 5-10% by 2003 on virtually all products. * Indonesia would move further toward free trade status by removing tariff protection on automobiles, opening the strategic state enterprises to import competition, removing export taxes on forest products, and removing agricul- tural NTBs. Privatization: * Develop political consensus and institutional oversight for privatization and private provision of public services. * Develop a transparent and competitive framework for sale of equity/assets or concessions. * Besides infrastructure, accelerate privatization of public enterprises in competitive markets (industry, trade, agriculture). * Develop transparent regulatory frameworks for sectors with less competitive markets. Active Lending Operations FY Project Name Total Lending (US$ million) 1989 Industrial Restructuring Project 284.0 1991 Technical Assistance for Public and Private Prov. of Infrastruct. 30.0 1995 Second Tech. Assistance for Public and Private Prov. of Infrastruct. 28.0 IFC Activities IFC's Corporate Finance Services Group has been in discussion with a number of state-owned companies, including PLN and Hotel Indonesia Group, regarding the provision of advisory services, and with the Ministry of Transport and Cormmunications regarding the privatization of four ports and Garuda, the national airline. 4ctor Note Natural Resources and Conservation Sector Summary Key Sector Data * Indonesia is a country with enormous biodiversity; it contains 10% of global flowering plants, 12% of all mammal species, and 35% of all fish species. * About 7% of land and 2% of marine area is in conservation reserves. * Forests cover about 55% of land area and are the largest in Asia; forest sector output is $ 8-9 billion/yr., accounting for 7% of GDP and 20% of exports. The sustainable yield is 22 million cubic meters (m3)/yr. The Bank estimates production in excess of 40 million m3; GOI estimates it at around 32 million m3. * Twenty percent of forest area is slated for agricultural conversion, 20% for watershed protection. * Fish production is 3.5 million MT; it comprises 2% of GDP and 15-20% of dietary protein. Net Sector Lending FY No. of Projects IDA IBRD Total Share of Total (US$ million) (US$ million) (US$ million) Lending (%) 1969-80 2 10.0 - 10.0 0.3 1981-90 4 - 66.1 66.1 0.6 1991-96 4 - 171.1 171.1 2.1 1997-98 (est.) 2 _ 65.0 65.0 2.6 Key Sector Issues Forest management is unsustainable; GOI should increase taxation. There are links between forest concessions and the plywood industry and political interests. * High export tariff on logs reduces internal log prices and subsidizes plywood mill inputs; i Indonesia leads many countries in its stated conservation initiative, but institutions remain weak and there is encroachment and logging in conservation areas. * Fisheries and coral reefs are often over-exploited and require improved management. * WWatershed management is needed for sustainable upland agriculture. Sector Work, FY90-96 e Production Forestry: Achieving Sustainability and Competitiveness (October, 1993) * Indonesia: Environment and Development (1994) * Fisheries in Eastern Indonesia (Background Paper for Eastern Islands Rural Strategy Review) (May, 1994) * The Economics of Long Term Management of Indonesia's Natural Forests (August, 1995) * Economic Analysis of Indonesian Coral Reefs (Draft, January 1996). Major Government Actions and Events * Intention to place 10% of land and marine area (30 million hectares) in reserves -31 out of a planned 40 national parks have been identified or established. * GOI is publicly committed to reaching sustainable timber harvests by 2000 under Intemational Timber Trade Organization Guidelines and is rapidly expanding plantations to take pressure off natural forests. * National Regreening Program targeting 39 watersheds, 11 of which are "critical." Goals are soil and water conser- vation, sustainable production systems and income generation for poor upland farmers. * GOI supports a national Coral Reef Program with Bank and GEF as major donors. Comments * Government does not wish to borrow from the Bank in this sector because of the easy availability of grant funds from a variety of sources. Accordingly, our relationship is limited to policy dialogue and GEF-sponsored projects. Active Lending Operations FY Project Name Total Lending (US$ million) 1988 Forestry Institutions and Conservation Project 34.0 1991 Yogyakarta Upland Area Development Project (watershed) 15.5 1994 National Watershed Conservation and Management Project 56.6 1995 Land Administration Project 80.0 1994 GEF Biodiversity Collections Project 7.2 Proposed Future Operations FY Project Name Total Lending GEF (US$ million) (US$ million) 1996 Kerinci-Seblat Integrated Conserv. and Dev. Project 19.1 15.0 1997 Coral Reef Rehabilitation and Management Project 25.0 12.0 1998 Regional Watershed Development I 40.0 - Energy Sector Summary Key Sector Data * Oil is Indonesia's most important export, but Indonesia will become a net oil importer in next ten years. * Private oil companies account for almost all Indonesian oil production, and have operated through production sharing contracts (PSC). PERTAMINA, the state oil company, receives govemment's share of the oil and overseas contracts, while operations are conducted largely by foreign companies. The downstream oil refining and marketing business is a PERTAMINA monopoly, although foreign oil companies (e.g., BP) have operated in the refinery sector in a service role. * Indonesia has substantial gas reserves that could be tapped to meet rising domestic energy requirements. But develop- ment of the domestic gas sector has been at a standstill due to state domination of the sector and the lack of a sector strategy, incentives for producers and infrastructure to bring gas to the market. * Indonesia is the world's largest exporter of liquefied natural gas, but the domestic gas sector has yet to be developed, despite enormous potential. * There is rapid and sustained electricity sales growth: sales have doubled every 5 years for the last 15 years, and 1.5 million consumers are connected every year (the largest growth rate of any utility in the world). * Indonesia has two types of electricity systems: on Java, there is a modern, profitable integrated grid; outside Java, there are many isolated grids that are loss-making. * The power sector until recently has been dominated by the state-owned integrated utility, PLN (Perusahaan Listrik Negara), but sector restructuring is underway: (i) PLN has signed MOUs with private sector IPPs for supply of over 4,000 MW of power; (ii) PLN is being reorganized into subsidiaries under a holding company as an initial step to- wards partial divestiture. Net Sector Lending FY No. of Projects IDA IBRD Total Share of Total (US$ million) (US$ million) (US$ million) Portfolio ( 1969-80 9 101.8 699.0 800.8 21.9 1981-90 13 - 2687.2 2687.2 25.1 1991-96 6 - 1730.7 1730.7 21.7 1997-98 5 - 741.0 741.0 29.5 IFC has no oil or gas projects in Indonesia. Key Sector Issues Electricity * Institutional/technical: Bottlenecks exist in transmission and distribution; power supply quality and reliability are low. * Policy: Electricity tariffs need to be increased to finance sector growth and meet Bank covenants; power sector has been opened to private entry but rules for entry need to be better defined and regulatory oversight strengthened. * Investment: Access to electricity remains low, especially in rural areas; construction of first nuclear power plant is under consideration. Gas * Allocation is on an administrative basis, including highly subsidized sales to public enterprises. There is little transmis- sion pipeline capacity. Many end users - industrial and residential - do not have access to gas, despite Indonesia's large reserves of nonexportable gas. * To develop the sector requires: improving incentives for gas producers; establishing an unbundled, open-access transmission system and independent distribution companies; implementing a regulatory framework to promote private investment, efficiency, and competition; developing a transparent and competitive mechanism for recruiting foreign gas companies to help develop the gas system. Sector Work, FY90-96 Energy Sector Pricing Study, 1990 Natural Gas Development Planning Study, 1992 Natural Gas Development Planning Study, 1992 NORPLAN Study on Electricity Sector Restructuring Options for Private Participation in PGN, Options, 1993 the State Gas Company, 1994 Policy Note on Reform of the Gas Sector, 1994 IPP Pricing, 1994 PLN Financial Targets, 1995 Framework for Power Sector Development, 1995 Power Sector Regulatory Oversight, 1996 Power Supply Reliability, 1996 Development of Private Power, 1996 Major Sectoral Targets and Achievements Electricity * Sustained rapid growth and substantial efficiency improvements; rural electrification target of 100% of villages by about 2010. * PLN corporatized and unbundling begun on Java. * Introduction of private power w/ construction underway of first large private power plant (Paitonl). * Introduction of automatic electricity tariff adjustment mechanism and small power purchase tariff. * Legislation to promote downstream oil and gas competition is being prepared. * Effective regulatory oversight for electricity sector to be finalized this year. Gas * Decision made to end the monopoly of the national oil company, PERTAMINA, in gas transmidssion and convert the state-owned gas company, PGN, into a limited liability company to pave the way for investment in the company by intemational gas utilities (1994). * Revision of the oil and gas laws to promote private investment and competition in the downstream oil and gas industries has gone to the Cabinet (1996). • Development of an open access national gas grid which could yield net savings of $800 million per annum in addition to substantial environmental benefits through the substitution of cleaner natural gas for petroleum products. Comments * GOI has relied heavily on Bank advice in developing and reforming the power and domestic gas sectors. * All seven active projects in the Bank energy portfolio are rated satisfactory or higher. * Future power and gas projects will focus on: regulatory reform, private sector participation, transmnission and distribu- tion, renewable energy, and rural electrification. Active Lending Operations FY Name of Project Total Lending (US$ million) 1990 Gas Utilization 104 1991 Power Transmidssion 172 92 Suralaya Thermal 424 1993 Cirata Hydro Phase II 104 1994 Sumatera and Kalimantan 261 1995 Second Rural Electrification 398 1996 Second Power Transmnission and Distribution 373 Future Operations FY Project Name Total Lending (US$ million) 1997 Gas Transmission 166 1997 Solar Home Systems 25 1997 Renewable Energy Development 100 1998 Java Distribution Project 350 1998 Power Distribution Outside Java 100 IFC Strategy in Indonesian Power Sector IFC's strategy for investment in this sector includes support for projects with the following characteristics: * Competitive IPP generation providing catalytic and demonstration benefits without any involvement of the friends or family of the president. * Economically viable IPP generation utilizing renewable resources (e.g., hydro, wind, solar, biomass, and geothermal). • Private sector transmission and distribution, to the extent that they become feasible under Indonesian regulations. MIGA Strategy in Indonesian Power Sector MIGA has so far issued one contract for a power project in Indonesia. It provided a US$50 million guarantee to Global Indonesia Power (General Electric Capital Corporation) for its investment in the Paiton 7/8 project in FY96. MIGA also expects to issue a guarantee for another power project (ENRON, East Java) in FY96. In addition, MIGA has a number of applications pending, and might participate in other power projects, subject to its country and sector limidts. Sector Note. Mining Sector Summary Sector Profile * Mining accounts for about 10% of GDP. In 1994, Indonesia earned US$1.84 billion from exports of mainly coal and copper (4.6% of total exports). * Having reasonably attractive mining laws and market-oriented policies, Indonesia has been able to attract substantial foreign direct investment and world-scale mineral producers, e.g., CRA and BHP in coal mining, INCO in nickel, Freeport McMoran and Newmont in copper and gold. The mining sector has also been reasonably successful in attracting long-term financing from international commercial lenders. * With encouragement from the World Bank, the Government has recently privatized P.T. Aneka Tambang (general mining, nickel, bauxite) and P.T. Tambang Timah (tin). By law, the state coal mining company, P.T. Tambang Batubara Bukit Asam, owns Indonesia's coal resources and private operators obtain concessions via contracts of work in exchange for a set royalty (generally 13.5% of coal output). Copper: Freeport Indonesia is the only copper producing company in Indonesia. Its production exceeded 1 million tons for the first time in 1994. Virtually all was exported in the form of concentrate since Indonesia does not yet have a copper smelter. Export earnings in 1994 were US$858 million. The main markets for Indonesian copper concentrate are Japan, USA, Germany, and South Korea. Coal: * The rapid increase in coal-fired power generating capacity in Indonesia and in the region has led to high growth in coal production. In 1994, Indonesia produced 28 million tons as compared to 10 million tons in 1990. Export earnings amounted to US$915 million up from 18 million tons in 1994. The country's total coal reserves are estimated at 37 billion tons, 85% of which are low-sulfur lignite or sub-bituminous, suitable for thermal power generation. Gold: - In recent years, there has been spectacular growth in gold exploration and production. In 1994, Indonesia produced about 44,000 kg (41,000 kg of which was exported) as compared to 6,700 kg in 1990. This growth is partially associated with the growth of copper production, since gold is a by-product of copper concentrate produced at the Freeport mines in Irian Jaya. IFC's Role * IFC's role in the Indonesian mining sector has been limited. Mining ventures in Indonesia have been able to attract long-term financing from commercial sources. * IFC's most significant involvement has been in the US$650 million Gresik Copper Smelter project, in which IFC originally worked with Metallgesellschaft, which did not proceed with implementation. The project was taken over by Mitsubishi Materials which, together with Freeport Indonesia, invited IFC to participate. Nevertheless, due to the publicity associated with OPIC's cancellation of its insurance of the Freeport copper mines, the sponsors decided to withdraw their request for IFC financing of the smelter. IFC expects to pursue a role in projects involving smaller companies which are venturing into Indonesia for the first time. In addition, IFC seeks to promote smaller coal mining projects involving Indonesian sponsors. IMor' Note Financial Sector Key Sector Data * Commercial banks are the predominant participants; there are more than 240 such banks with more than $100 billion in assets. * The stock market is robust if volatile, with more than 230 listed firms, more than $60 billion in market capitalization, and more than 200 brokerages. * Recent Initial Public Offerings (IPO) have been enlivened by divestment of large public enterprises, including PT INDOSAT, PT TELEKOM, and the scheduled IPO of a large state bank, Bank Negara Indonesia. * Fixed-income securities are less active, with $13 billion of money-market instruments and $2 billion of corporate bonds. * There are many nonbank finance companies (more than 250, including leasing, factoring and consumer credit companies) and about 100 insurance companies, but the volume of business for these firms is very small (less than $10 billion of revenue for nonbank finance companies and less than $2 billion of written premiums for insurance companies). * Banks and nonbank finance companies are regulated by Bank Indonesia (BI). * Security markets are regulated by the Capital Market Supervisory Agency (BAPEPAM). * Financial regulations have been progressively liberalized since 1983. Sector Lending (IBRD) FY No. Projects IDA IBRD Total Share of (US$ million) (US$ million) (US$ million) Total Lending (%) 1969-80 6 19.6 154.8 174.4 4.8 1981-90 3 - 538.8 538.8 5.0 1991-96 1 - 307.0 307.0 3.9 1997-98 - - - - Key Sector Issues * High level of nonperforming bank assets, 10 % eaming assets for the banking system and 17% for the state banks. Mixed compliance with prudential banking regulations, particularly on capital adequacy and legal lending limits by borrowers. * High interest rates and over-collateralization of loans, which adversely affects small firms. * Uneven development of financial markets, with relatively illiquid capital markets, limnited supply of term finance, and lack of significant institutional investors. Sector Work, FY1 990-96 * External Debt Management, 1992 * Non-Bank Financial Sector Study, 1994 * The Emerging Asian Bond Market - The Case of Indonesia, 1995 * The Indonesian Pension System, 1996 * Financial Sector Update, FY96 * Report on the Dissemination of FDI Related Data, IFC, February 1996 Key Sector Objectives * Restructuring and privatization of state banks. * Market-based facilities for housing finance, including secondary markets for mortgages. * Growth of institutional investors, particularly contractual savings institutions including mutual funds, insurance companies and pension funds. e' Deepening of financial markets to provide more services and flexibility, including access of small firms to equity markets, to longer-term debts, both domestic and abroad, and developing securitization as a financing alternative. IFC Strategy * Selectively assisting private sector banks to enhance their level of sophistication in products, services, and operations by introducing foreign technical partners together with an IFC equity investment. * Financing SMEs, which are typically crowded out of the financial sector by larger and better connected corporates, by providing credit lines to mid-sized private banks for onlending to this segment of the market. * Developing an institutional investor base in Indonesia through the establishment and/or expansion of mutual funds, venture capital funds, insurance companies, and pension funds. * Improving the capital market infrastructure though the establishment of depositories. e Facilitating investments by establishing and/or expanding brokerages offering reliable service and sophisticated research. * Developing and deepening of the Indonesian bond market. IFC: Detailed Financial Sector Brief Sector Profile * Indonesia's financial sector has been liberalized in stages since 1983 and has become considerably more sophisticated since then. In mid 1989, a comprehensive regulatory framework (the Capital Market Decree of 1990) was established to attract foreign institutional investors. * The stock market has grown from a dormant institution with a total capitalization of US$101 million and 19 listed companies to one consisting of 238 listed companies and a market capitalization of US$67 billion (as of December 1995). This growth does not reflect qualitative changes such as better settlement procedures, better research availabil- ity, and higher standards of professionalism in the securities industry. * In January 1996, PT Merrill Lynch Indonesia became the first majority-owned U.S. securities firm to be granted a license by the Indonesian Capital Markets Supervisory Agency, BAPEPAM. * The IPO market has been dominated by state offerings such as the recent IPOs of Tambang Timah, a state-owned tin mining firm and PT TELKOMUNIKASI, a state-owned telecommunications firm. Both issues were floated on the London, Jakarta, and Surabaya stock exchanges. Several other state-owned firms including PT Jasa Marga (a tollroad operator), PT Krakatau Steel (a power generator), Perusahaan Listrik Negara (a power generator and distributor), and Bank Negara Indonesia 1946 are scheduled for flotation in 1996. * The banking system has improved considerably in the last decade, particularly after the 1988 reforms which permit- ted the entry of new private banks and joint ventures with foreign banks. The number of commercial banks in Indone- sia has doubled in the past five years to reach 240, of which 60 have foreign technical partners. Loan growth increased in tandem with the increase in the number of banks. In 1994, outstanding loans grew by 27 percent. Deposits have not increased as sharply, rising by only 17 percent in 1994. As a result, the loan-to-deposit ratio increased by 3 percent to 82 percent in December 1994. * However, this growth has frustrated Bank Indonesia (the Indonesian central bank) in its efforts to reduce the level of bad loans in the banking system. The latest estimates released by Bank Indonesia show that 4 percent of outstanding credits from Indonesian commercial banks have been in arrears for more than 2 years. State banks, which controlled 43 percent of Indonesia's 188.6 trillion rupiah (US$84.8 billion) in total outstanding credits in 1994, have an even higher proportion of bad loans. Bank Indonesia is also concerned with the high level of real estate lending done by many private banks. * Govemment officials are expecting a gradual consolidation of the banking industry, which is expected to occur through a series of bank mergers. In 1995, 10 banks were either bought out by independent groups or acquired by rival banks. The state-owned banks are expected to continue to be plagued by bad debts and to see their role in the banking system diminish. * Indonesia has a large number of finance companies which are involved in a range of credit-related activities including leasing, consumer financing, factoring and credit cards. There are currently 253 finance companies registered with the Finance Ministry, of which 197 are private, 54 are joint ventures, and two are state owned. In 1995, Indonesian finance companies financed 25 trillion rupiah (US$10.9 billion), an 80 percent increase from the previous year. In December 1995, the Finance Ministry stopped issuing new licenses to finance companies as part of a series of measures to squeeze credit growth and cool the overheating economy. Equity investments by finance companies have been limited to investments in the financial sector and capped at 25 percent of paid-up capital. * Life insurance is a young business in Indonesia. In 1994 (latest data available), only about 15 million individuals had life insurance coverage, representing 7.8 percent of the total population of 190 million. In contrast with other large emerging markets such as China and India, which are still working out procedures for deregulation, the Indonesian life insurance market has been deregulated considerably since the release of the Insurance Policy Package (IPP) in 1988. As a result of the deregulation brought about by the IPP, between 1989 and 1994 the number of insured grew from 5.3 million to 14.9 million and the proportion of population insured from 3.0 percent to 7.8 percent. A substantial proportion of the growth came from group business, which accounted for over 83 percent of the total number of lives insured in 1994. The number of individual lives insured was only 2.5 million (1.3 percent of the population) in 1994. * This low level of insurance penetration, combined with a population of more than 190 million, population growth of over 1.5 percent, forecast economic growth of over 6 percent a year over the next 5 years, and an estimated 20 million uninsured middle class professionals (the group most targeted for life insurance products), suggest that there is a substantial need for further development of the Indonesian life insurance market. By mid 1995, the 50 life insurance companies in Indonesia consisted of one state-owned firm, 39 local private companies, and 11 joint venture operations. In 1994, the state-owned firm wrote 16 percent of total life policies outstanding but only 12 percent of the total sum (in rupiah) insured. The local companies accounted for 82 percent of total life policies outstanding and 72 percent of the total sum insured. Although the joint venture companies wrote only 2 percent of total life policies outstanding, they accounted for 16 percent of the total sum insured, reflecting their focus on the growing better-paid middle-class sector. * Indonesia's commercial debt market is relatively small. Periodic local banking scandals have caused wary foreign lenders to only offer short-term funding at high interest rates. As of December 1994, outstanding bond issues by Indonesian issuers consisted of US$13 billion equivalent of bonds and money market instruments with a maturity of less than one year and US$2.1 billion equivalent of corporate bonds. Corporate bond issues for the whole of 1994 totaled only US$336 million equivalent. Unlike its Malaysian and Thai counterparts, the Indonesian Govemment has not issued any govemment bonds with a final maturity of over 1 year. Recent large issues by corporations have included a US$310 million Yankee bond issue by the Sinar Mas conglomerate, which raised US$310 million. * Demand for bond financing is increasing due to the strong growth of the Indonesian economy, coupled with the inadequate size and depth of its equity markets. In the latter half of 1995, an electronic exchange, clearing, and settlement system was set up for bond trading. A rating agency, Pefindo, was recently set up in response to a direc- tive from Bank Indonesia requiring all commercial paper to be rated by a company approved by the Capital Market Supervisory Board. These measures will facilitate the growth of the Indonesian bond market. Sector Work, FY90-96 e Project to encourage backward linkages, April 1995 * Report on the dissemination of FDI-related data, Feburary 1996 IFC's Role * IFC would like to help establish a brokerage house and/or an investment bank which wouid set the standards for the industry. * In order to help small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) which cannot tap the stock market, IFC has helped, and will continue to help; develop the private equity/development capital industry. * Since the availability of term finance is limited and tends to be channeled towards larger corporations with better access to the system, IFC has mobilized and channeled long-term money via leasing and finance companies to SMEs, and it intends to continue doing so in the near term. * In addition to the focus on SMEs, it is also part of IFC's strategy to assist appropriate (i.e., larger, more established) Indonesian institutions in accessing the intemational money and capital markets. IFC will selectively help Indonesian borrowers access the U.S. commercial paper market and help lengthen borrowing maturities for Indonesian institu- tions. * Given the importance of mobilizing domestic savings, particularly long-term savings, IFC has supported, and contin- ues to support, the establishment of contractual savings institutions such as life insurance companies. * On the more sophisticated end of IFC's work on capital markets in Indonesia, it has helped to promote the develop- ment of Indonesia's asset-backed securities market by establishing a specialized securitization institution. * More generally, IFC intends to keep working towards developing the domestic debt market, which it views as a vital component of the Indonesian capital market. IFC: Chemicals, Petrochemicals and Fertilizers Department Strategy for Indonesia CPF Strategy * Indonesia has a sufficiently large domestic market and enough raw materials to justify further development of its chemical and petrochemical industries, including fertilizers and refinery. Since most projects in these sectors are intensive in both capital and technology (know-how as well as marketing), the CPF Department can play a meaningful role in these sectors, especially in terms of (i) assessing and advising on the long-term strategic viability of projects; and (ii) acting as an honest broker in joint venture arrangements (North-South as well as South-South), such as the BKC projects between the Mitsubishi and Bakrie groups. * CPF has not been very active in Indonesia because of two main issues. One, the Government's privatization intentions and liberalization actions, especially for the refinery and fertilizer sec- tors, are still quite unclear. Two, the dividing line between the corporate and political sectors has been less and less clear in investment decisions, especially for large, capital-intensive, high- visibility projects as petrochemicals. * We have focused, therefore, mostly on the chemical industries and medium-size companies. Although, with the keen interest from commercial banks in project financing, opportunities for a meaningful IFC role may be limited in the near term. We shall, however, maintain promotion efforts in Indonesia in view of its long-term strategic potential in the Asian markets. World Bank * The CPF strategy is consistent with the Bank's assistance strategy for Indonesia. Pipeline * Projects under consideration at present are in early stage of development: * Maspion Group projects: (i) to set up a 120,000 tpa PVC joint venture project with Siam Cement, largely for the domestic market, with technology from Shin Dai-Ichi Vinyl Corporation (merged with Sumitomo Chemical's PVC division in mid-1995). Maspion is a major producer of house- hold sundry goods in Indonesia, including PVC pipes and cables; (ii) to set up a melamine project in joint venture with Srithai, a large melamine producer in Thailand. * LG project: to set up a 100,000 tpa PVC plant, being proposed by LG. The feasibility study is now under review by the LG board. If board approval is obtained, LG intends to request IFC support to help find and structure a local partnership. Portfolio * BKC I & II - PTA plant. Outstanding loans total US$150 million (including B loans in the amount of US$95 million) and equity investments total US$12.6 million. BKC I is doing well, and BKC II is under construction and due to be completed ahead of schedule in April 1996.. * BK PET - PET resin plant downstream of BKC's PTA operations. Outstanding loans total US$12 million, with an equity investment of US$2 million. Project was completed ahead of schedule. RELATIONSHIPS WITH OTHER ORGAN IZATIONS w~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~----------- Relationships with Other Organizations International Monetary Fund Recent Contacts with the Fund Emphasis should be placed on achieving a * Article IV consultation mission to Jakarta, fiscal surplus of 2-3 percent in 1996/97. This May 6-17, 1996. would support moves to increase the flex- ibility of exchange rate policy and strengthen * First Deputy Managing Director Mr. Fischer control over the growth of monetary aggre- visited Indonesia, May 21-24, 1996. gates. Background * Recent information points to continuing * Indonesia rejoined the IMF in 1967. Between overheating pressures, with inflation close to 1968 and 1973, Indonesia had one year stand- 10 percent in 1995/96. The budget for 1996/ by arrangements, but made no purchases 97- aiming broad balance, following an after 1971. Indonesia is on the standard expected surplus of about 1 percent in 1995/ twelve month Article IV consultation cycle, 96- does not go far enough toward achiev- with a mid-year staff visit. ing the desired surplus. The growth of money and credit remained well over 20 * Indonesia formally accepted the obligations of percent as of January 1996. While Bank Article VIII, sections 2, 3, and 4 of the Fund Indonesia has taken steps to tighten mon- Agreement as from May 7, 1988, and has no etary policy with more stringent reserve current account exchange restrictions. The requirements and stronger moral suasion, capital account is also very open. monetary policy may still be insufficiently IMF Assessment of the Economy effective. * At the 1995 Article IV consultation (July 1995), * To improve the effectiveness of monetary directors emphasized that Indonesia faced a policy, it would be desirable to tighten significant short-term challenge of overheat- central bank liquidity and further increase ing in the face of persistent inflation and a exchange rate flexibility. Bank Indonesia widening current account deficit. They urged widened its rupiah-dollar intervention band the authorities to tighten both fiscal and to 3 percent on January 2, 1996. However, a monetary policies and recommended further resurgence of capital inflows in February led steps toward a more flexible exchange rate to large official purchases of foreign ex- policy. change and an easing of domestic liquidity * In IMF's most recent mid-year visit to Jakarta conditions. in December 1995, the staff noted that over- * Large minimum wage increases in recent heating pressures had increased. Rapidly years may have further entrenched inflation rising domestic demand had caused the expectations. current account deficit to widen sharply, to Although Bank Indonesia has been address- close to 4 percent of GDP in 1995, while ing problems in the financial systems, and inflation remained nearly double the Repelita the proportion of nonperforming loans has targeet Of 5 percent . The authoriti es werev ro star gedpto reduceodemand pre- diminished, much more needs to be done to strongly encouraged to reduce demand pures- reuenprfmiglasrstcue sures and develop a disinflation strategy with reduce nonperforming loans, restructure a view to achieving their Repelita objectives. problem banks, and enforce regulations. Cooperation with the World Bank * Trade and investment liberalization has * In its surveillance function, IMF concentrates on generally been broad based and sup- macroeconomic advice. The Fund and the Bank ported competitiveness, but some recent have recently shared similar macroeconomic measures, including preferential tax and views. The staffs of the two institutions have tariff arrangements, could harm effi- intensified collaboration efforts to emphasize ciency and impair the credibility of the areas of primary responsibility and ensure consist- policy direction. ency of advice. On this basis, the Fund staff has Technical Assistance been developing a disinflation strategy for a mission to Jakarta in May. * In recent years, IMF has provided tech- nical assistance to the Indonesian au- * The Fund's macroeconomic advice has been thorities on various aspects of assisted by World Bank work in a number of macroeconomic policy, especially fiscal areas, in particular tax administration, expendi- reform, banking, and statistics. Missions ture reviews, public enterprise reform, and resolu- have advised specifically on pension tion of state bank difficulties. Efforts are being reform; budgetary procedures; banking made to ensure better coordination of work pro- supervision, regulation, and liquidation; grams. For example, Bank work on labor market management and operation of the pay- issues and public expenditure priorities was very ments system; and balance of payments useful to the Fund staff in the context of the Arti- statistics. In April 1996, missions advised cle IV consultation in May 1996. further on financial regulation and * The technical assistance provided by the Bank and supervision, tax administration, and the Fund staffs on the banking system is closely compilation of government finance coordinated and complementary. statistics. Another mission on payments system reform is planned for later in the year. Relationships with Other Organizations Other Donors * Indonesia receives development assistance agreements with GOI. A new ADB project in the from the bilateral aid agencies of more than environmental sector will directly build on a 14 countries, as well as the Asian Develop- World Bank-financed project to strengthen GOI's ment Bank (ADB) and UN agencies. For FY environmental agency (BAPEDAL). 1995/96, the Consultative Group commit- UN Agencies ments totaled US$5.36 billion, of which US$2.6 billion came from multilaterals, with the * In 1994 a total of US$56 million in assistance was World Bank and ADB each committing US$1.2 provided to Indonesia by all UN agencies, exclud- billion. Japan is by far the largest bilateral ex- ing the World Bank.' The three most active agen- ternal support agency (ESA), contributing cies in terms of total disbursements were UNDP, US$2.1 billion in 1995/1996, a substantial in- UNICEF, and WFP, each disbursing between US$ crease over its previous year's commitment of 10 million and US$13 million. Many complemen- US$1.7 billion. After Japan, the largest assist- tary actions are being financed by UN agencies ance providers among the bilateral ESAs are and the Bank, including the Ozone Depleting Great Britain, France, and Germany, which Substances Phase-out Project, financed by the pledged US$155 million, US$139 million, and World Bank-administered Ozone Projects Trust- US$125 million, for 1995/96, respectively. Sig- Fund (OTF) which also involves UNDP, UNIDO, nificant support is also provided by the United and UNEP. Another important example of coop- States, Australia, Kuwait, Austria, Canada, eration is the World Bank-executed, UNDP and and Switzerland. World Bank-financed Regional Water and Sani- tation Program for East Asia Pacific (RWSGEAP),2 Asian Development Bank based in Jakarta. The Community Water Supply * The Asian Development Bank's portfolio is Component of the E. Java Bali Urban Develop- large and covers many sectors, including edu- ment Project was prepared and financed by cation, energy, transport, agriculture, irriga- UNDP through RWSGEAP; it is anticipated that tion, water resource management, natural re- collaboration with RWSGEAP will continue on source management and conservation, credit, other projects. and health. There are no joint cofinancing ar- . In the area of HIV/AIDS, the World Bank's efforts rangements between ADB and the World are being coordinated with other ESAs through Bank, principally because the resources quarterly meetings organized by WHO. Collabo- available from each institution have been ration with FAO is especially strong, since it has sufficient for individual project investments. been asked by GOI to implement key TA activities However, the two institutions have financed under the Integrated Pest Management Training many complementary programs. For exam- Project. With UNICEF, collaboration is beginning ple, ADB and the World Bank finance similar in the preparation of a new Early Childhood De- projects in urban development, environment, velopment Project. irrigation, roads, and education, but in different regions, provinces, cities, or institu- Bilateral Agencies tions. In the case of the Flores earthquake re- . Substantial interaction and information sharing habilitation program, the World Bank and with bilateral ESAs occur on a regular basis, by ADB are providing parallel financing for com- RSI as well as by HQ staff. Interaction has been plementary actions under separate 0 F N 0 0 N E S I A especially important with OECF (Japan) and financed JABOTABEK Urban Development II GTZ (Germany). DANIDA, because of its in- project. In the education sector, OECF finances terest in regional development, is currently fi- the construction of school buildings, while a nancing the preparation activities for a new re- Bank loan focuses on improving the quality of gional development project in Bengkulu prov- instruction, rehabilitating existing facilities, and ince, Sumatra. In addition, Bank staff are in com- purchasing books and equipment. OECF also munication with USAID, especially regarding provides funding to the city of Surabaya, di- HIV/AIDS and public sector management ef- rected at supporting a separate but complemen- forts; with the Norwegians regarding natural tary set of activities and investments to the resource management and environmental con- World Bank-financed Surabaya Urban Devel- cerns; and with several other bilateral and opment Project. nongovernmental ESAs such as CARE and Germany. The German goverment, through WVWF in other priority fields. GTZ, provides substantial technical assistance * Japan. Of the bilateral ESAs, the Japanese OECF in the areas of rural and regional development, and JICA are the most important in terms of upland farming systems, rural finance, and amount of financing provided, with OECF public sector decentralization. In each area, providing approximately US$1.6 billion of Ja- Bank staff have benefitted by significant inter- pan's commitment of US$2.1 billion for 1995/ action with these projects. For example, the 96. In addition to providing balance of payment identification and preparation of the new group support, OECF funding is concentrated in in- of Bank-financed regional development and frastructure investments in the following sec- integrated conservation projects is building on tors: transportation, water resources, commu- the experience of GTZ/GOI in Sumatra and nications, urban development, energy, and irri- Kalimantan. GTZ's work with GOI in develop- gation. Cooperation among the World Bank, ing a group credit program is now being con- OECF, and GOI has ensured the sidered as a model to be expanded and financed complementarity of OECF and World Bank in- under a new Bank operation. In addition, a vestments. As in the case of ADB, OECF finances Bank/GOI study on village institutions and projects in urban development, rural roads, and participation will be done in collaboration with irrigation which are often similar to projects fi- GTZ to take advantage of its work on decen- nanced by the World Bank, but are located in tralization and regional development. different regions. In a few instances, however, there is more direct cooperation. In JABOTABEK (the multi-city region including I Source: UNDP 1994 Development Cooperation Report. Jakarta and three neighboring cities), OECF is 'Similar programs are also located in South Asia, Africa, and providing an additional US$45 mnillion in par- South America. allel financing to complement the World Bank- Relationships with Other Organizations NGOs NGOs and the World Bank * Direct NGO involvement in Bank Projects: Between 1989-1995 the Bank disbursed some $14.4 million dollars to local and international NGOs for consultant services on Bank-financed projects. Nearly 87 percent of these resources were used to support increased community participation; with improved service delivery being second, at 10 percent; and special studies comprising some 3 percent of consul- tancy contracts. * EA3 has since 1994 initiated a program of activities to include NGO participants in project preparation and implementation. These activities have been carried out both by the Environment and Social Unit of the Resident Mission as well as by country operations, each sector division, and individual task manag- ers. * Since 1995, the resident staff in Indonesia has initiated a program of activities to increase NGO participa- tion and partnership in Bank projects. This NGO Participation Program has three objectives: first, to use the Bank's leverage to encourage more contact between NGOs and the Government of Indonesia; sec- ond, to help identify constraints and ways to improve NGOs' working environment; third, to open a line of communication to NGOs on a more systematic basis than simple project consultations. The activities pursued by the Resident Mission to strengthen the Bank's partnership with NGOs are described below: * Consultation Activities/Dialogue. The Participation Program has increasingly led to task managers seek- ing out NGOs working in their sector at both the national and the grassroots level. The program has also brokered NGO-Government dialogue through workshops in Irian Jaya, Nusa Tenggara Barat, and East Java. In the last six months nearly 70 NGOs joined discussion roundtables in the Resident Mission on several projects: "Safe Motherhood," "HI-V/AIDS," and "Coral Reef Conservation and Rehabilitation Project." These discussions have led to the development of simplified mechanisms to allow NGO par- ticipation in Bank projects. * Study on NGO Enabling Environment: The Resident Mission, with the assistance of BAPPENAS and local NGO specialists, has undertaken a review of the "Enabling Environment for Indonesian NGOs," including papers on legal issues, financing, and procurement. This study has helped foster a number of important meetings between NGOs and Government agencies. Main Issues Three principal issues stand out from our NGO Participation Program. *The NGO landscape is more complex than we initially thought. NGO capacities, and operational relation- ships with Government and local communities vary significantly, and their potential for improving the effectiveness of development is uncertain. At the same time, the NGO presence is growing fast, and any Bank strategy must aim for where the sector will be in the near future. *Despite an improved climate for Government-NGO relationships, NGOs are still restricted by the Gov- ernment's overall policy, a general attitude of distrust, and a fairly restrictive operating environment. At the same time, there is clear evidence that increasing contact between Government and NGOs promotes better working relationships, since NGOs can often develop coping strategies that let them work rela- tively freely and at times even with direct Government support. *We have learned that for NGOs to become significantly involved in any Bank projects will require careful preparation to overcome general resistance to anything other than a minor executing role. Some of the environment and health sector projects have started to address the operational procedure needed to make NGO involvement in Bank projects possible. A more concerted effort will be needed to convince Government that NGOs can achieve development objectives often more effectively than traditional Gov- ernment agencies, particularly in poverty alleviation. I1. E P U B L I c 0 F § N D 0 N t S I A NGO Activities The NGO Community in Indonesia opment efforts outside of a bureaucratic structure; * The NGO community in Indonesia is relatively and (ii) the policy environment encourages foreign young and underdeveloped compared to other donor investment in social development activities, ASEAN countries such as the Philippines and which has fueled NGO activities. Thailand. Indonesian NGOs describe them- . As Figure 1 indicates, nearly 50 percent of all NGOs selves as Lembaga Swadaya Masyarakat (LSMs) are based on Java, which has nearly two-thirds of or self-help community development institu- Indonesia's population. The second highest concen- tions. Indonesian NGOs play a strategic role in tration is on the island of Sumatra. Generally, areas developing partnerships between local govern- that have a strong tradition of group organization ment agencies and community-based groups and community self-help, such as central Java, have such as informal credit and farmer groups. The large numbers of NGOs; areas such as Kalimantan, larger NGOs, especially those based in Jakarta, which have small dispersed settlements, have rela- often act as a channel for funds and technical tively few. NGOs have expanded their programs in support, and play an advocacy role with cen- eastern Indonesia, an area with an extremely high tral Government on behalf of smaller grassroots incidence of poverty, where Government programs NGOs and community groups. have been slow to reach. * Although NGOs have been effective interlocu- Resource Mobilization tors in a few sectors such as irrigation and so- and Donor Support cial forestry, their overall capacity to implement development activities remains weak: first, * Between 1991-94, some US$127 million dollars were NGOs are often distrusted by local government channeled to Indonesian NGOs from international for their advocacy work, which is viewed as agencies for social development activities. The larg- critical of government polices and programs. est contributor was USAID (about US$30 million). This often leads to petty harassment of NGOs These funds were used predominately for social by local officials; second, NGOs have limited hu- development activities (education, health, man and technical capacity to operate on an community training), including institutional equal footing with counterparts from govern- support and capacity development for local NGOs. ment agencies; third, they remain predomi- Indonesia has a long history of private philanthropy nantly dependent on foreign funds for program through local foundations, yayasans, in the areas of support. This has left them unable to invest in public health, culture, and education. The oppor- institutional and human resources develop- tunities for individual and corporate support for ment, since most donor funds are tied to spe- local NGOs remain limited due to few tax incen- cific projects. tives for charitable donations and a lack of trans- parency by the NGOs themselves regarding their Numbers and Distributions activities and use of program funds. * The number of development-oriented NGOs National NGOs has dramatically increased from less than 2,000 National NGOs can be characterized by their insti- in 1985 to some 3600 registered in 1995. The main tutional format, their geographical coverage, on reasons are that (i) many of the best graduates their primary program focus. The following types from the national universities have established of NGOs are typical of Indonesia's NGO commu- NGOs as a means of supporting social devel- nity: : E P U B L I C 0 F I N D C N E S I A * Networking, Advocacy NGOs: These NGOs are networks with central offices in Jakarta and re- Distribution of NGOs in Indonesia gional chapters in the provinces. The regional by Region chapters are usually represented by local NGOs ava with a similar program interest. Examples of these types of NGOs include: the Indonesian Legal Aid , Wt Foundation (YLBHI), which provides legal aid and monitors human rights abuses; the Indone- E Idnd.1. sian Environmental Forum (WALHI) and the For- Su E est Conservation Network (SKEPHI), which fo- Kht I, cus on environmental advocacy and community Y s Ai 6 rights and access to resources; and the Interna- tional Forum for Indonesian Development (INFID), a network of national and international In some cases the international NGO negotiates a NGOs which monitor development programs in memorandum of cooperation directly with a spe- Indonesia. These NGOs often find themselves in cific line ministry. an adversarial position vis-a-vis Government, * Foundations Operating in Indonesia: The Ford given the nature of their activities. Foundation, Asia Foundation, and MacArthur i Large Community Development Foundations: Foundation give a range of grants to local envi- Several have offices in Jakarta and work across ronmental and advocacy NGOs, universities, and Indonesia. They receive funds from a variety of Government agencies. sources including Government contracts, and in- * International Conservation NGOs: The World- come from businesses that they operate (printing, wide Fund for Nature (WWF), The Nature Con- consultancy services). Examples of such NGOs servancy (TNC), and Conservation International include Bina Swadaya and LP3ES. (CI) all have resident offices in Indonesia and * Local NGOs: Local NGOs typically work in one work closely with the ministries of Forestry and province or district. They are often established by Environment on biodiversity conservation. local university graduates or retired civil servants * Development-oriented NGOs: CARE Interna- and focus primarily on community development tional, OXFAM, Save the Children, PACT, and and local advocacy issues. An example of a suc- PATH are some of the large development NGOs cessful local NGO is the Foundation for Commu- operating in Indonesia. These NGOs focus pri- nity Development in Irian Jaya (YPMD) which marily on rural community development, health, works closely with local government on health and sanitation issues, with a strong geographical and community income generating programs as focus on eastern Indonesia. well as issues relating to land rights for local in- digenous groups. International NGOs * International NGOs are well represented in Indo- nesia. Grants made by international NGOs to lo- cal groups must be approved by the Government. SEIflSSI AP- Key Issues Poverty Background * Indonesia's rapid and broad-based pattern of growth (an average rate of 4.2 percent per capita per annum, as compared to 1.4 percent for low- and middle-income economies) has had a spectacular effect on poverty reduction. In 1967, Indonesia's per capita income was US$50, roughly half that of Bangladesh, India, or Nigeria. By 1993, Indonesia's GNP per capita was (US$740), more than three times that of Bangladesh (US$220), and more than twice that of India (US$300) or Nigeria (US$300). * In 1970, an estimated 60 percent of the population (about 70 million Indonesians) were living in absolute poverty. By 1990, the proportion of poor had declined to 20 percent (about 35 million people). Recent estimates indicate that the proportion of poor has now fallen to about 14 per- cent. Enormous improvements have also occurred in nutrition, life expectancy, and basic health and education. * Despite this progress, Indonesia still has substantial numbers of poor people (some 26 million). Most of the poor are on Java; the Eastern Islands have fewer numbers but high concentrations of poverty. Increasingly, poverty in Indonesia is localized rather than widespread, by rural/urban residence, province, occupation, household size, age, gender, and other characteristics. The current Five Year Plan (Repelita VI) has set an ambitious target of reducing absolute poverty to about 6 percent of the population (12 million). * A large number of EA3's projects have poverty components. This is especially true of the urban, human resources, and agricultural development projects. EA3 is currently implementing a Village Infrastructure Project which is directly targeted to poor villages. Key Issues * There is a growing perception in Indonesia of an increased concentration of wealth. This is raising concerns that the pattern of growth that has emerged since the mid 1980s is leading to greater inequality of incomes between various social groups, such as workers and owners of capital; residents of Jakarta and others; and male and female workers. * To further reduce absolute poverty, it is necessary not only to maintain broad-based growth (with special emphasis on human resource development) but also to: (a) target programs to reach the hard-core poor; (b) allow poor communities, households, and especially women to have a greater role in specifying the services they need; and (c) develop a workable agricultural growth strategy for the resource-poor outer islands. Government Position * The Government of Indonesia has already initiated an innovative program targeted to the poor: the INPRES Desa Teringgal (IDT) aims to channel US$600 million in grants to communities which have a high incidence of poverty. Notable features include the participation by beneficiar- ies in decisions about how to use project funds and the use of streamlined mechanisms to chan- nel funds directly to targeted communities without going through traditional budget processes. E P U B L I C 0 U I N D 0 N E S I A Key issues Gender Background * Compared to other Moslem countries, the position of women in Indonesia is fairly favorable. In general, education has not been segregated. Legally, the equality of men and women in Indonesia has been established without much struggle. Ingrained in the state philosophy, Pancasila, it is incor- porated in the 1945 Constitution. Voting rights have been ensured through the ratification of the UN Convention on Political Rights of Women and the Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination Against Women. The Government's political commitment is expressed in the Guidelines of State Policy, GHBN, and the Five Year plans. However, a wide gap still separates de jure from defacto discrimination against women in Indonesia, evident in: * the low number of women in key political and bureaucratic decisionmaking bodies; * occupational segregation, with a concentration of women in low-skilled, labor-intensive manufac- turing sectors; * substantially lower earnings of women relative to men; and * the high maternal mortality rate. Key Issues * Education: Based on average national statistics, girls and boys have equal access to primary educa- tion, and there is not much gender inequality through the high school level. The Bank is designing a series of junior high school education projects at the provincial level which will take into account differences in girls' access in some parts of the country. * Health: Indonesia's maternal mortality rate of 450 per 100,000 live births is higher than that of countries with much lower per capita incomes, such as India (420) or Pakistan (270). This is an important indicator of the overall low quality of health services available to Indonesian women. The Bank is currently preparing a Safe Motherhood and Family Development Project (US$115 million) to tackle the problem. * Wage Labor: Women workers have been major beneficiaries of the recent expansion in employ- ment opportunities in labor-intensive manufacturing in Indonesia: between 1986 and 1994, formal sector employment for female workers has grown at over seven percent per annum (compared with five percent for males); and between 1989 and 1994, real wages of female workers have grown at almost eight percent per annum (compared with five percent for males). However, new prob- lems have emerged, including the poor working conditions of women workers in the industrial sector and the absence of effective workers' organizations that can provide workers with some negotiating power. * Agriculture and Natural Resource Management: Agriculture accounts for almost half of all em- ployment for women workers and there are 15 million female farmers (and 23 million male farm- ers) in Indonesia. Despite women's central role in agriculture, they have had less access than men i' E P U B L I C 0 F X N D 0 N E S I A to essential resources such as extension, training, and credit. Two recently negotiated regional de- velopment projects (Nusa Tenggara Agricultural Area Development and Sulawesi Agriculture and Area Development) will have components, such as training sessions, specifically targeted to women. * Financial Services: Only a quarter of working women in Indonesia are employed in the formal sector, with the rest in either agriculture or the informal sector. Limited access to credit is often a cause of low incomes in these sectors. The Bank plans to examine, through future work in the financial sector, whether there is a need to promote/support schemes and mechanisms for provid- ing small-scale credit for microenterprises, which tend to primarily benefit women. Key Issues Education and Training Background In the past two decades, Indonesia has had considerable success in dealing with the "first generation" education problems of a developing country: (a) providing basic education to the majority of children, and (b) producing a critical mass of skilled workers and leaders to make the economy, society, and government function effectively. There is now virtually universal access to primary education, with 89 percent of children aged 7-12 in primary school and a gross enrollment rate of 111 percent. Enrollment ratios in secondary and tertiary education (47 percent and 10 percent) are comparable to those of countries with twice Indonesia's income per capita. Adult illiteracy has been reduced to 23 percent. Pre-employment and in-service training imparts additional skills to more than one and a half million workers annually. Moreover, the country has reaped the benefits of having a literate population: re- ductions in fertility, better nutrition and health status, improved farm productivity, labor mobility, and higher incomes for the poor. Despite these achievements, the quality of education in Indonesia leaves much to be desired, especially when compared to East Asian countries. Proportionately fewer Indonesian students have the background to go abroad for higher education. Key Issues Notwithstanding the progress achieved so far, the education and training sector faces several formidable challenges in the medium to long term: e Increasing retention and access of the poor to quality primarv education. The 11 percent of children aged 7-12 not in primary school are mainly from low-income groups in rural areas outside Java and are not as easily reached as the other 89 percent. The high private cost of schooling, late start of school, distances to school, and understaffing of many rural and remote schools all contribute to low retention. * Expansion of basic education to include three years of junior secondary. The Government intends to universalize nine years of education over the next 15 years. This will require large investments in facilities, textbooks, upgrading of quality of teachers, and other inputs. The task of reaching poten- tial students from low-income, rural, and remote areas is likely to be more difficult than it was for primary education. * Development of a coherent framework for a large and differentiated higher education system. In- donesia today has 51 public and more thanl,000 private institutions of higher education. The role of the public sector is changing, moving away from micro-level planning and management towards setting broad sector policies and monitoring sector performance. * Redefinition of the role of government in providing and financing training. The private training system has been expanding rapidly in the past decade, yet the public sector still is heavily involved in providing pre-employment training. Such publicly provided training has high costs, is often unrelated to employer (supply-driven) needs, and crowds out potential private-sector initiatives. * Decentralization and regional implementation. It will now be necessary to decentralize planning and implementation so that the country's regions can deal with the specific problems they face in an appropriate way. It; I P U B L I C 0 F N D 0 N E S I A Government Position Government has a broad human resource development agenda featuring inter alia: improvements in the quality of, and access to, basic and higher education; capacity building in relatively less-devel- oped areas (off-Java); and enhancement of skills to support a transition to an industrial and techno- logically sophisticated economy in the 21st century. In education, government intends to do the following: * Target the poor and disadvantaged areas through special strategies to ensure that: (i) all children have access to begin primary school at an appropriate age and (ii) parents understand the benefits of and returns to education. * Reduce drop-out and repetition in primary education by improving the quality of education through training and better distribution of teachers, supply of textbooks and other teaching materials, and increasing the involvement of parents and the community. * Expand the supply of junior-secondary education through provision and quality improvement of facilities, teachers, and supplies, abolishing fees, providing incentives to poor youths and their parents to attend school and continuing policies which generate a broad-based increase in average income levels. • Improve the quality of higher education. both public and private institutions. a Maintain adequate levels of government spending on education and training. 3 Build capacity at the regional levels of management of the education system, to enable a more decentralized system to function effectively. In the area of training: e Government is experimenting with several schemes, including the dual-track apprenticeship scheme popular in Germany. Support for training activites is being received from many sources, including Germany and Korea. The Bank's Position The Bank's strategy for assisting the education and training sector in Indonesia includes: (a) In the Basic Education Subsector: * Help expand access to junior secondary schooling, particularly for the rural poor (provincial sec- ondary education projects). * Reduce drop-out and repetition in primary schoolthrough quality interventions. * Encourage Government to maintain overall resource envelope for education, particularly primary education. (b) In the Higher Education Subsector: * Enhance the contribution of public higher education to economic development through higher quality and more relevant teaching and research. (c) In the Training and Skills Development Subsector: * Encourage the Government to move from providing skills training directly towards facilitating the efficient functioning of the private training sector. _~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ _ Key Issues Labor Background * There is a growing concern among policymakers in Indonesia that labor has not shared in economic growth. This concern is fueled by the perception of an increased concentration of wealth in a few monopolies and oligopolies, resulting in a widening of Indonesia's social gap; and expressions of dissatisfaction from workers themselves, in the form of strikes and other industrial action. * The Government has responded by taking a much more interventionist stance in the labor market, in terms of setting wages and benefits. It has: - increased minimum wages sharply; - passed an all-encompassing social security law that provides health insurance, life insurance, accident insurance, and pension benefits to all workers; and - passed a ruling that compels companies to pay their workers a 13th month of salary each year. Key Issues * Workers in Indonesia have made steady progress over the past decade and have shared in the benefits of Indonesia's growth through sustained increase in wage employment (6 percent p.a. since 1986), and remove earnings (6 percent p.a. since 1989). * Female workers have benefited from increased employment opportunities in labor-intensive manu- facturing such as textiles, garments, and footwear. * The benefits of growth have been spread widely over workers of different levels of education and in different regions of Indonesia. * Even though the legal system provides for the right to form unions, it is not easy to set up a union in Indonesia. There is only one legally recognized union in the private sector - the SPSI (All Indo- nesia Workers Union), essentially a tightly controlled Government institution. * Since the mid 1980s, there has been very rapid urbanization, industrialization, and formalization of the workforce; rising levels of education of workers; and signs of tightening labor markets in pock- ets of the country. These factors are leading to a growing demand for free trade unions to negotiate higher wages and better working conditions. * Estimates of child labor in Indonesia range from about 2-3 million, small numbers by Asian stand- ards; the overall number declined by 25 percent between 1986 and 1994, but the percentage work- ing in urban areas doubled. Problems of children working extremely long hours for low wages in export-oriented, labor-intensive manufacturing have begun to receive widespread attention by some NGOs and donors in Indonesia and in the national press. 1: F IP U 8i L I C: C) F 0 N D 0 N E S I A Key Issues Urban Environmental Management and Industrial Pollution Background * The urban population is growing at 6 percent per year; by 2020, half the population may live in cities. * Industrial output has expanded 8-fold since 1970 and is likely to expand another 13-fold by 2020, with most growth on Java. * The pollution control agency is BAPEDAL; the Bank has been continuously associated with it since its creation in 1990; RSI manages the $17 million BAPEDAL Development Technical Assistance Project. Key Issues * Air quality. While industrial sources need attention, the most pressing problem is pollution from the rapidly increasing number of motor vehicles. Particulates and lead are the worst pollutants. * Solid waste management. Most is improperly disposed of (open burning and uncontrolled dumps, causing air and groundwater pollution and disease). Uncollected waste is dumped in drains and water- ways. An active, informal scavenger industry recycles paper, plastics, glass, and metals. * Water quality. Surface waters in cities are highly polluted. Groundwater is contaminated by bacteria and nutrients from septic tanks, posing health risks to the many users of wells. Most cities do not have wastewater collection and treatment systems. Piped and groundwater supplies are unreliable and un- safe without boiling, and many urban poor do not have access to public supply. Government Position * Air quality. The "Blue Skies" program was initiated several years ago, but so far there has been little action on industrial sources or vehicles. Unleaded fuel has been discussed, but only a token amount is available in Jakarta. * Solid waste management. Private sector participation is being encouraged. Progressive cities such as Surabaya have enhanced the status of scavengers to take full advantage of their valuable services. An- nual "ADIPURA" awards to the cleanest cities are main GOI instrument to promote improved perform- ance. * Water quality. Public works investment policies give high priority to water supply, low priority to sew- age treatment, rely primarily on septic systems. * GOI plans to: extend PROKASIH (clean rivers program) to all provinces; expand newly developed PROPER program, monitoring pollution control of plants; strengthen BAPEDAL's legislative basis for enforcement action and begin prosecuting violators; and expand cleaner production technology pro- gram. World Bank Position * Air quality. President should issue an order to switch to unleaded gasoline and low-sulfur diesel fuels; establish stricter emission standards for motor vehicles; implement motor vehicle inspection and main- tenance program; and improve urban land use planning and control, traffic management, public transit systems. p E U B L I C i F N D (3 , E 5 I A 9 * Solid waste. There should be a rational SW management planning process that allows for maximum private sector and informal sector (scavenger) participation. * Water quality. The country needs to improve availability of safe water supply: expand systems, reduce leakage, improve O&M, support with proper cost recovery; improve septic system maintenance and sludge disposal, and begin to install cost-effective sewage collection and treatment systems where septic systems are ineffective; require large, new land developments to provide acceptable sanitation systems; and for industry, develop credible industrial wastewater discharge permit, monitoring and enforcement process, using economic instruments, public information, and public pressure. Key Issues Natural Resources Management and Conservation Background * Basic Law for Management of Living Environment enacted in 1982, one of the first in a developing country. * State Ministry for Environment (MLH), established in 1983 as a policy-setting/coordination body. * Environmental impact assessment (AMDAL) implemented in 1986, BAPEDAL (similar to US EPA) created in 1990. * Other key agencies in natural resource management and conservation are: BAPPENAS; ministries of Agriculture, Forestry, Public Works; and Mines and Energy; Land Management Agency (BPN); National Institute of Sciences (LIPI); and Technology Assessment Agency (BPPT). Key Issues * Land use - encroachment of landless farmers into upland forests; conversion of coastal wetlands to agriculture; industrial expansion and urban sprawl around existing centers. * Forests - Indonesia contains about 110 million hectares of "closed canopy" forest, including 10 percent of world's remaining tropical rainforest. Approximately 60 million ha are designated as production forests, and GOI has granted more than 500 logging concessions. Regulations exist, but poor logging practices, agricultural conversion, and opening of new areas by logging roads con- tribute to annual forest cover loss of between 300,000 and 1.3 mnillion ha. * Water resources - emerging conflicts between competing water uses (agriculture, industrial, and municipal) and overuse of groundwater in urban areas, especially on Java. Unsafe water supply, poor sanitation, and flooding are serious urban problems. * Biodiversity - Indonesia has a Biodiversity Action Plan which sets out a strategy for biodiversity conservation. Major issues are competing land use from mining, logging, agricultural conversion, and coastal tourism development and weak enforcement of existing conservation regulations. * Energy - shift from oil exporter to importer expected as soon as 2000. Government Position * Land Use - Most basic policies in place. GOI agrees with Bank that institutions are weak and implementation is only beginning. * Forests - GOI has prepared Tropical Forest Action Plan and declared intention to achieve sustainably managed forests by 2000. GOI has supported the establishment of an independent Ecolabeling Foun- dation for voluntary labeling of forest concessions and products. GOI is also encouraging the devel- opment of plantations, especially to meet demand for pulpwood. * Water Resources - GOI is considering water management on an integrated river basin basis, in- cluding control of groundwater usage; few efforts have been successful. Only one true river basin authority exists, and it is weak. GOI has set aside 30 million ha of permanently protected forest to safeguard critical watersheds. Is E P u 6 t I C 0 F IN D_ ,N E S I * Biodiversity - GOI has set aside 19 million ha as parks and reserves and proposed or designated 30 million ha as marine conservation areas. World Bank Position * Land use - improve efficiency in allocation by reducing and simplifying land regulations, expe- diting titling and registration, improving transparency and availability of land information, and relying wherever possible on public auctions to allocate public lands. Implement the recently improved processes for spatial planning and administration of land development. Improve agri- cultural research, extension, and design of farming systems to ensure that lands converted to agri- culture can be used sustainably. Improve land policy through reform and implementation of basic agrarian and forest laws. * Forests - Improve management of production forests by raising domestic log prices to interna- tional levels; changing duration of logging concessions; and making renewability conditioned on performance, intensifying research on sustainable logging and replanting practices, and strength- ening enforcement of forest regulations. Ensure community participation in forest management decisionmaking. Combine conservation activities within protected areas with income-generating activities outside. * Water Resources - Besides basin-wide management, implement improved pricing and cost-re- covery policies for better demand-side management and funding of O&M and capital investments. Rationalize pricing structure and ensure that subsidies, where used, actually reach the poor. * Biodiversity - Many critical ecosystems, such as commercially important lowland forests, are poorly represented in the protected area system. Insufficient numbers of trained staff, low budgets and lack of infrastructure constrain effective management. GOI should strengthen partnerships with NGOs, the private sector, and local communities to conserve biodiversity. * Energy - Environmentally responsible fuel pricing, in the form of a pollution-based tax to cover the costs of environmental damage. Promote efficiency and pollution control in the transport, in- dustrial, and power sectors. Enact regulatory measures to create a market for electric power, includ- ing removal of tariff subsidies and introduction of purchased power rates. Key Issues Land Acquisition and Resettlement Background Infrastructure projects mostly require land acquisition which affects and displaces people from project areas. In the past, a lot of the affected/displaced families did not receive sufficient compensation to find/buy a similar house/workplace on a new site. Land acquisition problems often delay project implementation and raise serious social and political issues. Key Issues * inadequate compensation (although there is already good progress). * no resettlement option (they are beginning to work on it). * people with no legal land status have received minimum/no compensation. * insufficient information and consultation, nontransparent process. * insufficient budget to cover land compensation. * operational guidelines of Keppres 55 have not emphasized "real market value" compensation. Government Position • spending for compensation will slow down infrastructure development. * providing higher compensation to squatters will invite thousands of them to settle on sites for urban infrastructure and other public land. • those who are affected but not displaced will get high benefits from infrastructure investment (higher land value, better access, etc.). • change/improvement should be introduced gradually. World Bank Position * the affected people should not be worse off after project implementation; there should be a policy and strategy going toward compensation; Keppres 55 should have clear operational guidelines to ensure fair compensation. * all affected people recorded at the baseline survey are entitled to receive compensation for their lost assets; the level of compensation may vary. * the benefits can be considered in the valuation, but should be determined through a fair, trans- parent, and rational process. * the change/improvements may come about through gradual implementation, but a clear formal strategy should be defined and an action plan for the improvement should be available; all rel- evant agencies need to improve their procedures and technical guidelines. * transparency is very important to improving the whole system. I I'E P U R i C 0 F I N 0 0 N E S I A Key Issues Land Markets and Policy Background * 70 percent of land is designated state controlled land; including practically all forest land. * Of the remaining 30 percent, only about 25 percent is registered, due to cumbersome procedures, unrealistic documentary requirements, and capacity problems with the responsible agency (BPN or the National Land Agency); 75 percent (including in many urban areas) is held under (insecure) customary land rights. * The number and visibility of land disputes (mainly government/projects vs. the local population) is increasing, mainly because of insecurity of land tenure due to the low rate of registration. * The Land Administration Project, cofinanced by the Bank and AusAID, has been under implementation since September 1994, mainly to accelerate land registration. * Land can only be owned by Indonesian nationals; others get short (10-30 year) extendable leases. * Land markets are heavily regulated (with about 2,000 land-related laws and regulations identified to date) and not very efficient. Key Issues * Low rate of land registration. Only 13 percent in East and West Java. * Distorted land markets due to (a) insecure tenure, (b) unfair land acquisition mechanisms - loca- tion permits - that favor large developers/investors, and (c) underpricing of public land sold to investors for housing, industry, and tourism. * Traditional communal lands/indigenous land rights are, in practice, not respected and are in- cluded in forest and mining concessions without consultation/compensation. - Intransparent land use/spatial planning. The process of land use/spatial planning is not transparent, despite provisions of a 1994 law. * Institutional inefficiencies and insufficient human resources in the National Land Agency. Government Position * All natural resources, including land, are a national asset and must be used for public benefit. * Rising land price is mainly a result of speculation, and should be controlled by government regulations. * Register all nonforest land within 25 years. * Forest land will remain under GOI administration and no legal status will be given to indigenous communal land (at the most, limited use rights under community forest agreements with MoFr). P U B L I C 0 F I N D 0 N E S i A 1 World Bank Position * Accelerate land registration to provide the basis for functioning land markets. * Review land management policies, in particular the location permit, exploring more equitable land acquisition options. * Implement the Law for Spatial Planning, to increase transparency in land use planning. Legally recognize/protect indigenous communal land rights. Key Issues Legal Development Background Legal development in Indonesia has taken a back seat to the Government's efforts to maintain economic growth. The legal system remains fragmented and outdated, consisting of customary law, remnants of colonial law, and more recent legisla- tion. In recent years, a strong consensus on the need for extensive and responsive legal and institutional reform has emerged from society and the business community, in particular. As a response, GOI, for the first time ever, included a separate chapter dedicated to describing its legal reform policy in the 1994-98 Five-Year Development Plan (REPELITA VI). Under REPELITA VI, GOI would: (a) develop a modem legal system and framework; (b) improve the administration of justice; (c) strengthen application and enforcement of laws; (d) develop community-oriented legal aid services and extension programs; and (e) strengthen legal infrastructure. Key Issues A successful legal reform program must: (a) address institutional deficiencies of the current legal framework * develop technical skills and capabilities; * strengthen professional and ethical standards; * promote independence of the judiciary; review salary structure for judges. * improve dissemination of laws; * develop an appropriate legal framework through the modernization of civil and commercial codes dating from the 1800s, avoiding piecemeal reforms; and (b) enhance confidence in the legal system and provision of justice * improve access to justice and equity; * enforce laws and contracts in a transparent manner; * curtail administrative discretion in the implementation of laws and regulations; * improve society's trust of the legal/judiciary system. Government Programs Legal reform efforts are currently underway through the combined efforts of: (a) BAPPENAS (National Planning Agency) (b) EKKU-Wasbang (Coordinating Minister for Economics, Finance and Development Supervision, assisted by USAID), and (c) BPHN (National Law Development Agency of the Department of Justice). World Bank Assistance An IDF grant is supporting GOI's efforts to complete a thorough diagnostic assessment of the legal system and institu- tions, aimed at: (a) preparing a strategy for human resource development in the legal field; (b) assessing the capabilities of legal institutions and identifying more opportunities for community participation in legal development; and (c) assessing the functioning of the judicial system and other means of dispute resolution, including measures to enhance the awareness of legal rights and responsibilities among the citizenry. E *9 P U B L I C 0 F N D 0 N E S I A . . . ...................... .... .... .................... .. . . .........I * The Land Mobilization Project provides GOI with technical assistance to improve land registration regulations and study customary land registration. * Analytical work on commercial law done by the Bank in 1990 led to a USAID-sponsored technical assistance program. .. .... Key Issues Improving the Financial System Background * Indonesia's financial system is market oriented and operates in the context of an open capital account; it remains undercapitalized and has large bad debts, particularly in the state banks. * Rapid financial sector growth followed the massive financial deregulation of the late 1980s. Bad debts rose sharply, particularly in the state banks, when financial tightening occurred early in the 1990s. About 10 percent of bank assets (17 percent for state banks) are classified, mostly loans to well-connected citizens. * The Government has improved supervision and prudential regulation in the 1990s and reduced bad debts in four of the state banks by about US$1.3 billion. The Bank has supported this pro- gram. With state banks' lending restricted by poor portfolios and low capital, private banks have captured the majority of lending volume. * Real interest rates are high, reflecting exchange rate and country risk. The differential between on- and off-shore US$ deposits is about 1 1/2 percentage points; deposit rates in local currency are about 8 percentage points above on-shore US$ deposits. * The capital market's development is in line with Indonesia's per capita income. The main con- straints to growth are not regulatory but high inflation, high risk premiums, poor financial accounting, and an inexperienced rating agency. * There is no domestic government debt, owing to the longstanding balanced budget rule. The central bank issues debt which it uses to conduct open market operations. * The new public pension scheme could help capital market development, but its treatment of contributors and its investment rules remain opaque. Key Issue * To improve the soundness of the financial system so that it can mobilize more saving and allo- cate those funds more effectively. Government Position * The Central Bank Governor and the Minister of Finance appear to believe that everything is under control and that progress-albeit slow-is being made in resolving the most important structural issues. World Bank Position: * Government is taking undue risks with a sector that would be among the first stressed in the event of economic crisis, owing to the country's open capital account. To reduce risks, there is a need for: - President Soeharto's active support to collect more bad debts, particularly those of the state banks. - the Central Bank's stronger enforcement of its regulations regarding legal lending lim-Lits and capital adequacy; - a shift in priorities for the use of public money towards closing bad banks rather than bailing them out; -collection of more bad debts before bail-out is permitted; and - increased capital requirements for nonforeign exchange banks. * For capital market development, risk could be reduced by significantly lowering inflation; a stronger pension system should assist in raising local savings. Key issues Macroeconomic Stability Background * The risk of macroeconomic instability is increasing. Consumption/construction-led boom has over- heated the economy (rise in imports of 20 percent and inflation of 9 percent in 1995/96). * The current account deficit doubled (to about 3.5 percent of GDP). Despite rising foreign direct investment, external borrowing was needed to finance deficit, adding to Indonesia's already large foreign debt. * In the next few years, foreign investment projects are likely to generate large imports and private debt (assuming even a 80/20 debt-equity ratio), given the large volume of approved projects. Key Issues * To reduce the risk of sudden capital flight if foreign lenders and domestic depositors consider Indonesia's external position unsustainable. This would provoke a foreign exchange crisis, given Indonesia's modest international reserves and still weak banking system. * The Government needs to reduce risk and make room for the new foreign investment by (a) tight- ening fiscal policy, and (b) reducing its own extemal debt. * Prudent management of the external debt, especially the fast-growing private component. Government Position * The President's budget speech made overheating a major issue. However, he assigned monetary policy to cool overheating, and presented a looser budget than in 1995/96. * The Government relates much of the import growth to foreign investment. Government considers the consumption/construction boom to be slowing and projects a sharp fall in import growth. World Bank Position * The Bank followed up President Soeharto's request to President Wolfensohn to help reduce over- heating with package of recommendations to raise the fiscal surplus from 0.5 percent to 2.5 percent of GDP, and use it for debt prepayment. The IMF has made similar recommendations. This package put would Indonesia in line with Thailand and Malaysia's surpluses, and reduce the risk of loss of confidence. * The higher fiscal surplus can be achieved by a combination of expenditure restraint and revenue enhancement, through such measures as: (a) reducing spending for telecommunications and power generation, (b) limiting the rate of growth in civil service wage and salary payments, (c) reducing debt service payments by prepaying high-interest debt from privatization proceeds, (d) increasing petroleum prices, electricity tariffs and forestry charges, and (e) raising property taxes and improv- ing assessments. * Keep monetary policy tight to increase international reserves. Strengthen monetary policy through further widening of Bank Indonesia's exchange rate intervention band. i' E P U 8 t I C 0 F I N D 0 N E S I A Key Issues Trade and Foreign Investment Policy Background * Indonesia has a fairly open trade and foreign investment regime, but recent ad hoc decisions have called into question this policy direction. * Presidential Ruling (PP)20 of May 1994 allowed investment in most industries without export re- quirements or a local partner. Other industries are open to joint ventures with a local partner; dives- titure is required, but only as agreed to by the parties. Defacto, a local partner is needed to maneuver through the bureaucracy. Press, strategic industries, and wholesaling/retailing are the main closed sectors, although retail franchises exist. * The May 1995 deregulation package cut the average tariff to 15 percent(simnilar to Malaysia), and set up a schedule to reach a 7 percentaverage tariff by 2003. This package followed up APEC's Bogor Declaration (1994). of "open" regionalism that President Soeharto and his team pushed through. The January deregulation package cut average tariffs by another 1 percent. * Recent decisions (e.g., a favorable tax/tariff regime for joint venture between one of the President's sons and Kia of Korea to produce a "national car," a tariff surcharge to protect a petrochemical plant in which another son is involved) have gone against the now "rules-based" approach. Key Issues * The unfinished trade agenda consists of nontariff barriers in agricultural trade, export restrictions on primary commodities, and high protection for cars and strategic industries. * Infrastructure concessions to joint foreign/local ventures have shown a high degree of favoritism, nontransparency, and uncompetitiveness. Government Position * Nontariff barriers in agriculture are part of the state trading company's (Bulog's) management of agricultural trade; barriers to trade in soybeans, meat, and dairy products will be lifted under GATT/ WTO Uruguay Round agreements. * Export restrictions promote higher value added industries (e.g. plywood instead of logs), regulate domestic supplies, conserve natural resources, and raise export quality. * Development requires a "national car" and strategic industries (for example, planes and ships). World Bank Position * Carry out the scheduled tariff cuts with no back-tracking; the rules-based approach is a sound framework for ensuring efficient investment. * Eliminate nontariff barriers in wheat, sugar, rice, and soybean products (and deregulate local pro- duction) to improve efficiency and cut the cost of food, helping the poor. * Eliminate export restrictions, improving efficiency and benefiting agricultural producers off Java. The most important case is forestry, where the setup generates huge profits for the favored cartel of plywood producers. Replace the ban on log exports and the cartelization of plywood exports with (a) a higher fee per cut log to compensate for the reduction in national wealth, and (b) competitive auc- tions of concessions under a performance bond to improve sustainability of forestry (forestry-based exports are already slowing in volume terms). p # S~~~~mor Key lssues External Debt Background * Total external debt: estimated at more than $100 billion, with public debt $62 billion at end-1995. Debt service-to-export ratio: 31 percent. The Bank's Debt Tables classify Indonesia as "moderately" indebted. Fifty percent of medium and long-term debt, including multilateral debt, is linked to the yen. * Indonesia's S&P rating is BBB; Moody's is Baa3. Indonesian borrowers can access 5-7 year commer- cial loans at 100-300 basis points over LIBOR, depending on the borrower. * Almost all public external debt is owed by the central Government. External borrowing for public enterprises typically is done by the Government and on-lent to the enterprise; guarantees are few. (Recent exceptions: guarantees to state banks and the national airline, and gas facilities that are guaranteed by export receipts.) i The Commercial Offshore Loan Team (COLT, or BKPN in Indonesian) has restrained offshore bor- rowing since its formation in October 1991, public borrowing more effectively than private borrow- ing. In addition, prudential regulations limit the offshore borrowing of commercial banks. * Indonesia prepaid about $1.5 billion of high interest IBRD and ADB debt in 1994-95, using offshore privatization proceeds. * Indonesia's open capital account has allowed foreign investors play a large role in the capital mar- ket and hold bank accounts; this role is understated in the external debt estimates. Key Issues • Reduce public debt with public sector surpluses and privatization revenues. * Ensure productive use of borrowing by public enterprises and quasi-public projects. e Avoid excessive guarantees Government Position * The Finance Ministry is against guarantees of private debt, since Indonesia has established a track record of sound macroeconomic policy and debt repayment over the last 25 years. Guarantees would call into question that record and be difficult to manage, in terms of who receives the guarantees and maintenance of incentives for project performance. * Government wants to renew COLT, especially to handle public borrowing and contain borrowing for mega-projects that are import intensive and may not be internationally competitive. World Bank Position * Government should increase fiscal surpluses and reduce external debt, as promised in the Presi- dent's budget speech; it should continue to use privatization revenues to reduce debt. This would reduce risk and create room for the private sector. * Government should clearly distinguish between private and public debt. It should exercise great care in extending guarantees. Any guarantees of debt for concessions should be provided up front. The status of debt of the partially privatized enterprises needs clarification. I'. F P U . L I C 0 F N D 0 N E S - i A . * COLT should be strengthened for the public sector firms but reduced for the private sector firms, except those with contingent public liabilities. COLT is a blunt instrument, but it is perhaps even more necessary today, now that more public enterprises, including partially-privatized firms, are being allowed to borrow offshore more independently. Key issues Privatization Background * In 1995, the public enterprise (PE) sector comprised about 180 firms across all sectors, accounting for 15 percent of GDP; with assets (book) of about US$140 billion and employment of 1.14 million (1.4 percent of the labor force). * While privatization has been on the agenda since 1989, meaningful actions have been taken only over the last two years through partial divestiture of state-owned firms in the telecommunications (PT. Telkoms and P.T. Intelsat) and tin mining (P.T. Tambang Timah) sectors, and private/public joint operating schemes for the development of basic telecom services. Key Issues * PEs are performing poorly; average financial returns are barely half those of private companies. * The privatization process is widely perceived as nontransparent, with continuing rumors of favoritism and post-contract negotiations, notably in the IPO of PT Telkom. i Selection criteria for divestiture to date have emphasized revenues and speed rather than competition and efficiency. * Ad hoc arrangements for preparation and implementation prevent full realization of the potential ben- efits of privatization. * The President seems to aim for a faster privatization program than what the administration considers feasible to deliver, in part out of concern that vested interests may extract rents. Government Position * Announced plans to privatize five companies - PT Krakatau Steel, Bank Negara Indonesia, PT Jasa Marga (toll roads), and PLN (electricity). * Has decided on a general formula for IPOs of 25 percent divestiture of Government shares (interna- tional offering) and 10 percent dilution (domestic offering), with revenues from international offering earmarked for public debt reduction. * Has asked for Bank Group advice in implementing the privatization program. World Bank Position * Has strongly advocated privatization as an instrument not only for debt reduction but also for improved efficiency and competitiveness. * Responded to the President's request for technical assistance by collaborating with MOF in: - making suitable institutional arrangements for an accelerated privatization program; - establishing clear and transparent procedures for using privatization advisors/underwriters and for defining technical aspects of sales; - identifying key sector/corporate issues that need to be addressed for successful privatization of identified candidate companies; - developing a broader list of potential candidates for privatization with recommendations for ad- dressing pertinent constraints. j E P U S L I C O f N D 0 N E S I A .. .. ............ ....... ..............~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ . ... ... * After an initial hiatus, a constructive working relationship has been established with MOF. The first phase of the technical assistance has been completed with submission of technical papers on the various key issues. An IDF grant is being processed to provide MOF with requisite in-house expertise and train- ing. * IFC's Corporate Finance Services Group has been in discussion with state-owned companies, including PLN and the Hotel Indonesia Group, regarding provision of advisory services, and with the Ministry of Transport and Communication on privatization of four ports and Garuda Airlines. Key Issues Private Provision of Infrastructure Background * Investments of about $45 billion (about 6 percent of GDP) in infrastructure are needed during 1995/ 98 to sustain rising living standards and enhance Indonesia's international competitiveness. Pri- vate financing is expected to account for over one third of investment requirements. * Public enterprises have held monopoly positions in virtually all infrastructure sectors until recently. They have expanded infrastructure at one of the world's most rapid rates in 1970-90, but are un- likely to meet future demand and service quality requirements. * Infrastructure provision in Indonesia is generally characterized by high-cost contracts, capacity imbalances, inadequate maintenance, and service deficiencies. Key Issues * Mobilization of private financing in most infrastructure subsectors has been slow and costly due to negotiated deal-by-deal approaches and pass-through of cost overruns. • With the exception of telecom, the Government has not yet established a clear market structure and effective regulatory oversight in infrastructure. The Government's decision to maintain uniform infrastructure service prices throughout Indonesia effectively rules out cost-based pricing and com- plicates unbundling and divestiture of public utilities. • Infrastructure tariffs - except in telecom - are not sufficient to generate attractive rates of return or even to cover costs. This poses a problem for private sector entry. Government Position * Committed to private sector entry into infrastructure provision. Has lead role within APEC for public-private sector dialogue in infrastructure; - Displays high tolerance for rent extraction and for regulatory and legal ambiguity; * Now looking into possibilities for mitigating private investor uncertainty and risk except for sovereign guarantees for private infrastructure deals. l Has established high-level Steering Committee to promote cross-sectoral arrangements for private concessions to provide infrastructure services. World Bank Position * Developed frameworks for private participation in all infrastructure sectors and assisted selectively in preparing concession contracts and evaluation of bids. * Has played a decisive role in the process of awarding concessions to five international consortia under joint operating schemes, with PT Telkom as a passive partner. Transparent rules were ad- hered to and the award was competitive. The international investor community has given Indone- sia high marks in this case. * Made specific recommendations on cross-sectoral regulations for awarding infrastructure conces- sions. * The Government hosted a high-level Bank conference on the "Frontiers of the Public-Private Inter- face in East Asian Infrastructure" in September 1996 in Jakarta. Among the issues discussed were: why are so few deals finalized; why are transaction costs high; what are the real prospects for private infrastructure financing; what steps are needed to revive the momentum. ......... B.. . ... _ a_ .. .... ... .... .......... N . ...... .............N............................. E BP u L I C O' f N D O N E 5 1 A Key Issues Strategic Industries and Competitiveness/ Comparative Advantage Debate Background: * Minister Habibie's "technologist" view is that his strategic industries will improve competitive- ness through technology upgrading. "Promoting high value added manufacturing and high technology industries won't bring high growth in the short run.. .but in the long run national interest will be well served because national development will no longer be determined by the international division of labor." * IPTN, the most notable strategic industry, has produced a passenger plane used in Indonesia and sold a broad (often in counter trade but perhaps not used), flew a prototype turbo prop in August, and plans a jet. President Soeharto just established a firm to raise funds for the jet. * Other major strategic industries include shipbuilding, which is heavily protected, and Krakatau Steel, which was protected and still enjoys subsidized gas inputs, but which is now slated for privatization. * Minister Habibie also is pressing for nuclear power, on technological transfer as well as cost grounds; numerous industrial countries are trying to sell it. * Although the "technologists" claim that the strategic industries are profitable, the ten strategic firms account for half of the losses in Indonesia's state enterprises. True losses are probably much larger since many of the sales are counter-trade, and with Minister Habibie handling military procurement, losses can be covered up easily. Issue: How Best to Promote Technology Development in an Open Economy? * Should growth be based solely on comparative advantage that changes over time in line with growth in capital and human resources and in foreign investment? Or should there be leapfrog- ging into high tech using a technology cadre? (India may be an example of the results of leap- frogging; India has nuclear weapons and rockets, but many more illiterates and much poorer performance than Indonesia.) Government Position: Divided but Habibie's Influence is increasing. * President Soeharto's good relations with Minister Habibie go back many years; the President treats him as favorite son and has backed the IPTN planes to the hilt. He probably thinks that Minister Habibie will protect his children. * Minister Habibie's arguments appeal to the President, nationalists, and a number of "technolo- gist" proteges throughout the Government. The latter are typically engineers without much faith in the market, who generally favor an interventionist strategy. * The army is generally anti-Habibie, in part because of his control over procurement, but Habibie supporters and nationalists have recently gained ground in the army. * The economics team is anti-Habibie (confusingly, the economists are known as "technocrats"). They favor an open economy and the comparative advantage approach. * The economics team enjoyed the Finance Minister's refusal to increase the money budgeted for Minister Habibie's purchase of the East German navy but the President ordered the money to be paid out of the reforestation fund (a suit against this is in the courts) and closed three publica- tions that supported the Finance Minister. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~. . World Bank Position * The Bank supports the economists. (the East Asia Miracle box "Indonesia's Turbulent Leap into High Technology" was negative on the strategic industries, and was perhaps the most-read piece ever done by the Bank). * The strategic industries have wasted substantial capital and human resources. They have had minimal technological spillover into the rest of the economy; they and all the personnel they have trained remain a closed circle. * The protection afforded the strategic industries has been costly to the rest of the economy, for example, it hits the Eastern Islands by raising inter-Indonesia shipping and airline costs substantially. * The Bank supports high tech, provided it is privatelyfunded. If it is publicly funded, the costs should be accounted for in the budget, including any subsidies, instead of a nontransparent protection. Note * The "technologist-technocrat" debate is highly charged, even the use of certain words. * The President supports the planes strongly. Little can probably be gained by raising the issue again, except to say that the Bank is worried about the costs and nontransparency of the project. * Nuclear power is still an issue, and the Bank's worries over costs and environmental issues could be raised. Even Japan is reconsidering nuclear power after its recent accident. Great care will be needed in the Indonesia context to ensure that the purchased technology is not out- moded and that its location on densely populated, earthquake-prone Java is safe. The World Bank East Asia and Pacific Region. Country Department III 1Si8 H Street, NW I--4i Washington, DC 20433-OOQI Marianne Haug, Director______ Ar~~~~~I INDONESIA DISCUSSION PAPER SERIES REDESIGNING GOVERNMENT'S ROLE IN HEALTH: LESSONS FOR INDONESIA FROM NEIGHBORING COUNTRIES (NO. 1) SAMUEL S. LIEBERMAN, 1996 INVESTING IN JUNIOR SECONDARY EDUCATION IN INDONESIA: RATIONALE AND PUBLIC COSTS (No. 2) HANEEN SAYED, 1996 PROJECT QUALITY AT ENTRY: TEN KEY ELEMENTS (No. 3) RICHARD CALKINS, 1996 INDUSTRIAL TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT FOR A COMPETITIVE EDGE (No. 4) A DARIUS MANS, 1996 INDONESIA IN PERSPECTIVE: A COUNTRY BRIEFING (No. 5) VARIOUS CONTRIBUTORS, 1996 POVERTY AND INEQUALITY IN ASIA: A SURvEY OF RECENT LITERATURE AND RESEARCH AGENDA (FORTHCOMING) MUTTUKRISHNA SARVANANTHAN, 1996 EFFECTIVE PRIVATE PARTICIPATION IN TOLL ROADS (FORTHCOMING) JORIS VAN DER VEN, 1996 The Wrci Bank East Asa and Pacific Region, Country Department II1 @ 3 1 WHStreet, NW Washington, DC 20433-0001 Marinn Haug, Director