Commentary/Mani Shankar Aiyar
It was not political repression but the OPEC which gave the
Indonesian economy its big push
Her emphasis on seperating economic decision-making
from political decision-making is echoed by Mohammad Sadli,
former Indonesian labour minister, an economist by training as formidably reputed in
that country as Manmohan Singh is in India.
"The Opposition in Indonesia," he says, "has no
say in policy-making; it can only suggest 'corrections in implementation.'
So we had a free hand in taking hard decisions: raising administered
prices; devaluation; introducing valued-added tax; favouring mill textiles
even if it meant destroying the handloom industry; replacing the
customs service with a Swiss inspection agency; banning strikes
and all other forms of industrial action; pushing an exit policy..."
The outcome has been a spectacular economic growth.
Growth, however, was not the immediate outcome of the tightening
of the political screw. Indeed, for all of eight years, from the
rise of Suharto in 1965 to the four-fold risen oil prices in late
1973, there was no growth of any significance in the economy.
It was not political repression but the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries which gave the
Indonesian economy its big push.
Within an year -- 1973 to 1974 --
oil exports earnings jumped from US $ 641 million to over
US $ 2,600 million. By 1981, Indonesia's foreign exchange earnings
leaped to US $10,000 million. It is the fact that Indonesia is
oil and gas rich -- the fourth largest producer of crude oil in
the world -- that makes our endowments so incomparable with the
Indonesians.
If, however, oil alone was the reason for Indonesia's
growth, things might have come unstuck after the great
Petramina scandal and the horrendous dip in international oil
prices in the mid-eighties. It was the intelligent husbanding
of oil revenues and the opening of the economy to market
forces, domestic and international, which so diversified economic
activity that Indonesia today has moved into the big league.
Where many authoritarians have used untrammelled economic power only
for self-aggrandisement, the Suharto regime used its enormous
military and political clout to bend the nation's will to economic
development. In consequence, where per capita income even five
years after the overthrow of Sukarno was a meagre US $ 70 -- considerably
less than India's -- it is today above US $ 1,000, well over
double ours.
"We set ourselves three objectives," says
Dewi Anwar. "Political stability, economic growth, and equitable
distribution." The first -- political stability -- has been
attained, albeit through the politics of the morgue. The second
-- high economic growth -- was achieved at the cost of
democratic freedom.
It is, however, with respect to the third
-- equitable distribution -- that the most serious reservations are
expressed. "Absolute poverty, measured as nourishment in
excess of 2,400 calories a day, has been," as Dr Anwar says,
"virtually eradicated."
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