THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
OCTOBER 20, 2009

Indonesian Appointments Taint Prospects for Economic Overhauls 

By TOM WRIGHT

    
European Pressphoto Agency
    A
deployment of armored vehicles was part of 
stepped-up security measures
for Tuesday's 
presidential inauguration ceremony in Jakarta.
   
JAKARTA -- The new cabinet of Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono 
features choices likely to be popular with foreign investors as well as some 
who analysts say lack the credentials to achieve economic overhauls.

Mr. Yudhoyono, who was re-elected in July and will be officially sworn in to a 
second five-year term on Tuesday, had promised to appoint a cabinet comprised 
mainly of technocrats -- instead of representatives of local political parties, 
who dominated his cabinet in his first term.

Top appointees, local media reported, include politicians from the Golkar 
Party, which has strong support among government employees but also has a 
history of blocking efforts to streamline bureaucracy and privatize state 
enterprises. Mr. Yudhoyono offered a Golkar member the industry-minister 
portfolio, local media reported. A spokesman for Mr. Yudhoyono couldn't be 
reached to comment.

Indonesia's resource-dependent economy is forecast to grow 4% this year due 
largely to a rebound in global commodity prices. Analysts say the country needs 
broad legislative and legal changes -- including steps to slash red tape, 
reduce corruption and make it easier to finance big infrastructure projects -- 
to maintain investors' interest.

The cabinet is likely to be formally announced on Wednesday at the earliest. In 
recent days, a number of candidates have said they have been asked to serve.

The market is likely to applaud the inclusion of Finance Minister Sri Mulyani 
Indrawati. Ms. Indrawati said she had been asked to fulfill a cabinet-level 
role that promoted economic growth through fiscal measures, a likely reference 
to the finance minister portfolio. She is a former senior executive at the 
International Monetary Fund.

A former head of J.P. Morgan Chase & Co.'s operations in Indonesia, Gita 
Wirjawan, said Mr. Yudhoyono had asked him to head Indonesia's investment 
board, which will be elevated to a cabinet-level position.

In other areas, Mr. Yudhoyono's selections drew criticism. "Yudhoyono is 
attempting to balance technocrats with party representatives, and the result is 
likely to be more of the same: capable economic management and missed 
opportunities for institutional reform," said Kevin O'Rourke, who runs a 
Jakarta-based political consultancy.

Mr. O'Rourke pointed to the apparent choice of Hatta Rajasa, a close Yudhoyono 
aide, as senior economics minister as a disappointment. Mr. Rajasa, currently 
state secretary and a close aide to Mr. Yudhoyono, confirmed to local media 
that he had been asked to fill an economic post in the cabinet but declined to 
give further details.

In 2007, as transport minister, Mr. Rajasa blamed global shipping companies for 
charging too much, rather than trying to overhaul the levies that push up the 
cost of doing business through Indonesian ports, Mr. O'Rourke said.

Attempts to reach Mr. Rajasa weren't successful. Darwin Zahedy Saleh, a member 
of Mr. Yudhoyono's Democrat Party, the largest in parliament, confirmed he was 
asked to become energy minister but declined to comment further until it was 
made official.

Oil output has been falling in recent years because of unclear regulations and 
reports of corruption that have deterred foreign majors from spending on 
exploration. Indonesia this year pulled out of the Organization of Petroleum 
Exporting Countries.

Mr. Saleh, a former economics professor at the University of Indonesia, is an 
unknown quantity and may find it hard to tackle endemic corruption in the oil 
sector given his limited experience in government, analysts said.

Write to Tom Wright at tom.wri...@wsj.com 

Printed in The Wall Street Journal, page A11

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB125596285068394117.html


Copyright ©2009 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.





      

Kirim email ke