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Indonesia re-enters the club
of fast growing economies
Friday, 20 March 2009
The Jakarta PostAfter sinking deep
during the financial crisis, Indonesia has
now entered the club of the world's fastest growing economies, but it
needs further economic reforms and liberalization to gain more from
international trade.
The Organization for Economic Cooperation and
Development (OECD), in its latest report "Globalization and Emerging
Economies" released in Geneva on
Thursday, includes Indonesia among
the world's best performing large developing economies.
Indonesia
now sits alongside Brazil, Russia, India,
China and South Africa, in
a group the OECD calls BRIICS.
"The inclusion of Indonesia into BRIICS is a
recognition of the importance and size of the country, the situation
relative to OECD member countries, and the desire of OECD countries to
engage in it more closely," Douglas Lippoldt, acting head of the
Development Division at the Trade and Agricultural Directorate of the
OECD.
Des Alwi, an official at the Indonesian embassy in Paris, said the inclusion of
Indonesia
into BRIICS puts
Indonesia
back on the global radar as a future economic powerhouse following the
financial crisis.
He also said the inclusion acts as recognition of Indonesia's
relatively fast recovery from the severe financial crisis of the late
1990s.
The report said while Indonesia had not yet recovered to
pre-crisis levels of growth, the national economy had done very
admirably considering the sharp depreciation of the rupiah and the rise
of oil prices.
The biggest drawback is Indonesia's international trade,
which has been declining in proportion to its gross domestic product and
global trade, as well as new constraints on business in the country. The
increasing rigidity of the labor market, in particular, is of big
concern.
Before the crisis,
Indonesia's international trade had
long been a key catalyst for growth, but since the crisis trade has
played a much smaller role. The emergence of new competitors, or the
fact the severity of the crisis affected the ability of firms to trade,
could be two reasons for this change. Another factor is that Indonesia, which
has the lowest tariff levels among the BRIICS nations, has become less
open to international trade. The nation has been raising tariff barriers
for agriculture, textiles and steel products. Since 2001, new non-tariff
barriers have emerged and creeping protectionism has set in.
In addition, the recovery of the economy has not
spread equally across sectors. Growth has been strongest in
capital-intensive services, while labor intensive primary and
manufacturing sectors are experiencing sluggish growth. This results in
persistently higher unemployment.
High unemployment has also been attributed to the
increasingly rigid labor market, where hiring and firing has become more
expensive for businesses.
Indonesia,
therefore, needs to continue deeply integrating into the world market
and improve the investment climate to boost its attractiveness as a
global production base. This way, with the momentum of high growth being
sustained, it will remain relevant to the global economy.
As
Indonesia
becomes significantly more important economically on the world stage,
the OECD has adopted an "enhanced engagement" process with the BRIICS
countries, with the view being they will eventually become members.
OECD Secretary General Angel Gurria said that
engaging Indonesia and
other BRIICS countries was important for the OECD to maintain its
relevance.
OECD countries' share in global trade has declined
for several decades to just 60 percent, while the BRIICS countries'
shares has increased to 30 percent.
"If we are not engaging BRIICS nations, we run the
danger of becoming less and less relevant," Gurria told journalists from
BRIICS countries at his office Thursday.
"Whether you are going to be a member or not, we say
we are representing 60 percent *of global trade* and working closely
with the other 30 percent, and therefore, we remain a relevant
organization”
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