[nasional_list] [ppiindia] Jakarta can't spend a way to prosperity

  • From: "Ambon" <sea@xxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <"Undisclosed-Recipient:;"@freelists.org>
  • Date: Sat, 7 Jan 2006 01:48:44 +0100

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** Beasiswa dalam negeri dan luar negeri S1 S2 S3 dan post-doctoral 
scholarship, kunjungi 
http://informasi-beasiswa.blogspot.com **Jakarta can't spend a way to prosperity

By CHRISTOPHER LINGLE
Special to The Japan Times



    UBUD, Indonesia -- Indonesia's chief economic minister, Boediono, along 
with Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati and Bank Indonesia Gov. Burhanuddin 
Abdullah are credible and competent bureaucrats. They put forth an action 
agenda of economic reforms designed to reinvigorate the local investment 
climate and to speed up the resolution of disputes with foreign investors. 
But President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono should worry about the advice his new 
economic team has given him. News reports indicate that they are offering a 
noxious cocktail of wishful thinking, nonsensical nostrums and macroeconomic 
mumbo jumbo. 

According to Boediono, Jakarta will accelerate and boost spending to stimulate 
the economy. Part of the plan is for the government to spend 10 trillion to 15 
trillion rupiah during next year's first quarter. 

If the government's game plan is for these steps to boost real and sustainable 
economic growth, it is easy to predict failure. After all, if prosperity and 
recovery could be conjured up by increased spending by governments then no 
country on earth would be poor! 

In all events, front-loading government spending into the present cannot have a 
greater benefit than were it left to a later date. The fantasies of economic 
textbooks aside, the real world provides no evidence for government spending 
permanently stimulating higher real economic growth. 

As it is, the problem with the Indonesian economy is that government officials 
control too many resources taken from private-sector actors. As the Indonesian 
government has a poor track record for probity and efficiency, it is better to 
refrain from taking so much away from the private sector, which can use it more 
effectively. 

But these woeful results differ only as a matter of degree from public-sector 
failures in other countries. As elsewhere, the incentives faced by public 
officials do not motivate them to do the right thing. 

Unlike private-sector actors, public officials spend someone else's money on 
someone else. This makes them less cautious. And if the money is badly spent or 
lost to waste or corruption, it is unlikely that bureaucrats will be fired or 
politicians held directly accountable. 

The private sector will increase investment only if economic fundamentals 
improve. And neither the amount of government spending nor its timing changes 
anything real about the economy. 

There is also an illusion that lower interest rates engineered by the central 
bank can boost economic activity. While there can be a temporary spurt of 
higher growth, it inevitably and always gives way to rising consumer prices. 

This is because, in the real world, something must first be produced to provide 
income to resource owners that provides them with the capacity to consume. New 
or more government spending involves an attempt to allow consumption without 
the prior supporting supply conditions being in place. 

What happens is that increased spending by households or businesses is based 
upon paper debt or artificially cheap credit. The extent to which this approach 
works to raise overall production is not sustainable because the government 
cannot borrow indefinitely and the central bank must stop prices from rising. 
When either the government or the central bank or both throttle back on their 
expansionary policies, the economy will adjust back to its previous position. 

And so it is that sustainable economic growth requires more saving, which 
allows increased investment in capital as the basis of greater specialization 
and an expanded division of labor. These investments allow labor productivity 
to increase so that real wages can rise. This process can provide the basis for 
sustainable increases in both production and consumption. 

Without the support of increased earnings by increased productivity, economic 
booms based on spending are illusory and temporary. The usual result of 
artificially low interest rates and deficit financing to manipulate demand is 
an orgy of politicized overspending and high public debts that lead to 
recession and inflation. 

As such, consumption should be seen as the result and not the cause of growth. 
An exception can arise if expansive central bank policy leads to excessive 
credit expansion that creates an artificial and temporary sense of increased 
prosperity. But either inflation or overexpansion will cause profitability to 
collapse to the extent that businesses must contract production and employment 
levels. 

Cutting interest rates under the dictate of central banks or finance ministers 
also has an obvious downside. Low interest rates hurt retirees that rely on 
past savings for consumption, and reduce the incentive to save more. Less 
saving is undesirable from an economic viewpoint since there are fewer real 
funds available for long-term investments. 

Monetary and fiscal stimulus will not solve Indonesia's economic problems 
because the aim is to boost demand artificially. It is far better to leave 
households and businesses with greater control over their earnings and spending 
as the basis of more sustainable investment that will create new jobs and more 
wealth. 

Christopher Lingle is senior fellow at the Center for Civil Society in New 
Delhi and professor of economics at Universidad Francisco Marroquin in 
Guatemala. 

The Japan Times: Jan. 6, 2006
(C) All rights reserved 


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** Forum Nasional Indonesia PPI India Mailing List **
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