With commodity prices falling, SBY's
government treads a risky path
Singapore-based
DBS Holdings Group announced in April it would pay US$7.2 billion to take over
Bank Danamon, Indonesia’s sixth-biggest bank. Only three weeks later Bank
Indonesia, the country’s central bank, announced that it would issue new rules
limiting international ownership in local banks, putting the Danamon takeover
on hold – until after the new ownership rules are promulgated and Singapore
agrees to reciprocal arrangements for lenders operating in the two countries.
No one is certain when that will be. That has dismayed at least three other
foreign banks that had plans to acquire Indonesian institutions.
The
rules are the latest manifestations of Indonesia’s troubling increasing
economic nationalism and antipathy towards multinational investment. Despite
the country’s enviable economic growth over the past decade, the government is
considering a raft of measures to lock in its position with state
enterprise-driven resource monopolies that could well end up hurting its growth
and global position.
That
has troubled the international rating agency Standard & Poor’s, which in
late April declined to upgrade Indonesia’s sovereign debt from BB+, one step
below investment grade, because the country’s plan to lure investment is at
risk from “policy slippages.”
What
are these policy slippages? In late April for instance, the government
announced that a government-linked company, the Indonesian Ports Corporation,
would take on the monumental job of building a US$1.9 billion new port at
Tanjung Priok in North Jakarta. It’s arguably the biggest infrastructure
project in Indonesia’s history and one of the biggest port projects in the
world. The government had previously cancelled international tenders for the
terminal, outraging private-public consortia that had devoted considerable
funds into preparing the bids only to see them thrown out.
These
protectionist predilections, built on the country’s steady 6 percent-plus
growth and its stellar performance during the global credit crunch that struck
in 2007, have emboldened the government and particularly Kadin, the Indonesian
Chamber of Commerce, to continue to tighten against international entry.
Indonesia
is largely alone in a region that has seen globalization and FDI as the path to
prosperity. Jakarta, however, is aware that it presides over Southeast Asia’s
biggest economy. Domestic consumption insulated it from the global financial
crisis. It’s also the world's largest exporter of palm oil and natural gas and
the second-largest exporter of coal. Foreign investors continue to beat a wary
path in because of their desire to tap the US$1.1trillion domestic economy and
its export potential.
New
trading curbs will apply to exports of 14 metals, including iron ore,
manganese, gold, silver and copper. Exports will be limited to refined exports
only, forcing more value-added production within Indonesia. Mining exploration
was brought to a halt, dismaying international investors, when President Susilo
Bambang Yudhoyono signed a new law into effect in early March forcing foreign
investors holding mining and special mining business permits to begin divesting
their operations to Indonesian entities within a five-year period.
The
divestment must begin during the sixth year of mining production. Under the
existing regulations, by the sixth year Indonesian investors must own at least
20 percent, which must be increased to 30 percent in the seventh year, 37
percent in the eighth, 44 percent in the ninth and 51 percent at the end.
In
addition, in April the government said it plans to impose a 25 percent export
tax on coal and base metals this year, jumping to 50 percent in 2013 as it
looks to looks to boost domestic investment and take a bigger slice of mining
profits.
The
country’s ambition to own operations could ultimately drive companies like the
US-based mining giant Freeport McMoRan, which operates the world’s biggest
copper and gold mine in the Sudirman Mountain Range in Papua, out of ownership
altogether, before hiring them back as fee-based contractors.
Freeport
currently operates under a 30-year contract of work that allows the company to
own 90.64 percent of the mine, the government of Indonesia owning the remaining
9.36 percent. The parent company, believing it has an ironclad contract, has
previously said that any changes to the contract of work would require mutual
agreement between Freeport McMoRan and the government of Indonesia.
After
the new divestment rules were announced in February, Freeport said it would be
unaffected by them. However, sources in Kadin say that if they have their way
there will be no more profit-sharing and no more long-term mineral rights.
Although Freeport has expressed confidence in the current agreement, it has
reason to be concerned.
Kadin
is said to have a scheme to change the resource code in the constitution so
that raw material does not belong to "the people," but instead
belongs to state-owned enterprises such as the national energy company
Pertamina. The chamber officials suggest that because of the article 33 clause
in the constitution and the way that Sukarno allowed foreign exploitation of
resources, foreign companies are able to claim billions in assets on the basis
of the ore or gas they can extract – using that to raise money from investors
as apparent "owners" of Indonesia's resources.
Kadin
wants Indonesia to "own" the resources and just have service
contracts with foreign companies. In so doing, chamber officials assume the
state-owned enterprises could raise hundreds of billions in IPO money. Now that
Indonesia is rich and realizing its potential, they say, it may be time to
complete Sukarno's 1958 revolution, kick out the foreigners, take away their
concessions – and turn it all over to Pertamina.
The
government appears aware that the protectionist measures against the extractive
industry sector will have a deleterious effect, especially in exploration,
where most of the high-end activity is carried out by high-tech multinationals
with the ability to go where domestics don’t know where to look. Exploration
has come to a virtual stop because of the tightened investment rules.
But the
government and Kadin assume that eventually they will develop the ability to handle
the fallout and that in any case, Indonesia gets a bigger share of a smaller
pie – and it’s their pie. These protectionist measures extend beyond minerals.
Last October, in an effort to boost the country’s stagnant palm-oil refining
capacity, the government introduced a new export tax structure with wider
differences between crude and refined palm oil, enabling the country, the
world’s biggest palm-oil producer, to sell cheaper refined products and gain
market share against Malaysia, which has been looking for countermeasures and
so far hasn’t found one.
In the
meantime, according to the Trade Knowledge Network of Southeast Asia, Indonesia
has been using a number of stratagems through non-tariff measures including
expanding quarantine requirements for various import products and using the
Indonesian National Standard instead of international standards for various
imports. According to the Industry Ministry, there are 86 obligatory Indonesian
National Standards, SNIs, and 6,000 non-obligatory SNI standards that must be
met although the World Trade Organization must approve the list. Indonesia has
been a WTO member since 1995.
According
to the Indonesian Trade Security Committee, KPPI, Indonesia was ranked third
after India and Turkey on a list of countries that applied protectionist trade
barriers, based on WTO data in 2010. Possibly out of retaliation, Indonesian
products face antidumping and safeguarding measures implemented by more than 12
countries, according to the Trade Ministry. It’s unclear what the next moves
will be. One source describes the tightening process as “seeping.” But it will
continue.
John
Berthelsen
(This
was written for YaleGlobal, the publication of the Yale University Center for
the Study of Globalization. John Berthelsen is the editor of the Asia
Sentinel.)
Asia
Sentinel
Business & Investment Opportunities
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