Trade wars increasing over cars, apples, wheat and animal products and more
In a country where court
decisions often seemingly have little to do with the matter at hand, it is
tempting to suspect a certain choreography behind the Indonesian government's
attempts to assert its hegemony over multinationals operating in the country's
energy sector, and that such attempts stem from a government policy to take
over a much wider spectrum of investment and commerce through nationalist
industrial policy.
That is a policy that has
delivered discomfort to countless nations that have tried it. Nonetheless,
Indonesia appears to be doing exactly that, with import substitution spats
going with at least five countries.
"A lot of this, don't
forget, is about creating a lot of confusing regulations that may never really
be well understood or implemented," said a Jakarta corporate advisor.
"That leaves open a lot of room for shaking down companies that might run
afoul of confusing regulations."
In the case of the oil industry,
months ago a consortium of 42 organizations and individuals brought suit in the
Constitutional Court to review the 12-year-old law that brought Indonesia's
upstream gas regulator into effect, a case that moved smoothly through the
system.
The plaintiffs included
Muhammadiyah, one of Indonesia's largest Muslim groups, and business
organizations, many believed to be closely aligned with the government, and
particularly with Hatta Rajasa, the 59-year-old coordinating minister for
economic affairs and an official with presidential ambitions.
Under the terms of the 2001 law,
BPMigas's job was to grant rights on production-sharing contracts to oil and
gas producers to explore for oil and gas. Most of those contracts are with
multinational producers. The court ruled on Nov. 13 with immediate and final
effect, throwing the sector into confusion, although it's clear that President
Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono saw it coming.
On the same day, SBY issued
Presidential Regulation 95, immediately transferring BPMigas's powers and
responsibilities to the Indonesian Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources.
Within a month, BPMigas and its
chairman, Raden Priyono, who was thought to be too friendly with the companies
he regulated, had been replaced by SKMigas, headed by Jero Wacik, the energy
and resources minister. In early January, Jero in turn let it be known that
Richard J. Owen, the chief executive of ExxonMobile Indonesia, had in effect
been kicked out of his job over refusal by the US oil giant to divest itself of
gas fields coveted by Indonesian companies.
Along with a campaign to arrest Chevron
Indonesia officials on what appeared to be trumped up charges over an
environmental remediation project, that has generated considerable legal
uncertainty over the future not just of the oil and gas sector but a whole
range of multinational investment and services including beef, soyabeans, cars,
oil and mining.
"On a range of products and
issues, the drumbeat of protectionism is now constant and there is very little
pushback from anyone," said a Jakarta-based source with connections to the
government. "The Indonesians act like they want to pull up the
drawbridge." But little of it appears to be ideological and the odds are
still that if companies and investors wait it out, once the rent seeking and
jockeying for the 2014 presidential race is over, the country will get back to
normal and want to do business again.'
Not content to wait, the United
States on Jan. 10 notified the World Trade Organization of a request for
consultations with Indonesia over growing restrictions on imports of
horticultural products, animals and animal products. The request formally
initiates a dispute within the WTO, according to a press statement on the WTO
website.
The Indonesians are reportedly
restricting beef imports in an effort to drive up the price of local beef on
the theory that rising prices would spur development of a domestic beef
industry. Also in dispute are apples and vegetables.
Indonesia's Trade Minister Gita
Wirjawan told Reuters the government was "preparing materials" and
will communicate directly with the US about the trade issue.
"We will prepare all the
needed steps to resolve these problems," he said in Jakarta. Somewhat
embarrassingly, at a time when the country is turning towards a
self-sufficiency economy, it has fielded a candidate to head the WTO itself.
The country is also separately being challenged by Australia, Turkey and Sri
Lanka over a 20 percent emergency tariff on wheat flour.
Indonesia has been a
multinational investor favorite since the onset of the global financial crisis.
As the rest of the world crashed, gross domestic product remained in positive
territory and has been there ever since, built on a big domestic consumer market
and exports of natural resources including coal, palm oil and timber, much of
to China. However, the country risks turning investor sentiment against it at a
time when commodity prices of Indonesia's major exports have started to dive.
For instance, palm oil prices, now at US$2,238 per tonne, are 46 percent off
their cyclical high and look like they could fall further. Copper has fallen
19.9 percent from its high, China coal -- Indonesia's major coal partner -- is
off. 8.7 percent.
As Asia Sentinel reported on Jan.
11, the investment climate is growing so hostile that both Chevron and
ExxonMobile, which have been operating in Indonesia for decades, are growing
fed up with policy shifts and the climate of hostility toward multinational
companies. Executives say they are confused and worried over the future but are
concerned about speaking out for fear they will be forced out of the country as
well. Chevron warned SKMigas that the deteriorating investment climate could
lead to lower future investment by the company, which has been operating in
Indonesia since 1952 and is the country's largest oil and gas producer.
The question is when this is
going to come back to bite the country in terms of access to technology and
international fund flows into the country. Indonesian companies have shown
little aptitude in building anything on their own. Last May, for instance,
BPMigas head Priyono in a report told the Indonesian House of Representatives
that only five of the 56 companies operating on production-sharing contracts in
the country had been able to meet their designated targets.
http://www.asiasentinel.com
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