1997
May: Thai currency attacked by speculators.
July: Malaysian, Philippine, Thai and Indonesian
currencies all
slump.
14 August: Indonesia abolishes its system of a managed
exchange
rate. The
rupiah plunges.
16 September: 15 budgeted mega-projects postponed.
8 October: Indonesia says it will ask the IMF for
financial
assistance.
31 October: Indonesia's IMF package is unveiled. It
provides for as
much as
US$40 billion in aid.
1 November: Sixteen banks closed as first step in IMF
package.
Causes rush on other banks & panic all round. IMF later admits
it was a
mistake.
5 November: IMF approves a US$10 billion loan for
Indonesia as part
of the
massive international package.
The 15 mega-projects are quietly reinstated about this time.
12 November: IMF Director Camdessus visits Jakarta,
reveals much
more reform is planned, and aid is subject to 3-monthly reviews.
5-15 December: Suharto takes 10 days rest after a
12-day world tour,
misses ASEAN summit.
9-12 December: Finance Minister asks for debt roll-over
in
Washington, but gets none.
1998
6 January: Indonesia unveils an expansionary 1998/99
budget,
contrary to IMF demands of a budget surplus. The rupiah loses
half its value
over a five-day period.
9 January: Ratings agency Standard & Poor downgrades
Indonesia's
currency to 'junk bond' status.
10 January: Suharto once again postpones the 15
mega-projects.
10 January: Megawati Sukarnoputri announces she is
ready to become
president. Amien Rais had made a similar announcement in
September. They
appear on several platforms together to denounce Suharto.
12 January: Former cabinet minister and economic guru
Sumitro
Djojohadikusuma says Indonesia needs a new government.
15 January: IMF Director Camdessus stands over Suharto
while the
latter signs a new IMF agreements.
January till mid-February: Anti-Chinese food riots take
place in at
least a dozen places throughout Java, three in Sulawesi, and in
Sumbawa and
Flores.
11 January: All but 22 of the 286 companies listed on
the Jakarta
stock exchange are technically bankrupt. Property companies are
the worst.
21 & 27 January: National Economic and Financial
Resilience Council
chaired by Suharto announces a raft of reforms, but the rupiah
does not
recover.
27 January: Government announces a moratorium on
repaying debts and
interest, and promises to guarantee all obligations entered into
by commercial
banks.
9 February: Suharto foreshadows the government
will institute
a 'currency board' system to peg the rupiah to the US dollar. The
IMF, World
Bank, and Bill Clinton think it won't work, and threaten to cut
off aid.
(16 February, 1998)