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Indonesia has always experienced a current account deficit in its
balance of payments. This means more money always leaves the
country than enters it. Between 1979 and 1996 the shortfalls
totalled US$ 43.4 billion. The two biggest reasons for the
deficit are repatriating foreign investment profits, and paying
interest on foreign debts. In other words, foreign interests are
draining the surplus out of Indonesia.
The current account measures money moving in and out of the
country. It incorporates all exports, imports, payments on
foreign loans, foreign investors sending back their profits, and
so on. Year in year out, it is in deficit. So it doesn't
contribute at all to national savings or to our foreign currency
reserves.
The following tables show the state of the current account in
1995/96 and 1996/97, just before the monetary crisis.
Sources and uses of foreign capital funds:
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Sources of funds
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1995/96 (US$billion)
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1996/97 (US$billion)
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Direct foreign investment
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5.4
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6.5
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Other private capital
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4.5
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6.2
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Government foreign debt (mid- to long term)
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5.7
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5.4
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Total
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15.6
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18.1
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Uses of funds
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1995/96 (US$billion)
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1996/97 (US$billion)
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Financing current account deficit
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7.0
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8.1
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Repaying foreign debt
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5.9
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6.1
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Adding to foreign currency reserves   
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2.7
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3.9
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Total
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15.6
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18.1
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When we look at the figures, several conclusions spring easily
to mind.
First. Our foreign currency reserves are highly dependent on
getting new foreign loans, because the deficit stops us from
accumulating foreign reserves freely. This means our reserves are
effectively borrowed, not free as we should expect in a healthy
economy.
Second. Just as in a business, all payments (income versus
expenditure) must be balanced. This means that adding to our
foreign reserves by means of debt in this way in fact represents
money leaving the country. We call this capital flight, which is
a bad thing. In other words, the capital flight committed by
private parties in Indonesia (better called economic criminals)
is paid for by government foreign debt.
This is surely a case of extraordinary stupidity, not to mention
complete inhumanity. Private wealth overseas grows at the expense
of government debt, ultimately paid for by the ordinary people
of Indonesia, who have no means of enjoying its benefits.
Now back to our question. What caused the collapse of the rupiah
against the US dollar? It was caused by a gross imbalance between
the value of total exports including oil and gas, and the value
of total imports. Not only are imports larger, they have also
been growing at a faster rate than exports. This is what causes
the current account deficit.
Exporting supplies us with foreign currency, while importing
demands it back again. Since both are normally done in US
dollars, the excess of demand over supply makes the value of the
US dollar grow against the value of the Indonesian rupiah.
Moreover, export and import practices in Indonesia are full of
manipulative practices, in which exports are underinvoiced and
imports are overinvoiced. The government has always overlooked
such practices, because of the constant conspiracies between
politics and business (remember the way Coordinating Minister
Sudomo backed corrupt businessman Eddy Tansil?).
So who caused this excessive demand for foreign currency? They
fall into three categories:
* Importers (both foreign and national), foreign investors and
foreign creditors. They want foreign currency to pay for their
imports, to send their profits back overseas, and to pay the
interest on (private and government) foreign debt.
* Those who repay principal on their foreign debt.
* Those committing capital flight - both businesses and
individuals.
Ironically, all these people causing excessive demand for foreign
currencies share the same perception of uncertainty, namely that
the Republic of Indonesia may become financially insolvent due
to its chronic current account deficit. Indeed the perception is
strengthened by the reality that the government has always paid
back old debts with new loans, whose value is less than that of
the old. As a result, the Republic constantly transfers more
money out of the country than enters it. Indonesia suffers from
what is known as Fisher's Paradox, which says that the more
foreign debt you repay, the bigger the debt you accumulate.
Add to that the political uncertainty. All these sources of
uncertainty come from within the country, not from overseas. I
can't see that there has been a conspiracy by foreign currency
speculators such as George Soros, who simply have a good nose for
opportunity. We should rather blame ourselves for mismanagement
and immorality.
But there is a conspiracy, and a much more dangerous one than
George Soros. That is the one concocted by foreign interests
through the IMF and the World Bank who are, by the latest count,
prepared to give us loans of up to US$49 billion. Most of this
debt will be used to pay for the current account deficit. That
is, most of it will be used to allow foreigners to import goods
and services, repatriate their profits, and repay their foreign
loans.
In other words, the debt will be enjoyed by people overseas, but
the burden of it will be born by the people of Indonesia. The
debt will be used once again to pay for our dependency on imports
from overseas. It's truly absurd for us to say 'thank you very
much' to the IMF, the World Bank, and other members of this plot.
The political conspiracy means that, first, overseas interests
will now determine our economic and social policy and even our
power structure. Second, control over our foreign currency
reserves by foreigners will be even greater than before. Third,
control over Indonesian economic resources by foreigners will
become even more intensive.
This truly is national policy-making at its least heroic. We will
be under the heel of foreigners as if we were a colony.
Allow me herewith to declare: heroism has died among the
Indonesian power elite and the intellectuals who support them.
We will now witness the collapse of the Indonesian nation state.
The people will not forgive the power elite for this. Do not be
surprised if in the near future a history book is published with
the title: Indonesia, the fall of a nation.
Dr Sritua Arief is an Indonesian economist. He obtained his
doctorate at Hull University in 1979, and presently teaches in
the Management School of the University of Northern Malaysia.
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