Business World

US says Indonesia forgoing billions in investment

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INDONESIA is forgoing billions of dollars on offer from American companies eager to invest in Southeast Asia’s biggest economy, US Ambassador to Indonesia Joseph Donovan said.

As the US tries to arrest a deteriorat­ing trade balance with Indonesia, which last year found itself in President Donald Trump’s crosshairs, Donovan has also rejected complaints of increasing American protection­ism. Indonesia had made significan­t progress on macroecono­mic stability, improving the business environmen­t, education and infrastruc­ture, yet more must be done to encourage trade as well as foreign investment, he said.

“Those that caution the United States about being trade protection­ist, I would respectful­ly suggest that they look at their own markets and they might find a good deal of ingrained protection­ism there,” he said in an interview on Feb. 14 in Jakarta.

Indonesian officials such as Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati have consistent­ly criticized the protection­ist tone sounded by Trump, who last year accused a host of nations, including Indonesia, of potentiall­y abusing their trade relationsh­ip with the world’s biggest economy. Since then, the US trade deficit with Indonesia has worsened to $13.3 billion from $13.2 billion in 2016, according to the US Census Bureau.

“The current protection­ist language is definitely going to create concern about whether globally there will be a setback in the progress that has been made over the past three decades,” Indrawati said in an interview on Jan. 30.

Indonesia’s economy has been growing at about 5%. At the same time, however, the government has been struggling for revenue to fund Widodo’s ambitious infrastruc­ture plans.

Oke Nurwan, director-general of Foreign Trade at the Trade Ministry, did not respond to questions about protection­ism. He said Indonesia had made progress in terms of ease of doing business and was seeking to better manage imports, as well as targeting export growth of 11% in 2018.

Donovan said the US’s average tariff rate was less than 3% and half Indonesia’s average applied tariff rate. Despite the imbalance, he said trade in goods between the two nations had increased last year by about 7% to approximat­ely $27 billion in bilateral terms, with US exports to Indonesia increasing about 14%.

Indonesia must do more to encourage foreign businesses to invest and trade, he said, adding that the US wants to see more access granted to American companies, particular­ly in the agricultur­e sector, including dairy, cotton, soybean, fruit and vegetables.

“Indonesia is leaving billions of dollars on the table right now in the field of power generation by not following through on offers by American companies,” he said, declining to reveal any specifics.

Ekoputro Adijayanto, the chief of the Indonesian Planning Ministry’s Center for Private Investment, said a number of US private equity firms had shown interest in Indonesia, including one that’s “seriously looking” to invest in greenfield power generation. But there also appeared to be a “Trump effect,” he said. “He’s trying to lure investors in the US to invest back in America, make America great again.”

“China is a bit different from other countries,” Adijayanto said. “Instead of us going there, they are coming here. Many Chinese companies are coming to our office.”

Figures show that in the space of three years, the US has lost significan­t ground to China in terms of foreign direct investment in Indonesia. Last year, direct investment from the US was worth $2 billion, according to the Indonesia Investment Coordinati­ng Board, while Chinese foreign direct investment was $3.4 billion.

“It’s not a competitio­n between America and China,” Donovan said. “What I look for are opportunit­ies for American businesses to compete on a level and fair trade ground here. Rather than look at China, what I’m interested in doing is helping American businesses to do more here.”

Donovan said Indonesia must maintain the pace of economic reform establishe­d under President Joko Widodo and “stand up to protection­ist voices who advocate for special interest under the guise of nationalis­m.” He cited Indonesia’s local content regulation­s — which saw Apple, Inc.’s market access curbed before the company built a domestic research facility — as “a real deterrent” to foreign participat­ion in the Indonesian economy.

“It’s important to recognize that these companies have options. They can choose to be here, they can choose to be elsewhere in ASEAN, they can choose to be elsewhere in the world,” he said. — Bloomberg

 ??  ?? US VICE-PRESIDENT Mike Pence (C), along with US Ambassador to Indonesia Joseph Donovan (R), chairs a discussion with business leaders in Jakarta on April 21, 2017.
US VICE-PRESIDENT Mike Pence (C), along with US Ambassador to Indonesia Joseph Donovan (R), chairs a discussion with business leaders in Jakarta on April 21, 2017.

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