Business Day

Prabowo s penchant for big government sparks anxiety

- Gayatri Suroyo and Fransiska Nangoy

On the three occasions that Prabowo Subianto has run for the Indonesian presidency, the former special forces commander has maintained a consistent policy message. He is no fan of economic neo-liberalism and favours a big role for government.

But despite the defence minister’s qualms about marketorie­ntated policy, Indonesia’s stock market surged on Thursday after Prabowo appeared to have secured a comfortabl­e win in this week’s election to replace President Joko Widodo later in 2024.

“Neo-liberalism” usually refers to the idea of a reduced role for government so that the private sector can lead developmen­t under a free market system.

Rather than focus on his earlier pronouncem­ents, investors cheered the expected continuity of the policies fostered by Widodo, popularly known as Jokowi, who had given

Prabowo his tacit backing during the campaign.

Jokowi ’ s decade in office has been a period of steady economic growth and low inflation. It has been underpinne­d by efforts to cut red tape and attract foreign investment, seeking to position Indonesia as a key player in the global electric vehicle supply chain.

However, a Prabowo presidency could be different for Southeast Asia’s largest economy, with some analysts also pointing to speeches he has made backing protection­ism and indicating a penchant for big government, including populist policies that require large fiscal expenditur­e.

“I’m a little different. I don’t subscribe to neo-liberalism,” Prabowo said during the final presidenti­al debate on February 4. “The government is not just a regulator. The government should be in front, the pioneer, intervene when needed and work for the people.”

STATE COMPANIES

Prabowo has not clearly defined what he dislikes about the free market mechanism, but economists decipherin­g his comments have pointed to him having an issue with food imports and preferring a larger state role across sectors ranging from energy to healthcare.

“Mr Prabowo used to head the farmers’ associatio­n.

“He has said he wants to reduce food imports, and I think that is where his passion is,” said Mohammad Faisal, an economist at Jakarta-based think-tank the Center of Reform on Economics.

Indonesia, with 270-million people, is a major importer of rice, wheat, sugar, beef and soya beans.

As a minister, Prabowo has overseen Jokowi’s Food Estate project, which was spearheade­d by the military and intended to boost production of crops such as rice, maize and cassava, though he came under fire during campaignin­g over the lack of progress at the project.

Bhima Yudhistira Adhinegara, an economist at the Center of Economic and Law Studies, expects there to be a larger role for state companies in a Prabowo presidency.

Under Jokowi, bloated state constructi­on firms dominated his infrastruc­ture drive, with private companies often sidelined. “Among our concerns is the crowding out effect of stateowned companies because these companies will need large loans if they are to become tools for the state’s agenda,” he said, adding banks might be forced to help fund state projects.

If early election results are confirmed and Prabowo is sworn in to the top job in October, he would inherit a $1.4-trillion economy facing a global economic slowdown, ongoing geopolitic­al tensions and threats of climate change.

Prabowo has pledged to boost economic growth to 7%, from 5% now, mainly through expanding Jokowi’s policy of attracting investment by blocking exports to secure domestic processing of minerals like nickel. But his main campaign promise was to provide free school meals and milk to children, at an estimated cost of 450 trillion rupiah ($28.81bn) a year, raising concerns about whether he would continue Indonesia’s record of fiscal prudence.

FISCAL DISCIPLINE

The free meals and other plans pointed to an expansiona­ry fiscal stance that, if implemente­d, “would mark a divergence from Indonesia’s long track record of conservati­vely managed budgetary finances and debt ratios”, said Anushka Shah, senior credit officer at Moody’s Investors Service.

As defence minister, Prabowo has already embarked on billions of dollars of spending to upgrade Indonesia’s military.

His apparently off-hand comment during one presidenti­al debate about being open to taking Indonesia’s debt-to-GDP ratio to 50%, from below 40% now, has already sparked investor anxiety. Prabowo has not said how he would fund his programmes, though he has pledged to boost the tax-toGDP ratio significan­tly by setting up a new tax agency.

Still, some in the business community hope his background as a business person means he understand­s how to manage the economy.

“I trust he and his economic team will weigh the positive and negative. He won’t leave the private sector to die, because then the government will also die. We are taxpayers,” said Tutum Rahanta, a senior executive at a retail garment chain. /

THE GOVERNMENT IS NOT JUST A REGULATOR. [IT] SHOULD BE IN FRONT, THE PIONEER, INTERVENE WHEN NEEDED Prabowo Subianto Presidenti­al frontrunne­r

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa