Indonesian Technocracy in Transition: A Preliminary Analysis <Special Issue>The Politics of Technocracy in Southeast Asia

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  • Indonesian Technocracy in Transition : A Preliminary Analysis

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Abstract

Indonesia underwent enormous political and institutional changes in the wake of the 1997&#8211;98 economic crisis and the collapse of Soeharto's authoritarian regime. Yet something curious happened under President Yudhoyono: a politics of economic growth has returned in post-crisis decentralized, democratic Indonesia. The politics of economic growth is politics that transforms political issues of redistribution into problems of output and attempts to neutralize social conflict in favor of a consensus on growth. Under Soeharto, this politics provided ideological legitimation to his authoritarian regime. The new politics of economic growth in post-Soeharto Indonesia works differently. Decentralized democracy created a new set of conditions for doing politics: social divisions along ethnic and religious lines are no longer suppressed but are contained locally. A new institutional framework was also created for the economic policy-making. The 1999 Central Bank Law guarantees the independence of the Bank Indonesia (BI) from the government. The Law on State Finance requires the government to keep the annual budget deficit below 3% of the GDP while also expanding the powers of the Ministry of Finance (MOF) at the expense of National Development Planning Agency. No longer insulated in a state of political demobilization as under Soeharto, Indonesian technocracy depends for its performance on who runs these institutions and the complex political processes that inform their decisions and operations.

Journal

  • Southeast Asian Studies

    Southeast Asian Studies 3 (2), 255-281, 2014

    Center for Southeast Asian Studies, Kyoto University

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