Suharto agrees to IMF dictates
By Peter Symonds
14 April 1998
Following three weeks of tense negotiations with International
Monetary Fund officials, the Suharto regime in Indonesia agreed
last week to sign a revised package of economic measures, in return
for the resumption of US$43 billion in emergency funding.
A previous deal signed in January collapsed when the IMF suspended
a US$3 billion payment to Indonesia due on March 15, accusing
Jakarta of failing to meet deadlines and prescriptions for the
restructuring of the economy.
The IMF, backed by the US, has seized upon the Asian economic
crisis to advance long-held plans for prying open the Indonesian
economy to foreign investors and dismantling the monopolies, tax
concessions and trade barriers enjoyed by the Suharto family and
its close business cronies.
During the ensuing standoff between the IMF and Indonesia,
the US press reported that top level meetings were taking place
regularly in the White House to weigh up various options, including
Suharto's removal. But the prospect of a complete economic and
political breakdown in Indonesia provoked alarm and divisions
in ruling circles, particularly in Australia. Canberra warned
that the IMF plan could trigger a social explosion, under conditions
where no viable ruling class political alternative to Suharto
existed. Backed by the World Bank and other IMF critics, Australia
urged the IMF to modify its stance to slow the rapid rise of unemployment
and poverty.
Talks recommenced and a new agreement was eventually reached,
but sharp differences remain. Even as the deal was being signed,
IMF deputy managing director Stanley Fischer publicly cast doubts
on Suharto's willingness to cooperate. Speaking in Tokyo after
visiting Indonesia, Fischer said: "We will simply have to
see if the system as a whole is capable of implementing reform....
It is clear that there is a question about the commitment of the
Indonesian government."
He warned that the IMF would again cut off funds if the plan
were not fully carried out. "The program has specific actions
and deadlines with other safeguards to monitor that actions are
taken. We could not continue disbursements if conditions were
not met."
Fischer's comments undermined the assurances made by chief
economic minister Ginandjar Kartasasmita that Indonesia would
carry out the IMF agreement "to the letter." "We're
following through on all of the commitments. I can confirm there
will be no more monopolies," he said.
International markets have pronounced their verdict. The rupiah
rose only marginally to 8,000 to the US dollar--still less than
a third of its value six months ago. At this exchange rate, most
Indonesian companies cannot pay back huge debts owed to overseas
banks and financial institutions.
Suharto criticised previous IMF deals for their failure to
restore confidence in the rupiah or reschedule the country's massive
US$71 billion private debt. Without that relief, many of Indonesia's
major corporations, those of the Suharto family included, are
technically insolvent.
The renegotiation of private debt remains unresolved. Talks
are due to take place in New York this week under the chairmanship
of three major banks, including the Deutsche Bank of Germany.
The bulk of the debt is owed to financial institutions in Japan,
followed by Germany, France and the US.
In all its essentials, the latest agreement is identical to
the one signed on January 15, effectively placing the Indonesian
economy under IMF control. It consists of a comprehensive plan
for restructuring the finance and banking sectors, the removal
of trade, taxation and other barriers facing international investors,
and stringent budget guidelines.
The IMF's minor concessions will do nothing to halt the destruction
of living standards. The removal of government price subsidies
on food, medicine, fertiliser, animal feed, fuel and other basic
items has been delayed, but just until October. Subsidies then
will remain only for rice and soybeans.
The IMF predicts that the inflation rate will hit 45 percent
for 1998. Prices for a number of basic commodities have doubled
or trebled in the last six months, creating enormous hardship.
Millions more workers will be thrown out of work as state-owned
enterprises are privatised and banks, finance houses and corporations
are merged, sold off or shut down completely. One of the key IMF
measures is for a revamping of Indonesia's bankruptcy laws to
permit the closure of indebted firms.
Already in early April the newly established Indonesian Banking
Restructuring Agency froze the licences of seven banks, including
three with close links to the Suharto family, and took over the
management of seven more.
The IMF forecasts a devastating 5 percent contraction in economic
activity during 1998, as companies cut production or shut their
doors altogether. Other commentators predict an even worse result--a
decline of up to 10 percent. Official unemployment has doubled
to 8.7 million in recent months and is expected to reach 13 million
by the end of the year.
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