Economics Globalisation and Indonesia's Economy

1048 Words5 Pages
Globalisation can be defined as the increasing economic and financial integration of economies around the world. Globalisation has drastically effected the Indonesian economy much like most economies of the world. Though has the globalisation had strengthening or worsening effect on Indonesia? Is the important debate. Indonesia has globalised their economy such as the liberalisation of Indonesia’s trade, investment and financial flows in the early 1980’s, which has affected Indonesia’s economic growth and development in interesting ways. Before the 1980’s Indonesia was a highly protected economy, when the oil boom developed in Indonesia in the 1970’s, Indonesia heavily protected its government owned and sponsored businesses even by the mid 1980’s the country managed to be completely self-efficient in rice eliminating all imports. From the mid 1980’s onwards Indonesia began shifting towards trade liberalisation with the tariff protection in the manufacturing sector falling from 86% in 1986 to 24% in 1995, the same can be said with the agriculture sector with it falling from 24% to 12% over the same period. The reduction in protection also went in line with the joining of regional trade agreements like ASEAN and APEC, as members of ASEAN are required to have a tariff rate of 0-5% for goods traded within ASEAN. And so, Indonesia turned from an import substitution strategy towards an export orientated strategy. Indonesia has a narrow export base being mainly oil and other commodity goods meaning it becomes very vulnerable to the changes of prices of these products, for example Indonesia was one of the worse off from the Asian Financial Crisis in 1997 with the economy contracting by 13% in 1997. The move to trade liberalisation has also benefited the country’s economic development, with a wider range of products available and at cheaper prices due to reduction in
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