JAKARTA, Oct. 9 (Chinese media) -- Indonesia will not suffer
another economic crisis as the one in 1997 and 1998, said the country's
prominent economist Faisal Basri quoted by a local newspaper on Thursday.
"Indonesia's economy is stronger now because it has
learned a lot from the last crisis," Faisal with Indonesia's Institute for
Development of Economics and Finance said on Wednesday.
Indonesia is the country hardest hit by the Asian
Financial Crisis in the late-1990's. Its currency against U.S. dollars dropped
from about Rp. 2,000 to Rp. 18,000 in two years, when the economy shrunk by 13.7
percent.
According to the economist, Indonesia's short-term
loans to foreign reserves ratio was 175 percent in 1997, which stands at 34.5
percent currently. That is to say, the country can safely finance its short-term
loans now.
"Our banking sector was erratic in 1997, it is now
sturdy. Overall, even in Southeast Asia, judging from indicators such as
politics and business, Indonesia is fairly stable," Faisal said.
Thus, he said that the global financial crisis will
only affect Indonesia's currency and stock market.
However, he also warned that Indonesia "may
eventually feel the impact of the financial crisis as the U.S. economy slows
down, resulting in China shifting its export destination from the United States
to countries like Indonesia."
In this regard, the economist said that Indonesia
should "guard national borders against imports of unessential goods." He added
that the government should move its focus from processing trade to domestic
potential industries, such as those producing rattan, wood, tea, coffee, cacao
and crude palm oil.
Faisal's remarks echoed the statements by President
Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono that the country should exploit domestic economy. The
President prescribed 10 steps to avoid the negative impact of global financial
crisis on Indonesia's economy on Monday at a special cabinet meeting with
central bank officials, business leaders, economic observers and mass media
figures
But economists said that the government still needs
"concrete actions to safeguard the economy, including providing incentives for
exporters and raising the deposit insurance limit from Rp. 100million (about
10,460 U.S. dollars) to Rp. 250 million (about 26,151 U.S. dollars)."
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