Bracing
for ASEAN Community
CPF Luhulima ; A researcher at the Center for
Political Studies,
Indonesian
Institute of Sciences (LIPI), Jakarta
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JAKARTA
POST, 27 Agustus 2014
The
establishment of an ASEAN Economic Community (AEC) should be viewed as a
transformation of ASEAN’s connectivity through the widespread use of information and communication technologies
as prescribed by the ASEAN ICT Master Plan of 2015 and its slogan: “We go
higher when we are connected.”
However,
to “go higher when we are connected” requires an effective and efficient kind
of interconnectivity. It requires infrastructural interconnectivity that
solidly supports institutional interconnectivity in order to improve the
compatibility of norms and values; and as a consequence, the compatibility of
mind-sets among the people of the member states.
This
is the basis for a “rules-based community of shared norms and values” as
proclaimed by the ASEAN Political and Security Community 2015. It should be
the basis for the other two communities as well. A focus on people within
ASEAN, then, is a natural consequence of this endeavor.
It
is, therefore, self-evident that Indonesia should take the initiative. It was
former president Megawati Soekarnoputri, who together with Hassan Wirajuda as
foreign minister, took the initiative in 2003 to advocate for an ASEAN
Community comprising three pillars: political and security cooperation,
economic cooperation and sociocultural cooperation.
These
three pillars should be closely intertwined and mutually reinforcing for the
purpose of ensuring durable peace, stability and shared prosperity in the
region. Together, they should nurture common values and help develop a set of
sociopolitical principles that can foster a community of caring societies
that in turn promotes a common regional identity and a “prosper thy neighbor”
policy.
This
will help ensure the long-term vibrancy and prosperity of the ASEAN region.
Realizing and expanding the widespread use of information and communications
technologies to achieve the maximum compatibility of norms, values and
mind-sets is the only means of dependably achieving these objectives.
Indonesia’s
weakest link in developing these three pillars is the economic one. The major
problem here is an inefficient business environment hampered by inadequate
infrastructure, connectivity and a low level of awareness regarding small-
and medium-scale businesses (SME) within the general public.
This
has resulted in Indonesia losing a competitive edge at the SME level.
President
Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono’s administration issued Presidential Instruction No.
5/2008 and No. 11/2011, instructing relevant ministries and non-ministerial
bodies to “execute the various commitments of the AEC” and “to take steps to
effect the commitments of AEC’s blueprint”.
In
2012, another presidential decree was issued mandating the establishment of a
national secretariat of ASEAN–Indonesia. The body reports to the President through
the foreign minister and acts as the focal point of ASEAN affairs,
coordinating the implementation of ASEAN decisions at the national level,
expediting the establishment of the ASEAN Communities and accelerating
Indonesia’s efforts in closing the gap, primarily between itself and the
original ASEAN members.
It is now August 2014. The ASEAN Communities
will be launched on Jan. 1, 2016. The incoming government of Joko “Jokowi” Widodo will have just 14
months to step up Indonesia’s capability to fulfill the requirements of the
AEC and compete on a healthy basis within ASEAN.
The
major problem here is to reach out to the 55,000 Indonesian SME entrepreneurs
— constituting 95 to 98 percent of Indonesia’s total business ventures — of whom the majority are unfamiliar with
doing commercial business across borders.
These
business owners need to be educated about the various consequences of the
freer flow of goods, services, investment, capital and skilled labor that
will follow the AEC launch.
Development in the SME sector is crucial to
achieving equitable economic development within ASEAN.
Reaching out to Indonesian business ventures
and improving their communication linkages must be a priority for the new
government. Furthermore, the government should upgrade Indonesia’s
communications infrastructure in the following areas: broadband Internet
connections (with larger bandwidth by using coaxial or fiber-optic cables),
satellites, microwaves and infrared links access methods. It should also increase
the number Internet service providers utilizing these technologies.
Additionally,
the SMEs should be encouraged to computerize their firms and utilize Internet
services to speed up their businesses, both domestically and on an ASEAN
basis in order to close the competitiveness gap between Indonesian SMEs and
their ASEAN counterparts. Once better connected, Indonesia can “go higher”
together with the other ASEAN member states.
These goals demand the appointment of a
capable and experienced person in ASEAN affairs to coordinate the
implementation of ASEAN decisions at the national level and to accelerate
Indonesia’s efforts at closing the gap, primarily with the original members
of ASEAN.
That
responsibility will fall to Indonesia’s foreign minister, so the immediate
question is determining the most suitable person to fill this crucial post.
In my opinion, there is but one person who
can fulfill these requirements to assist the president in mobilizing
Indonesia’s business community and the people at large.
The
one person with sufficient knowledge of ASEAN and extensive utilization of
the Internet is Marty Natalegawa, our current foreign minister. His
experience in conducting ASEAN affairs is well known and indisputable, both
at home and abroad.
Jokowi
as the seventh president of Indonesia and Marty as foreign minister would
provide the leadership and competence needed to successfully join the ASEAN
Community that Megawati and Hassan initiated in 2003. ●
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