Sanitary
pads, employment and nationalism
Julia Suryakusuma ; The
author of Julia’s Jihad
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JAKARTA POST, 20 Mei 2015
You men
out there, if you have ambitions to be on Time magazine’s list of 100 most
influential people in the world, would you be willing to wear a sanitary
towel that had goat’s blood pumped through an artificial “uterus” to mimic a
woman’s menstrual flow?
Well,
this is precisely what Arunachalam Muruganantham, a school dropout from a
poor family in Southern India, did. It was, however, not out of any desire to
be on a list featuring the likes of Barack Obama, Pope Francis, Jeff Bezos,
Malala Yousafzai, Shinzo Abe, Beyonce and many others, but out of love and
empathy for his wife.
In 1998,
newly married Muruganantham noticed that his wife, Santhi, used dirty rags he
“wouldn’t even clean [his] scooter with” — for her periods. Santhi knew about
sanitary towels, but said she could not afford them.
Shocked
at the extremely “unsanitary pads” his wife and, as it turned out, 88 percent
of Indian women used at the time, he embarked on a years-long quest to make
affordable sanitary pads.
To make
a five-and-a-half year story short, risking wife, life and reputation, he
ended up creating the world’s first low-cost sanitary towel-producing
machine.
You
probably wouldn’t normally associate sanitary pads with dignity, but that’s
what they gave to Indian women, not to mention help prevent urinary tract
infections and other diseases, as well as reducing maternal mortality rates.
The user-friendly technology he used also made it possible for rural women to
operate, therefore, creating jobs for them.
When out
of 943 entries, Muruganantham won first prize in a competition for a national
innovation award and was given the award by the president of India, he was in
the limelight.
For
Muruganantham it could have easily provided him with a (dirty) rags-to-riches
opportunity. But no, instead of selling his idea to the highest bidder, he
supplied his low-cost machines to the poorest rural communities, providing
millions of women with employment and even the opportunity to own their own
pad-manufacturing businesses.
* * *
Today,
May 20th is the 107th National Awakening Day (Hari Kebangkitan Nasional) in
remembrance of the 1908 formation of the first nationalist group, Budi Utomo.
All well
and good, but what does “national pride” or “nationalism” mean in today’s
Indonesia? Large numbers of Indonesians struggle to find something that makes
them genuinely proud of their nation. Instead they are bombarded with daily
stories of rampant corruption and governing dysfunction.
Most
versions of Indonesian nationalism are what Jonathan Pincus, president of
Rajawali Foundation (rajawalifoundation.org) calls “nationalism of
resentment” rather than a nationalism of pride or achievement.
Indonesia
has a huge chip on its shoulder for being pushed around globally and
historically so it’s understandable that being colonized for centuries is
bound to foster feelings of resentment.
But does
that mean we have to kill off drug-traffickers to prove our pride and
dignity? And how dare Malaysia say they originated batik and wayang (shadow
puppetry) and claim the Tortor dance as being part of its national heritage!
When are
the country’s leaders going to focus on giving Indonesia’s younger generation
national achievements they can be really proud of? Turbo-charging the
country’s economy would be a good place to start.
How
about doing something instead like what Muruganantham did as a concrete form
of economic nationalism? He started on a small, cottage-industry scale, but
now his sanitary pad machine has been installed in 26 states in India and
exported to several other countries.
There
are a lot of cottage industries in Indonesia as well. But unlike Indonesia,
India has large-scale, globally competitive manufacturing. Indonesia is not a
leading producer of any manufactured goods, so how about getting some
inspiration from India?
Recently,
a blueprint was offered by Gus Papanek, one of the most sophisticated observers
of Indonesia’s economy for over half a century in a book entitled The
Economic Choices Facing the Next President, published by the think tank
Transformasi. Co-authored with Raden Pardede and Suahasil Nazara, it’s about
creating desperately needed quality jobs in labor-intensive manufacturing
that could result in double-digit growth.
It’s a
once-in-a-century opportunity because as Papanek points out, China, the world
largest exporter of labor-intensive manufactured goods, is less competitive
than it used to be. “Wages are rising and the renminbi, China’s national
currency, is beginning to appreciate against the dollar, euro and yen” (see
“The stark economic choices facing Jokowi-Kalla”, The Jakarta Post, Oct. 14,
2014).
Naturally,
other countries, mainly in Asia, will take the share of China’s export market
for labor-intensive manufactured goods. Besides having a large and rapidly
growing labor force, Indonesia also has millions of workers employed in low
productivity jobs in agriculture or the informal sector.
The
authors estimate that Indonesia can increase manufactured exports by US$110
billion over the next five years. “These additional manufactured goods,
combined with the multiplier effect from higher domestic demand as workers
spend their additional income, would create 21 million good, productive jobs
by 2019.”
As one
might expect, there are a number of tough things that Indonesia has to do,
among others: improving infrastructure (roads, power plants, etc.), reducing
fuel subsidies, implementing tax reforms and perhaps even devaluing the
rupiah.
Way much
more easily said than done, but this is what the book recommends. Obviously,
I can’t do justice to all the things that the book says. So why don’t you
download it (transformasi.org/en/) and read for yourselves?
* * *
This
Wednesday, the Center for Pancasila Studies of Gadjah Mada University will
hold a choir performance involving 5,000 singers. Well, that should provide
us with the nationalism fix we need for the day, shouldn’t it?
But
we’re not talking about a day, but the future of the nation. Are we going to
keep on operating in banana republic style and keep on exporting raw
materials and agricultural products like palm oil? Are we going to allow
ourselves to remain at the bottom of the most positive lists and the top of
the most negative lists and persist in our “nationalism of resentment”?
Or are
we willing to try something different like what a school dropout in India
did?
Let’s
throw out our 7 percent growth mentality like Muruganantham threw out his
wife’s dirty rags, and go for “sanitary pads”: a double-digit economic growth
mentality! ●
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