Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Tables
- List of Figures
- List of Maps
- Acknowledgements
- List of Contributors
- Preface
- INTRODUCTION: The Regional Governance Reform in Indonesia, 1999–2004
- PART ONE MONITORING REPORTS & GENERAL ANALYSES
- 1 When the Burden is Shouldered Alone: Experiences in Autonomy at Regencies and Municipalities
- 2 Indonesia's Transition to Decentralized Governance: Evolution at the Local Level
- 3 Corruption and Decentralization
- 4 The Role and Function of the Regional People's Representative Council (DPRD): A Juridical Study
- 5 Regional Autonomy, Regulatory Reform, and the Business Climate
- 6 Decentralization, Regulatory Reform, and the Business Climate
- 7 Small Enterprises and Decentralization: Some Lessons from Java
- 8 Fiscal Decentralization and Its Impact on Regional Economic Development and Fiscal Sustainability
- 9 Origin and Development of the Urban Municipality in Indonesia
- PART TWO ANTHROPOLOGICAL ANALYSES OF REGIONAL CASES
- Index
- IIAS/ISEAS Series on Asia
6 - Decentralization, Regulatory Reform, and the Business Climate
from PART ONE - MONITORING REPORTS & GENERAL ANALYSES
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 October 2015
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Tables
- List of Figures
- List of Maps
- Acknowledgements
- List of Contributors
- Preface
- INTRODUCTION: The Regional Governance Reform in Indonesia, 1999–2004
- PART ONE MONITORING REPORTS & GENERAL ANALYSES
- 1 When the Burden is Shouldered Alone: Experiences in Autonomy at Regencies and Municipalities
- 2 Indonesia's Transition to Decentralized Governance: Evolution at the Local Level
- 3 Corruption and Decentralization
- 4 The Role and Function of the Regional People's Representative Council (DPRD): A Juridical Study
- 5 Regional Autonomy, Regulatory Reform, and the Business Climate
- 6 Decentralization, Regulatory Reform, and the Business Climate
- 7 Small Enterprises and Decentralization: Some Lessons from Java
- 8 Fiscal Decentralization and Its Impact on Regional Economic Development and Fiscal Sustainability
- 9 Origin and Development of the Urban Municipality in Indonesia
- PART TWO ANTHROPOLOGICAL ANALYSES OF REGIONAL CASES
- Index
- IIAS/ISEAS Series on Asia
Summary
INTRODUCTION
This chapter examines the many regulatory problems in local government in Indonesia and proposes simple models for regulatory reform. From the outset, it is important to stress that decentralization is not the major cause of regulatory problems in the regions. Many of the problems discussed in this chapter represent nothing new and have been documented elsewhere. For example, SMERU Research Institute (1999) and others identified a range of local government imposed tariff and non-tariff barriers in internal trade in the mid-late 1990s. The World Bank (1994) discussed the inappropriate use and pricing of user-charges in local government in the early 1990s. Goodpaster and Ray (2000) outlined the discriminative and anti-competitive nature of many local government regulations just prior to the commencement of the autonomy process.
Decentralization nevertheless does present new challenges and pressures. For example, under pressure to raise own-source revenues, local governments have turned to using a number of trade-distorting taxes and charges that were commonly found in the regions in the early-mid 1990s, but later banned through deregulation measures in 1997/98. Also under decentralization, new legislation on local taxes and charges (UU 34/2000) has lead to sub-optimal arrangements governing the supervision of local regulations. As a result distorting local taxes and charges are being implemented without effective review of their regulatory impact.
Monitoring and addressing the many regulatory problems in local government and policy-making has been an important focus for the USAID Partnership for Economic Growth (PEG) project based at the Ministry of Industry and Trade. This paper draws on, and builds upon the work by PEG and MOIT counterparts and includes the many regional and desk studies carried out under the PEG-USAID banner by local research groups such as the SMERU Research Institute, BIGS (Bandung Institute of Government Studies), KPPOD (Regional Autonomy Watch), LPPPM Sawala, AKADEMIKA, REDI (Regional Economic Development Institute), as well as a number of contracted individual researchers (see Table 6.l).
This chapter considers local regulatory problems at two levels. The first problem is at the process level. That is, the process by which a regulation (or other forms of government intervention) evolves from initial idea, to the design and review stage, through to final implementation.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Decentralization and Regional Autonomy in IndonesiaImplementation and Challenges, pp. 150 - 182Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak InstitutePrint publication year: 2009