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6 - International Labour Migration: A Very Mixed Blessing

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 June 2019

Chris Manning
Affiliation:
Honorary Associate Professor with the Indonesia Project and Arndt-Corden Department of Economics at the Australian National University.
Sukamdi
Affiliation:
Associate Professor in the Faculty of Geography, Universitas Gadjah Mada, Yogyakarta, Indonesia.
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Summary

June 2011 was a month that encapsulated the highs and lows of Susilo BambangYudhoyono's (SBY's) policies on international migrant workers. On the eleventh of that month the Indonesian president proudly announced his support for the migrant worker convention in one of his many eloquent speeches, on this occasion given as a guest at the 100th annual meeting of the International Labour Organization (ILO) in Geneva. A week later this socially responsive approach was sharply questioned by the execution of the Indonesian maid Ruyati Binti Sapubi in Saudi Arabia, in part signalling a foreign policy failure on the part of SBY, and one that was widely criticized at home. Some have argued that international migration was one area among many where SBY promised more than he could deliver; while introducing a number of innovations, and eventually taking a hard line with several of the host countries for Indonesia migrants, it is said that the government struggled to get beyond “rhetoric” in devising practical policies and building the institutions to support them (Budianti, Chandrakirana and Yentriyani 2015, p. 210).

The government continued to strongly support international migration as a source of employment and of foreign exchange during the SBY years. During this period the number of Indonesians working abroad increased substantially and its composition changed, first more in favour of females and domestic workers and later back to a greater reliance on males and formal sector workers, mainly as a result of government reassessment of priorities. However, there was a policy shift during SBY's second term after shortcomings were increasingly exposed in the media and by civil society groups. Because of continuing reports of exploitation of female domestic workers in particular, culminating in the execution of Ruyati in 2011, the government temporarily halted the sending of domestic workers to the main recipient countries, Malaysia (in 2009) and later Saudi Arabia. At the same time, there were a number of important new institutional developments. These included bilateral agreements with receiving countries that had the potential to improve migrant conditions overseas. Regrettably, reform was slow and piecemeal. The regulatory and institutional changes did not have a positive impact on the welfare of migrant workers, which officials had promised and many observers had pressed for.

Type
Chapter
Information
Aspirations with Limitations
Indonesia's Foreign Affairs under Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono
, pp. 105 - 135
Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute
Print publication year: 2018

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