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Far-reaching
and traumatic economic
developments have resulted in
compelling fundamental changes in
the Indonesian banking sector.
Headlines about major banking
issues appear weekly in
mass-circulation newspapers. Bank
reform, as essential as it is in
getting the economy to work again
and as revealing a stage as it
provides for examining ways of
doing business under the previous
regime, has become a spectator
sport for the Indonesian public.
The economic stakes in the changes
now taking place in the industry
are simply enormous. |
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Change
is occurring so fast on so many
fronts that it is impossible to
forecast how Indonesian banking
will look even 12 months from now.
The only certainty is that the
Indonesian financial sector, and
banking in particular, will be
constituted a year from now in a
way unimaginable even 18 months
ago. However, the overall
direction in which a combination
of powerful forces is currently
pushing Indonesian banking seems
clear. The future will most likely
see a smaller number of banks
operating in Indonesia, a greater
share of the banking market held
by foreign and/or joint venture
banks, and surviving banks
operating with the increased
efficiency and transparency
demanded by global economic
forces.
The difficulties facing the
banking sector itself are
enormous. Estimates of
non-performing loan rates for
Indonesian banks range from
60-80%. They could be higher.
There is little relief in sight as
the indebted Indonesian corporate
sector continues to struggle.
Almost all banks have stopped
making new loans. Credit is either
unavailable or unaffordable to
most Indonesian companies. Banks
continue to bleed as negative
spreads persist between their cost
of funds and their return on
funds. Indonesian banking woes are
deepened by a legal and cultural
framework that has traditionally
favored debtor over creditor.
Legal and cultural practices also
reflect a different understanding
of the concept of the contract. A
lack of transparency in corporate
financial practices further
complicates efforts to negotiate
debt repayment or re-structuring.
A newly revised bankruptcy law has
produced mixed results. Capital
requirements for banks, though
temporarily eased from
international standards, would
appear out of reach for a number
of the remaining institutions
pending recapitalization by the
government or by outside
investors.
Although it seems fairly clear
that the Indonesian banking sector
is headed toward a period of
consolidation, restructuring, and
increased efficiency, projecting
time frames for the progress -
even the survival -- of individual
banks is extremely difficult.
Individual business opportunities
are easier to assess. However,
even those individual
opportunities exist within the
larger context of considerable
uncertainty.
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