Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Tables
- List of Figures
- Preface
- Postscript: The 2008 Financial Crisis
- Acknowledgements
- Glossary and Acronyms
- The Editors
- The Contributors
- 1 A Brief Overview of Growth and Poverty in Indonesia during the New Order and after the Asian Economic Crisis
- Part One Trends in Poverty and Technical Issues of Measurement
- Part Two Poverty Alleviation Policies and Programs
- 6 Designs and Implementation of the Indonesian Social Safety Net Programs
- 7 Safety Nets or Safety Ropes? Dynamic Benefit Incidence of Two Crisis Programs in Indonesia
- 8 New Approaches to the Targeting of Social Protection Programs
- 9 Post-crisis Social Protection Programs in Indonesia
- 10 Conclusion: Coping with the Crisis
- Bibliography
- Index
9 - Post-crisis Social Protection Programs in Indonesia
from Part Two - Poverty Alleviation Policies and Programs
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 October 2015
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Tables
- List of Figures
- Preface
- Postscript: The 2008 Financial Crisis
- Acknowledgements
- Glossary and Acronyms
- The Editors
- The Contributors
- 1 A Brief Overview of Growth and Poverty in Indonesia during the New Order and after the Asian Economic Crisis
- Part One Trends in Poverty and Technical Issues of Measurement
- Part Two Poverty Alleviation Policies and Programs
- 6 Designs and Implementation of the Indonesian Social Safety Net Programs
- 7 Safety Nets or Safety Ropes? Dynamic Benefit Incidence of Two Crisis Programs in Indonesia
- 8 New Approaches to the Targeting of Social Protection Programs
- 9 Post-crisis Social Protection Programs in Indonesia
- 10 Conclusion: Coping with the Crisis
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
INTRODUCTION
In response to the economic crisis of 1997–1998, the Indonesian Government introduced a series of poverty alleviation programs that together constituted the so-called Social Safety Net (JPS). But although the negative effects of the crisis on social welfare began to decline as the economy slowly recovered and macroeconomic stability was restored, the poor and vulnerable still very much needed assistance in the post-crisis period. Most of the components of the JPS programs were retained in the social protection programs that were adopted in and after 2000, although some underwent modifications in design. The JPS program itself was gradually phased out and by 2003 had ceased to exist in its original form.
POST-CRISIS SOCIAL PROTECTION INITIATIVES
Fuel Subsidy Reductions
In the year 2000 policy-makers launched the first phase in a lengthy process of reductions in the subsidy for fuel (gasoline, diesel fuel, and kerosene, known collectively as Bahan Bakar Minyak, BBM). The BBM subsidy, which had been increased in May 1998, had drastically reduced the cost of fuel products relative to international prices. The subsidy was highly regressive in absolute terms, however, as the majority of cumulative benefits accrued to non-poor households. It was only mildly progressive in relative terms in that BBM, particularly kerosene, comprised a slightly larger proportion of total expenditures among poorer households. The first subsidy reduction occurred near the end of 2000 and over the following years the price of BBM was gradually increased, but no government was willing to make adjustments on a scale that would have significantly altered this extremely regressive form of public spending. It was largely for reasons of political expediency that subsequent governments did not substantially reduce the subsidy on kerosene until several years later in the context of more dramatic overall price adjustments.
In October 2000 the Indonesian Government cut the fuel subsidy by approximately 12 per cent. It then reallocated Rp 800 billion in savings to a package of short-term compensatory programs known as PKPS-BBM (Program Kompensasi Pengurangan Subsidi Bahan Bakar Minyak or the Fuel Subsidy Reduction Compensation Program).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Poverty and Social Protection in Indonesia , pp. 218 - 233Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak InstitutePrint publication year: 2010