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Decentralization in Indonesia Shifts Power to Local Leaders

FrontLines - May 2009


Each morning, residents of Kebumen Regency in Indonesia’s Central Java Province tune their radios to “Good Morning Regent,” a call-in show where ordinary citizens can ask questions of their local government leaders.

Pak Rosyid, headmaster of a local high school says of the show: “It is a positive step by our government, since it can respond to citizens’ needs directly. Now we know that the local government is really working for us.”

Photo by USAID
Ikhsan Yasin Limpo, the regent of Gowa in Southern Sulawesi, attended a USAID tour of U.S. local governments and then conducted a survey of views on education in Gowa.

The show is part of the legacy of Rustriningsih, who uses only one name and who became Kebumen’s first directly-elected regent in 2005. She said she believed that to govern effectively, she needed to hear the problems and concerns of Kebumen residents.

It is also one outgrowth of the decentralization of power which began in 2001, just three years after the fall of Soeharto and the introduction of democratic politics. In a very brief period, hundreds of subnational governments were vested with new responsibilities for local public services, about 30 percent of the national budget was devolved, and roughly 2.6 million central government employees became employees of subnational governments.

Not surprisingly, in a country with 250 million people, there were problems such as inconsistent policies, uncertainty about intergovernmental roles and responsibilities, bureaucratic foot dragging, and weak district capacity.

Since 2001, USAID has worked alongside Rustriningsih and other governors, mayors, councilors, and civil society leaders in 100 jurisdictions to meet some of these challenges.

USAID helped local officials to embrace consultative and transparent decision-making. Citizen report cards, citizen charters, and electronic customer service centers improve public services.

“Decentralization is clearly a driving force in Indonesia,” said USAID Democracy Officer Kate Somvongsiri.

Rustriningsih took unprecedented measures to repair public schools and provide other public services. She was featured in a 2003 New York Times article about her brand of clean politics. Last year, the citizens of Central Java elected her their vice governor.

In South Sulawesi, Gowa Regent Ikhsan Yasin Limpo held a public survey of citizen views on education services, shortly after returning from a USAIDfunded study tour of U.S. local governments.

The survey led local officials to address deficiencies. “People lacked the necessary income to pay for their children’s education due to unofficial fees, education not having been treated as a priority by government,” said Ikhsan.

Photo by USAID
Voters line up to cast their votes in an Aceh local election in December 2006.

A 2008 public opinion survey funded by USAID found that trust in local government officials grew from 42 percent in 2006 to 55 percent in 2008; and 56 percent had more confidence in their local government than in their national government.

Today, all 2,300 local and provincial officials are directly elected. This has invigorated local politics with successful local leaders running for higher offices.

There is debate over the wisdom of decentralizing power to 492 districts. Since 2001, the number of new district and provincial governments has grown by almost half, increasing the number of local governments, many with weak capacity and limited resources.

Decentralization has not solved all of Indonesia’s corruption problems, with investigations ongoing in as many as a quarter of Indonesia’s local governments.

 


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