„....creation of new rules does not in itself immediately produce new stable forms of behaviour… while rules can change overnight; individual responses will be much more complex and slow to adapt.” 
            
These quotations from Douglas C. North, a profound institutional economist, were the first thing that came out of my mind when I heard that the President finally announced his cabinet reshuffle. So what’s exactly this quotation mean? And what are the relations with the Cabinet reshuffle? Well, we shall proceed then, and I hope I can briefly explain my intentions.
So here it comes. I believe that institutions inIndonesia still  weak. And so what is institution anyway? In this sense, let me once more, quoted from North. He clearly point out that institution is the rules of the game. Institutions are humanly devised constraints that structure human interaction, or moves of the game. It’s the circumstances that make self-interested-homo-oeconomicus constrained with bounded rationality chooses their optimum pay-offs. In this part, let me generalize and simplified institutions as regulations, so that I meant that regulations in Indonesia Indonesia 
InIndonesia 
And so let’s go back to the general analysis of institutions. Inthe  case  of  newly-democratized Indonesia is  important  to  recognize  that  economic  development  alone  will  never  adequate  and should  always  be  paired  with  institutional  development and awareness. In general, modernization is defined as process  of  improving  the  capability  of  a  nation’s  institutions  to meet  increasing  and  different  demands.  And thus a  modern  nation  is one  in  which  the  institutions  are able  to  meet  or  adequately  handle  the  increasing  and  different  demands  made  on  them. Growth in  economic  development  is  change , and  change  is  inherently  “destabilizing” , especially  in  the  era  of  globalization  where  domestic  issues  and  international  challenges  can  no  more  be  separated.  Altogether , there  is  one  important  future  challenge  for  Indonesia on  how  can  it  adopt  changes  due  to  socio-political  pressures  needed  for  a  successful  economic  development , and  thus  learn  that  institutions do matter.
These quotations from Douglas C. North, a profound institutional economist, were the first thing that came out of my mind when I heard that the President finally announced his cabinet reshuffle. So what’s exactly this quotation mean? And what are the relations with the Cabinet reshuffle? Well, we shall proceed then, and I hope I can briefly explain my intentions.
So here it comes. I believe that institutions in
In
And so let’s go back to the general analysis of institutions. In
   

 
 














4 comments:
In Asean (particularly Malaysia, Singapore and Brunei), we saw that the rule of the game is almost completely lay down by previous strong ruler (Mahathir, Lee Kuan Yew, sultans).
It is facts that our early Presidents did not emphasize rule of the game and constitutionality. People are continously looking for short cuts and internal people (orang dalem) instead.
So what is your suggestion to strenghten institution and rule of the game in Indonesia?
I think the most important institution is the property right. :)
British say "we rule the waves". Indonesians say "we wave the rules" :-)
Yudo's point is quite true for Indonesian I think :)
Well, I also have another one about politicians though:
In Singapore, they will always say that they have the rules and also have the discussions about them.
In Thailand, they will always say that they have the rules, but they don't ever discuss them.
In Indonesia, they will always say that they have discussions, but they don't the have rules.
Cheers :)
Post a Comment