Economic Capacity, Regime Type, or Policy Decisions?Indonesia's Struggle with COVID-19
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Mietzner, Marcus
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Taiwan Foundation of Democracy
Abstract
Analyzing Indonesia’s COVID-19 response offers valuable insights into general
debates about the linkage between pandemic management outcomes and a
state’s economic capacity, regime type, and individual policy decisions. This
essay systematically reviews arguments that tie Indonesia’s pandemic response
to its limited economic capacity and status as a democracy with lower coercive
power than autocratic counterparts. It finds that while it is true that Indonesia,
now a higher middle-income country, had fewer economic resources to respond
to the crisis than fully industrialized states, its response was less effective than
those of other, significantly poorer nations. Similarly, Indonesia’s democracy
controlled considerable coercive resources when the outbreak began, but it
opted not to mobilize them to enforce a coherent lockdown. Thus, there is
little evidence for the notion that Indonesia’s central government was severely
constrained by structural predispositions; instead, its response was entirely
consistent with the policy preferences of the national leadership, which were
set in a climate of growing populism and developmentalism as the dominant
ideational streams since the mid-2010s.
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Taiwan Journal of Democracy
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Restricted until
2099-12-31
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