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This book explores the political economy of Chinese and Japanese infrastructure financing in Indonesia, examining how Chinese and Japanese actors utilize diverse modes including Official Development Assistant, commercial loans, export credits, business-to-business investments, and public–private partnerships to ensure profitability and manage risks.Moving beyond traditional views of these financing modes as geoeconomic statecraft, the book exposes readers to a new perspective by situating infrastructure financing in the context of capitalist development. It reveals how contestation, conflicts, and compromise between socio-political forces including different segments of Japanese and Chinese capital, state actors, and civil society actors in Indonesia give shape to distinct modes of financing. Through detailed case studies and interviews across Japan, China and Indonesia, it uncovers the interplay between these forces and how their relations are sustained through regulatory complexes underpinning large-scale projects.
Trissia Wijaya is a McKenzie Research Fellow, Asia Institute, University of Melbourne.
Introduction1. Infrastructure Financing, Social Forces and the Regulatory Complex2. Japanese-Led Infrastructure Financing and an Institutionalised Regulatory Complex in the New Order in Indonesia (1968-1998) 3. The Japanese Diffuse Regulatory Complex in the Democratised Indonesia (1998-2016) 4. Chinese-Led Infrastructure Financing and a Deinstitutionalised Regulatory Complex in Indonesia (1998-2013) 5. The Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) and China’s Institutionalised Regulatory ComplexConclusion
‘Innovative and thought-provoking , this book points to a new direction in studying the political economy of a changing Asia and its global implications.’ Hong Liu, Nanyang Technological University