
The Contested State: The Indonesian Bank Restructuring Agency during the Asian Financial Crisis
- Bank Restructuring Dynamics in Southeast AsiaAsian Financial CrisisEconomic policy
- Categories:Economics Politics & Government
- Language:English(Translation Services Available)
- Publication date:June,2025
- Pages:192
- Retail Price:(Unknown)
- Size:(Unknown)
- Publication Place:Australia
- Words:(Unknown)
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Feature
★ This story of the IBRA offers lessons for international development practitioners and financiers seeking to address future financial crises, while providing close watchers of Indonesia and Southeast Asia region with an in-depth look at the challenges and realities of a critical and still controversial example of economic policy in action.
★ The author Matthew A. Bush, has an educational background from Harvard and Melbourne, and has many years of professional experience in Indonesia.
Description
Twenty years after its 2004 abolishment, the stories and works of IBRA remain significant to contemporary Indonesian politics, law and anti-corruption. Drawing on unpublished state audits, Matthew A Busch examines the nationalisations of two of Indonesia’s largest private banks amid indications of fraud and billions of dollars in losses. Busch shows how the restructuring and economic recovery from the Asian Financial Crisis was achieved within the highly contested political economy of the time, and unpacks the policy decisions and legal frameworks and decisions that led the Indonesian government to become the temporary owner of an eclectic and extensive span of assets, ranging from the world’s biggest shrimp farm to the country’s largest private bank.
Author
Matthew A Busch holds a PhD from Melbourne Law School and a Bachelor of Arts in economics from Harvard University. For nearly a decade, he worked as a consultant with a specialty on economic policymaking in Indonesia and Southeast Asia. He was a Lowy Institute research fellow before joining the Australian public service. He has resided in Indonesia, Laos and China and lives in Canberra with his family.