The World Food Programme in Indonesia
An Exit Strategy
WFP Indonesia
April 2001
I. Introduction: Indonesia’s Food Security Challenge
For the better part of the past three
decades, Indonesia made steady progress in raising incomes, reducing poverty,
and improving living standards. Per
capita food availability increased from around 2000 calories per day in the
1960s to close to 2700 calories per day by the early 1990s (FAO 1996). The proportion of the population classified
as poor fell from 44 percent in the 1970s to as low as 11 percent in 1996. The combination of higher levels of food
availability and a much smaller poor population significantly enhanced food
security and nutrition status, at both a national and a household level.
Thanks to steady socio-economic
progress, the specter of famine and widespread under-nutrition had largely been
erased from Indonesia's policy landscape by the mid-1990s (Van der Eng
1993). But the crisis that engulfed
Indonesia from 1997 threatens to reverse many of the hard fought gains in
nutrition and food security. The
crisis--and its adverse effects on food security, poverty and nutrition--has
reminded policy makers that food security and nutrition improvement must be a national
policy goal.
The crisis, as it is commonly referred
to, is a catch-all phrase used to describe a series of adverse shocks that
struck Indonesia beginning in 1997.
These shocks were an unanticipated combination of environmental, financial,
political, and social events. Few
observers could have imagined a combination of such extreme events in so short
a time span (De Tray 1998).
The first shock to hit Indonesia was
the El Niño drought in late 1997 and early 1998. The drought depressed agricultural production
and triggered food shortages in parts of eastern Indonesia. The combination of dry weather and the use of
fires to clear plantation lands led to severe forest fires, which for several
months blanketed Indonesia and a wide sweep of Southeast Asia in a cloud of
haze.
The second shock, and by far the most
severe, was the monetary crisis. In
September of 1997, financial panic-struck and the government were forced to
abandon its efforts to defend the rupiah.
From September 1997 to September 1998, the rupiah lost three-quarters of
its value, inflation soared to triple-digit levels and international donors
assembled a multibillion dollars economic rescue package. The combination of
devaluation and monetary tightening caused widespread distress in both the
commercial banks and Indonesia's largest companies. High interest rates,
commercial bank failures, and corporate distress sent output and incomes
plummeting, by nearly 17 percent in 1998 alone.
Starting in September 1998, the government was able to restore some
measure of price stability, after which the exchange rate quickly
strengthened. But the collapse in
domestic demand together with the overhang of distressed banks and companies
continued to weigh heavily on the economy in 1999 and 2000.
The third set of shocks was political
by nature. From mid-1997 to mid-1998, political demonstrations broke out in
many parts of the country. Reports of
hoarding and food shortages led to riots and, in some areas, confiscation of
private food stocks. Government policies, and especially what became known as
KKN (corruption, collusion, and nepotism),
was openly criticized by students and the donor community. In May 1998, particularly severe riots
signaled an apparent breakdown in law and order, and triggered the resignation
of President Soeharto. The eighteen
months of President Habibie's protests, demonstrations, and spontaneous actions
against the government, including the takeover of contested lands marked "reform"
government that followed by small farmers and replacement of unpopular local
government officials. After what has
been described as a festival of democracy, the 34-year rule of the New Order
Government was drawn to an end in November 1999 and was replaced by a coalition
of more democratic, reform-oriented parties.
The fourth set of shocks was regional,
religious and ethnic in nature. In 1998
and 1999, Christian and Islamic places of worship were vandalized in a number
of Javanese cities. After violent clashes, the East Timorese voted for
independence, and ties between Indonesia and what had been its 27th
province were violently severed.
Independence calls were also issued in Aceh, and fighting broke out
between the military and civilians in several parts of that province. Severe ethnic conflicts also erupted in West
Kalimantan, Central Sulawesi, the Mollucas, and Mataram (Lombok). Regional violence and destruction have left
close to 1.1 million internally displaced persons in its wake. In an attempt to ease regional tensions, the
government accelerated the process of decentralization and revenue
sharing. The regional violence has also
called into question of the economic and political role of the military, both
in terms of its culpability for part of the violence and for its apparent inability
to effectively restore law and order and respect human rights.
The
crises, and the societies' responses to it, have had profound effects on
Indonesia's economic, political, and social landscape. The combination of
democratization, greater government accountability, growing press freedom, and
economic policy reform is expected to eventually result in a more robust
economy and a more just society. But in
the interim, economic collapse, volatile political conditions, and mounting
regional uncertainties have taken a heavy toll on the nation.
The food supplies. El Nino severely disrupted domestic
rice production, but thanks to ample imports, food supplies were adequate to
ensure national food availability.
Government and the private sector imported nearly 7 million metric tons
of rice in 1998 and 5 million metric tons in 1999. In response to good rains, the rice crop
began to recover in 2000, with imports falling to 1.4 million metric tons. Government responded to the sharp decline in
farm gate rice prices during the main harvest season in 2000 with a 30 percent
import tariff.
In
2001, national paddy production is estimated to be around 51.5 million tons
against the requirement of 53 million tons. The shortfall, equivalent to about
1.5 million tons of rice, is to be met through import on commercial terms or
food aid. In addition to rice, Indonesia also imports about 3.3 million tons of
wheat. The level of wheat utilization may continue to be lower than in recent
years due to low purchasing power and reduced demand for expensive wheat based
products.
The economy. Prior to the crisis, GDP grew by an average of 7 percent
per annum for nearly two decades. GDP
growth fell to 4.6 percent in 1997 and then declined by almost 14 percent in
1998. In 1999, the economy was stagnant,
with GDP rising by just 0.23 percent.
Thanks
to the upturn in petroleum prices, government spending increased and the
economy began to recover in 2000, with GDP rising by 4.8 percent. Per capita GDP in 2000 is Rp.6.3 million or
US$700 at the average markets exchange rate.
Per capita income for the year was $641. With devaluation pressures
accelerating towards the end of the year, the World Bank estimated per capita
income for the year 2000 at $580. Growth
has slowed in the last quarter of 2000 and the first quarter of 2001, leading
many analysts to forecast a fragile and uneven recovery.
Some
parts of the country have tended to recover faster than others. In the year 2000, the high-growth (above
4.78%) provinces included North Sumatra, Riau, West Java, South Kalimantan,
North Sulawesi, South Sulawesi, Southeast Sulawesi and West Nusa Tenggara. Provinces caught up in conflict, such as
Aceh, Central Kalimantan, East Kalimantan and Irian Jaya generally recorded low
or negative growth. The majority of the
Provinces, including West Sumatra, South Sumatra, Bengkulu, Lampung, Greater
Jakarta, Central Java, Yogyakarta, East Java, Bali, West Kalimantan, Central
Sulawesi, East Nusatenggara and Maluku, recorded a moderate (between 2 and 5%)
rate of growth.
In
1998, annualized inflation approached 70 percent, before returning to
single-digit levels in fiscal 1999 and 2000.
Since December 2000, inflation has accelerated and is close to 10
percent on an annualized basis. During
the crisis, the combination of soaring food prices and near-stagnant wages
priced basic consumer goods out of the reach of large segments of society
(World Bank 1999).
GDP growth for 2001 is forecast to be between 4 and
5 percent. But how much that will add to
domestic purchasing power depends very much on where the exchange rate settles.
In the first quarter of 2001, the exchange rate has come under tremendous
pressure. It is fluctuating in a range
from Rp.10,700 to Rp.11,000 to the US dollar, compared to approximately Rp. 7,
000 to the US dollar a year ago. In US
dollar terms, GDP per capita for 2001 is forecast at $580, compared to more
than $1200 prior to the crisis. The national
debt has now reached US $142 billion, or some 120 percent of GDP. Most of the extra oil revenues and other
export earnings are spent in servicing large domestic loans while repayments of
official foreign loans have been rescheduled.
In 1998/99, public expenditures fell to just 16
percent of GDP as the economic crisis fed through into sharply reduced domestic
taxes. In 1999 and the year 2000,
revenues have strengthened thanks in large measure to the sharp upturn in
global petroleum prices. Debt relief,
meanwhile, has eased significant pressure on external debt service requirements. However, Indonesia’s domestic debt service
requirements have risen to nearly 4 percent of GDP (approximately 60 trillion
rupiah) or close to one-fifth of total public expenditures. Indonesia’s fiscal constraints are related to
the small share of Government in the economy--public spending equal to just 22
percent of GDP; the rising debt service burden (forecast for 2001 at 5.4% of
GDP) and the very limited resources available to allocate to development
expenditures of any kind (development spending forecast at 3% of GDP in
2001). For the year 2001, the budget
has come under tremendous pressure due to weakening in global petroleum prices,
rising domestic interest rates (and debt service burden), currency devaluation
and the persistence of high fuel and electricity subsidies. Until progress is made in reducing the debt
overhang and increasing domestic revenues, it is envisioned that the Government
will be unable to fully meet its commitments in many critical areas, including
the provision of immediate assistance to the hungry poor.
Poverty.
Poverty levels increased substantially during the crisis. Studies based on the
SUSENAS survey show an increase in the total numbers of poor from 22.5 million
in 1996 to 49.5 million in 1998. In
August of 1999, the number of poor was estimated at 37.5 million persons. The immediate crisis impacts on poverty have
been far greater in urban than in rural areas.
The poverty incidence has increased from 12 percent in 1996 to 24
percent in 1998.
Although
poverty has become more severe in the urban areas, close to two-thirds of those
classified as poor are in the rural areas.
The rural poor are mainly lands less laborers, farmers with
smallholdings in the eastern part of the country and coastal fisherman. The combination of intense pressure on the
natural resource base combined with a lack of access to land and other
productive resources contributes to the poverty and food insecurity of this
group. At last count, Government
estimated that those classified as poor (or unable to afford a minimum diet)
was 25.1 million in the rural areas and 12.4 million in the urban areas (Irawan
2001).
The crisis has caused a dramatic
increase in urban poverty and food insecurity.
There are two main reasons for this.
First, real wages declined sharply and most of the urban poor depend on
a daily wage to meet their food needs.
Second, the urban poor tended to draw a significant share of their
income from construction and manufacturing employment. These were the sectors of the economies that
contracted the most and have, as yet, shown few signs of recovery. Indeed, many who were working in these
sectors are now involved in informal sector, cottage production of similar
products (but at lower wages).
There is also reason to believe that
urban poverty and food insecurity will be a more significant problem for
Indonesia in the years to come. Stern (2001) forecasts that more than half on
Indonesia’s poor will be in the cities by 2010.
Many of Indonesia’s urban poor live in densely populated corridor areas
along riverbanks and railways. Large
numbers are illegal squatters who have occupied government or private-land for
long periods of time. Living conditions
are highly inadequate; most houses have limited space, lack adequate ventilation
and sanitation; few have private toilets and physical security is difficult to
enforce. Many of the urban poor are dependent on daily wage labor in the
informal sector to meet their food needs.
Intense competition and volatile market conditions mean that they suffer
from highly irregular earnings. Most of
the urban poor are not covered by formal social safety net programs, leaving
large numbers without assistance. Compared
to the rural areas, opportunities for home gardening are limited and informal
community safety nets tend to be weaker than in rural areas. Often legal
obstacles prevent the poorest urban households from tapping public
assistance. The return to rural areas is
not an option for many as they are from landless families. Contrary to popular belief, Stern (2001)
reports that the vast majority of the urban poor in Indonesia’s major cities
are not recent migrants from the countryside, but are families which have
already resided for several generations in the urban areas. Other studies show that only about five
percent of Indonesia’s urban poor are, indeed, recent migrants from the
countryside.
The slow pace of recovery and a lack of
private investment continue to depress urban living conditions in the big
cities. A survey conducted by the
University of Indonesia in mid 1999 reported that estimates of the population
below the poverty line in Java rose from 23% in 1996 to around 40% in early
1999.
Poverty, and by extension, food
insecurity, has a large transitory element. There is a large segment of the
population with incomes marginally above the poverty line. The World Bank
estimates that, in addition to those classified as poor, nearly one-third of
the population runs the risk of falling into poverty one year in three
(Pritchett et. al. 2000, World Bank 2001).
Hence the population that is vulnerable to food insecurity is far larger
than simply those classified as being poor at any one point in time. Adding the poor and “sometimes poor” together
would imply that nearly half of the population is periodically vulnerable to
poverty.
While the crisis has increased the
headcount, depth and intensity of poverty in urban areas the most, the
geographic incidence of poverty and food insecurity remain much the same as was
the case prior to the immediate series of shocks. The largest numbers of poor, food insecure
households are to be found in urban and rural Java. The highest incidence of poverty, however, is
to be found in the eastern islands of Indonesia, especially in many regions,
which are remote from major markets.
The
Nutrition Situation.
The greatest fear, of policymakers and households alike, is that the ultimate
burden of the crisis will be borne by those groups that are least able to fend
for themselves. If the costs of the crisis
are borne by the nutritionally vulnerable groups, then the adverse effects will
linger on for generations to come, in the form of diminished health, nutrition,
and educational performance. Impaired human resource development is bound to
contribute to a vicious cycle of poverty, low productivity, and social
instability.
The SUSENAS data show that there was no
significant change in the prevalence of underweight children (those under five
years of age) from 1995 to 1998 and that the prevalence of underweight has
decreased from 35 percent in 1992 to 30 percent in 1998 (Jahari et al.
1999). A comparison of the
anthropometric data from 1995 to 1998 shows, however, that there was
practically no improvement in infant weight-for-age during these years. In other words, the steady progress that
Indonesia had registered in improving child nutrition from 1980 to 1995 came to
a halt during the crisis. Furthermore,
Indonesia's 30 percent prevalence of underweight children remains well above
the prevalence (i.e., 20 percent) reported in other parts of Southeast Asia.
The economic crisis has reminded
policymakers that Indonesia's nutrition agenda is far from complete. A detailed analysis of the SUSENAS
anthropometric data by Jahari and colleagues finds that the proportion of
children who are classified as severely underweight increased from 6 percent in
the early 1990s to 10.5 percent during the 1995 to 1998 period. Children between the ages of 6-23 months in
the rural areas recorded the highest prevalence of severe underweight.
A Department of Health analysis of the
nutrition status of infants in the urban slum areas found that the prevalence
of severe underweight children was far above national norms. Approximately 14
percent of the underweight infants were found to be severely underweight and in
dire need of clinical assistance. In early 1999, for example, the Nutrition
Surveillance System maintained by the NGO Helen Keller International (HKI)
found alarmingly high levels of wasting in the urban slums of the larger
cities, ranging from 19% to 29%. Those
children in the slum areas that had received complementary infant food tended
to record a far better nutritional performance than those that had not. A range of biological and anthropological
factors, including differences in birth spacing, weaning practices, and the
frequency and quality of maternal care, appear to explain the vast differences
in nutritional performance amongst infants of similar economic circumstances in
several urban slums (Tim Gizi 2000).
What appears to have happened between
1996 and 2000 is that the number of "mildly underweight" children
fell as the number of severely underweight children increased. While the average was little changed, the
distribution of weight-for-age by the under-fives became more skewed. Jahari et. al. (1999) report that in early 1998 there
were about 2.2 million children
under five years of age suffering from severe underweight, including 700,000 infants (children of 6-23 months of
age).
One of the main survival strategies
that low-income families have employed is to reduce the consumption of high
value foods (meats, dairy, fruits and vegetables) and concentrate their food
expenditures more on grains and low-cost pulses. As households reduced their
consumption of high-value foods, the prevalence of micro-nutrient deficiencies
increased. Drawing on a number of small
surveys, HKI (2000) reports that many children and women also suffer from
deficiencies in micronutrients, notably vitamin A, iodine, iron and zinc. The
HKI surveys also found that both iron deficiency and Vitamin A deficiency were
increasing among young children and their mothers. The HKI (2000) concludes that the adverse
nutrition impact from the economic crisis appeared to be more severe in the urban
areas than in the countryside, and that despite modest improvement in food
consumption in 1999, high rates of malnutrition persist.
The
Government Response.
Food Security is critical for the successful management of macro economic
crises, yet it is often not given the prominence it deserves in government
policy making. Food security applies to
a continuous spectrum -- from the micro perspective of nutritional well being
of individuals to the macro perspective that assures regular supplies of food
in national, regional and local markets. A key objective is to create an
environment where each household has adequate access to purchasing power,
nutritional knowledge and health care that will assure adequate demand for food
in markets and efficient food utilization.
The dual effects of El Niño and the
economic crisis in Indonesia have called into attention the very yardstick by
which food security is measured. For the better part of the past three decades
food security has been defined in practice as the availability of an adequate
supply of rice at an affordable price. Low and stable rice prices were taken as
a sign that food security was intact. The fact that Indonesia re-emerged in
1997 as the world's single largest rice importer; that urban areas were racked
by food protests and food related riots in 1997 and early 1998, that food
prices have been highly volatile and uncertain, suggests that food security was
badly compromised.
Prior to 1998, Government’s food
security policy was based on encouraging rice self-sufficiency and intervening
in the markets to stabilize domestic rice prices. The rice self-sufficiency goal has largely
been abandoned after El Nino. Attempts
to stabilize domestic rice prices failed in 1997/1998, and since then
Government has abandoned its grain trade monopoly and relied on the
international markets to set domestic food prices.
The crisis has inspired Government to
target its food assistance more directly to vulnerable groups. As part of its social safety net, the
government established a food subsidy scheme, the special market operation
programme, Operasi Pasar Khusus (OPK).
This was targeted at the poor, based on a classification system used by BKKBN,
the National Family Planning Coordinating Board. The OPK programme started in August 1998.
Initially it entitled each eligible household to purchase 10 kilos of rice per
month at Rp. 1,000 per kilo—less than half the market price. Later the
allocation was raised to 20 kilos. Some
11 million households, mainly in rural areas, were then provided access to subsidized rice each month
by Bulog.
The present Government has a
three-pronged strategy for long-term poverty reduction (and enhancing food
security) that includes promoting opportunities for the poor, facilitating
empowerment and providing an effective social safety net. With respect to this third element, the
Coordinating Minister for Economic Affairs, at the consultative group meeting
in October 2000 in Tokyo, has declared (p.4):
“A
functioning social safety net is an important element of a poverty alleviation
Strategy
as it protects the vulnerable from the adverse effects of economic and
social
shocks. The central government has an
important role in financing the
Social
safety, but with decentralization there will be a much greater role of the
local
government in the provision of these programs.
Critical to this process is
community
participation in the decision-making process and oversight by civil
society”
Food assistance is viewed as an
integral component of the social safety net.
Ensuring that the immediate needs of the hungry are met, and that the
special requirements of the nutritionally vulnerable are addressed, figures
prominently in the Government’s policy on food security and social safety
(Bappenas 2001).
II. WFP in Indonesia
WFP’s regular programme in Indonesia
was closed in 1996 after 33 years of presence in the country. In May 1998, the
Indonesia WFP office was reopened, at the request of Government, in response to
the precarious food security situation caused by the El Nino drought and the
subsequent economic crisis. An emergency
operation (EMOP 6006) for one year and a
Protracted Relief and Recovery (PRRO 6195) for eighteen months was
approved. The EMOP provided for a total
of 300,000 tons of rice equivalents and 8,600 tons of blended food at a cost of
US$145 million. The PRRO provides
176,000 tons of food, including 163,500 tons of rice and 3,200 tons of beans,
1,600 tons of oil, 268 tons of salt,
plus some 7,300 tons of fortified complimentary infant food at a cost of
US$68.3 million..
In 1998/1999, WFP operations were
concentrated in the rural areas.
However, with the rapid recovery in food supply and several Government
food assistance programs in rural areas, the programme shifted its support to
the urban poor and the IDPs refugees.
The general trend in food aid in Indonesia had been to limit food
assistance to the rural sector, in the belief that the urban poor are better
off than the poor in rural areas. But
with increasing urban poverty, high levels of urban malnutrition, deepening
social rifts, rapidly growing urban populations, and few informal or formal
options for food assistance in the urban areas, the shift in emphasis from
rural to urban areas was timely (Parajuli 2001).
Over time, WFP’s assistance partnership
arrangements have shifted. In 1998,
assistance was provided mainly through collaborating government partners. Thereafter, WFP began to work in close
partnership with a range of international and domestic NGO’s. This was designed
to take advantage of the NGO’s capacity to target effectively based on their
knowledge of local conditions, greater accountability and transparency of these
organizations, and the prospect for leveraging WFP assistance against other
resources mobilized by the NGOs (Parajuli 2001).
Under the EMOP (ending in June 2001)
and the PRRO (ending in Oct 2001 but expected to last until March 2002), WFP is
providing food assistance to people affected by the economic crisis in urban
centers in Jakarta, Bandung, Semarang, Surabaya and to internally displaced
persons (IDPs) and refugees in Central and North Maluku, West Kalimantan, East
Java and West Timor. The West Timor
operation has been suspended since October 2000. These operations encompass 445,000
households through the OPSM programme; 175,000 households through a school
feeding programme; 350,000 displaced persons in Maluku and Kalimantan, and will
reach 80,000 children and mothers through a complementary infant food and
nutrition education program. Lately, IDPs from Central Kalimantan, displaced to
Madura Island, are also included in WFP assistance. More than 80 percent of the beneficiaries
from WFP assistance are women are girls, an especially important target group
given their vulnerability to hunger and the seminal role they play in meeting
household needs.
The Special Market Operation (OPSM-WFP)
covers 445,000 households in 750 urban slums in four cities, namely Jakarta,
Bandung, Surabaya and Semarang. OPSM
provides eligible beneficiaries with the opportunity to buy 20 kilograms of
rice per month at a subsidized price of Rp.1,000 per kilogram (as compared to
Rp. 2500 per kilogram at the market price).
The program is structured the same as the Government’s OPK program, but
is aimed at those in the urban slums that the Government was unable to
reach. In contrast to the OPK program,
the OPSM-WFP is implemented through some 20 local NGOs who deliver 5 kilograms
of rice per week to each eligible household.
From the sales proceeds of the rice, WFP provides Rp.150/kg to meet the
logistics and administrative expenses of the NGOs. The balance of the generated funds (i.e. Rp.
850/kg) are used to purchase additional rice, to support a nutrition program
that includes the provision of fortified infant foods and other community
development activities. Special efforts have been made to strengthen the
institutional capacity of the local NGO community, as many of these
organizations are quite new and few have had prior experience implementing a large-scale
food assistance operation.
Under the nutrition component of the
OPSM-WFP programme, WFP has introduced an affordable, complementary infant food
called Delvita. Delvita is a fortified,
soybean-based product (80% soybeans, 15% malt, 5% vitamins and minerals) that
is manufactured in two factories. It can
be readily manufactured, using locally available ingredients, throughout
Indonesia. The acceptability of the product has been tested and approved for
distribution by Government. Delvita is mixed with rice porridge as a
complementary infant food for children from 6 to 24 months of age at risk of
growth faltering. The field unit of the nutrition project is a Pondok.
In each Pondok, children’s attendance is registered, monthly weight and
growth measures are made, 2 sachets of Delvita are distributed, nutrition
education is provided and demonstrations on how to cook Delvita are conducted.
On-site feeding of the children with Delivita is undertaken once a week. The field operations of the nutrition programme
have been in effect since January 2001.
So far, 1400 PONDOK’s have been established, 26 nutrition officers have
been recruited by the NGOs, 370 nutrition educators are operating in the field
and 91,000 mothers and children have been assisted.
Under the school programme, WFP
provides 10 kgs of rice to selected students as take home rations, effectively
contributing an income transfer equivalent to Rp.20,000-25,000/month. Started in 1999, the operation covers around
181,000 urban children in 2,960 schools run by the Ministries of Religious and
Home Affairs under phase I, 150,000 under phase II and possibly as many as
175,000 under phase III. Operation of the third phase has been delayed due to a
lack of counterpart funds for transportation and rebagging costs.
There are an estimated 1.2 million
IDP’s in the country, of which close to 500,00 have benefited from WFP
assistance. This includes those in West
Timor (150,000 currently suspended), Central and North Maluku (300,000) and
Kalimantan (150,000). WFP is providing
rice, beans and cooking oil which is delivered by international humanitarian
NGOs to the IDPs in these Provinces. WFP
leads a food assistance working group that draws together different donor
agencies and international NGOs involved in providing food assistance to IDPs
and refugees. Through this group, WFP
helps to inform the assistance community of IDP and refugee needs and helps to
coordinate the external assistance response, including key aspects of both food
and non-food assistance.
WFP is also engaged in strengthening
Indonesia’s institutional capacity in food security policy making. Working in close cooperation with the World
Bank, partner UN agencies and other multilateral and bilateral donors, the WFP
promotes the flow of information through an inter-agency working group on food
security. WFP has undertaken a number of
field surveys and policy studies to enhance understanding of the links between
food insecurity, livelihood conditions, public policies and evolving socio-economic
conditions. As an advocate on behalf of
the poor and food insecure, WFP works closely with key Government and civil
society partners to improve their understanding of food security challenges and
policy reform options.
III. The Goals and Objectives of WFP Indonesia Operations
WFP has a special and sometimes mis-understood role to play
in Indonesia. Some claim that WFP should
provide food to all of those who are hungry or food insecure. By this standard,
possibly as many as 100 million persons
(the estimated poor and sometimes poor) in Indonesia should receive at
least periodic WFP assistance. While
this would certainly exceed WFP’s limited resources, the reason that this is
incorrect is that WFP’s role in Indonesia is to fill those gaps in assisting
the hungry that neither Government, civil society or other assistance providers
can meet. Always cautious not to crowd
out efforts by communities and government to overcome hunger, WFP aims to
ensure that those who otherwise fall through the social safety net does receive
support.
Indeed, food aid does play an important role in Indonesia
and there is little evidence that it adversely affecting food production
incentives or contributes to long-term dependency. Indonesia’s total food aid receipts from
1998 to 2000 are less than five percent of total food imports, implying little
risk of crowding-out commercial trade.
Assistance provided under various food assistance programs (by WFP and
other donors) is aimed at vulnerable groups who wouldn’t have adequate
purchasing power to meet minimal dietary requirements (i.e. the urban
ultra-poor, IDPs and refugees). Food aid
to these groups augments the purchasing power of the hungry poor, increases
returns to education and other public investments and does not displace or
discourage private market activity. Food
assistance flows comprise less than 2 percent of total annual grain consumption
in Indonesia. But while these flows may
be small (relative to consumption and imports), they are important to Indonesia. Government’s fiscal capacity has become
increasingly impaired as a result of the crisis and grant aid flows have fallen
to just an estimated $200 million for fiscal 2000. With an already unsustainable debt overhang,
Government is naturally reluctant (and in fact unable) to borrow externally at
commercial terms to meet its food assistance requirements. The provision of food aid grants helps to
guarantee that Government does have adequate resources to target to the hungry
poor.
While Indonesia is a nation with an enormous number
of food insecure households and serious public finance constraints, it is also
a nation in which Government, civil society and local communities potentially
could address a significant portion of the food insecurity problem. Poor
households have developed a variety of livelihood strategies to allow them to
cope with short-lived food stress. Local
communities continue long-standing traditions of sharing resources during times
of distress. Community and other non-governmental organizations provide some
humanitarian assistance during times of need.
The National Food Logistics Agency maintains rice stocks of between 2
and 3 million metric tons, operates a national grain depot network and
distributes subsidized rice on a monthly basis to nearly a quarter of the
nation’s population through a logistics network of some 45,000 distribution
points. Although unevenly and
sporadically, close to half of the internally displaced persons are fed under
government programs; government operates a rural school lunch program and
numerous other social safety net and nutrition programs. To fill the food supply gap, the private
sector is able to import four to five million metric tons of food grains (rice,
wheat, sugar, soybeans) each year on a commercial basis, despite Indonesia’s
lingering economic distress. Even though
private imports may be available, the low incomes of a large segment of society
mean that the poor cannot afford an adequate diet, even if the food is
available in the market.
In some cases, however, the food challenges overwhelm the
capabilities of Government and civil society both. Gaps in coverage expose large numbers of the
poor to severe food insecurity. WFP
plays an important role in filling critical gaps in coverage to vulnerable,
food insecure households. In so
doing, WFP is complementing public sector initiatives by reaching groups whom
otherwise would be missed. This is
demonstrated most clearly in WFP’s programs in urban slums and peri-urban
areas, for these are regions hard-hit by the economic crisis which tend to fall
through the Government’s social safety net.
This is also the case for a large segment of the IDP’s whom, for reasons
of fiscal constraints and limited organizational capacity, Government is unable
to reach.
There are also severe food and nutrition problems, which
affect specific segments of the Indonesian population, such as the growth
faltering problem affecting infants and toddlers. New and innovative approaches
are required to break the inter-generational transmission of malnutrition and
impoverishment. WFP’s complementary
infant feeding and nutrition education initiative is aimed at applying an
innovative approach aimed at reducing the high incidence of infant
malnutrition. Likewise, efforts to
introduce school feeding in the urban slums as a means of combating school
drop-outs represent an innovative approach to addressing urban food insecurity
problems in the Indonesian context.
The involvement of local non-governmental organizations in
the delivery and management of food assistance efforts is also an innovative
approach in the Indonesian context. The
activities of local NGO’s were restricted under the New Order Government and
responsibility for addressing food insecurity was largely vested with the
state. With the transition to
democracy, civil society has begun to play a greater role in meeting
humanitarian challenges. In the case of
food assistance, however, there was very little capacity in civil society to
mount well-governed food assistance efforts. WFP’s partnerships with NGO’s to
develop their capacity to address food insecurity is another example of a
complementary, innovative approach to addressing a critical part of Indonesia’s hunger problem.
While civil society organizations can undoubtedly play a
growing role in combating hunger, Government must continue to bear the main
responsibility for combating food insecurity.
This implies a need for a strong policy commitment to food and nutrition
security, a clear and coherent policy framework and a set of robust government
programs that effectively serve to mitigate food insecurity in the short-run
and to eliminate it over time.
Indonesia’s public policies are in a state of flux and pressures for
reform are great. Gaps, deficiencies and
inconsistencies in food security policy---both in design and implementation---
contribute to weaknesses in the delivery of public assistance. WFP’s support for the development of improved
food security policy draws on lessons-learned from a wide-segment of donor, NGO
and government agencies and uses these to advocate for improvements in
policies for the food insecure.
WFP’s
efforts are designed to be complementary to the anti-hunger efforts of
Government, civil society, other donors and local communities. In strategic terms, its main role is to:
·
Fill
critical gaps with emergency food aid and subsidized OPSM rice to highly
food-insecure, vulnerable households thereby reaching needy people beyond the
reach of government and civil society;
·
Develop
innovative technical and institutional approaches to combating severe food
insecurity; and
·
Advocate
on behalf of Indonesia’s food insecure in a way that also assists Government
improve its food security policies and programs.
Consistent with this special role, WFP has defined a set
of activities and goals for fostering food security. These include:
·
Increasing
access to basic foods for the urban poor excluded from the Government’s food
assistance social safety net programme;
·
Help
reduce the drop out rate amongst primary school students;
·
Address
key nutritional concerns among children aged 6 to 24 months;
·
Provide
livelihood support to displaced persons and refugees; and
·
Contribute
to a long-term solution through better food security policy.
The pace and extent to which WFP should exit from its
operations depends on five inter-related factors:
1. The first is the pace at which
Indonesia’s economy recovers and the degree to which the hungry poor and food
insecure share the benefits of that recovery.
2. The second is the degree to
which instability, conflict and natural disaster incidents abate.
3. The third is the degree to which
Government is able to assume responsibilities from WFP, and provide adequate
coverage to those urban and IDP groups who tend to slip through the social
safety net.
4. The fourth factor to consider is
the degree to which WFP is able to continue its operations in an effective and
accountable manner.
5. And the fifth factor is the
extent to which the international community continues to support provision of
food assistance to address Indonesia’s food insecurity problems.
Each of these factors is discussed in turn.
IV. The Likely Setting for Future WFP
support to Indonesia
Sluggish Economic Recovery.
While Indonesia’s economy shows some tentative signs of recovery, growth
remains uneven and volatile, and exchange rate volatility is severe. Although the authorities were predicting a
rupiah to the dollar exchange rate of 7,000 for 2001, the exchange rate is now
hovering just above 11,000. Systemic
weaknesses in the banking and corporate sector are still to be addressed and
both Government and the private sector are saddled with a debt overhang that
now exceeds140 percent of GDP ($142 billion).
Public debt has reached nearly 90 percent of GDP, of which two-thirds is
related to the costs of restructuring the banking sector. Although Government’s external debt has been
restructured, nearly a quarter of public expenditures have been allocated to
domestic debt service. With limited
domestic revenue sources and strict limits imposed on foreign borrowing, the
Government’s resources (after debt service) are on the order of 15 percent of
GDP, a relatively small sum for a Government faced with major recovery,
security and governance improvement challenges.
At the current market
exchange rate, average per capita incomes for 2001 are forecast to be in the
range of US$650 per annum, with close to half of the population having an
annual income of less than US$350 per person.
Economic growth continues to be sluggish, with per capita income growth
of just 2 to 3 percent forecast for 2001.
The global slowdown in economic growth, and in particular the US
slowdown and the Japanese recession, is expected to reduce the pace of recovery
in 2002. With very little productive
investment and low levels of investor confidence, medium-term prospects are
mixed. While Government had initially
hoped that economic recovery would restore income levels to pre-crisis
conditions by 2005, this estimate has now been pushed back to 2008.
Whether or not living standards can in fact recover to 1996
levels by 2008 is difficult to predict. Medium-term recovery depends on the
restoration of investor confidence and there are few signs that confidence is
returning. Moreover, with a large debt overhang, the Government’s ability to
stimulate economic activity and borrow for public investment purposes will
remain highly constrained.
But it is not only the pace of recovery that will affect the
food security needs of the population.
With largely open markets for goods, services and capital, the effects
of changing global and domestic market conditions are rapidly transmitted to
the poor. A combination of currency
devaluation, imported inflation and sluggish wage adjustment can price basic
foodstuffs out of the reach of large numbers of wage earners. Commodity market fluctuations---such as the
2001 collapse in the international prices of rice and coffee---lead to an
immediate decline in the incomes of nearly sixteen million Indonesian farming
households, the majority of whom were poor or near-poor to begin with. Volatility in global and domestic markets and
the speed at which this volatility effects the purchasing power of the poor, will
continue to contribute to major swings in the numbers and characteristics of
food insecure households.
Global grain prices have fallen to historic lows on the
world markets. In the Asia region, rice
is trading at $120/ton to $130/ton fob for 25% broken. These prices are almost half of what they
were just two years ago[1].
That world grain price has fallen so low has important implications for
WFP’s operations.
Many policy makers conclude that low global grain prices
means that food security, at both a national and household level, is not a
priority concern. They tend to forget
that a vast number of households have very little purchasing power to begin
with. Moreover, low global grain prices
depress Indonesian farm incomes and reduce farm labor demand, both of which
combine to push the poor into the urban slums. With 14 million farm households
involved in rice production and many of those poor or near-poor, extraordinary
low global rice prices have immediate adverse effects on rural welfare.
Instability and Vulnerability to Natural Disasters.
Many of today’s regional, religious and ethnic conflicts can be thought
of as a sort of decompression after a long period of social repression.
Optimistically, a short period of decompression will be followed by a period of
democratic consolidation and national unity.
However, there are a number of reasons why one might believe that the
“decompression” stage might last for some time to come, including:
·
An
injustice overhang: There are large parts of the country in which the 12
million transmigrants resettled in the 1970s and 1980s are viewed as being
unwelcome “encroachers”. The
land-reallocation that took place in the 1980s and 1990s has yet to be
reversed. A legacy of Central Government and Javanese interference in the
operation of public administration off-Java adds to inter-ethnic concerns. The widening gap between living conditions of
the elite in urban Java and much of those in the Outer Islands fuels demands
for regional rebellion.
·
Limited
civilian control over the military. The
military remains a potent force in Indonesian society. While its role has been reduced, it’s still a
force to be reckoned with. The military’s record in respecting human rights and
observing civilian leadership merits improvement. Military culpability in regional conflict has
been acknowledged in East Timor and is a concern in Aceh and other parts of
Indonesia. Indonesia’s democratization threatens the degree to which the
military can retain its preferential economic position, particularly off of
Java. The military may well respond to
counter the simultaneous loss of economic “rents” and prestige.
·
Confrontation
Precedents. The granting of
Independence for East Timor has set a precedent for groups in other parts of
the nation. Official local Government
support for the expulsion of the Madurese population in Central Kalimantan sets
a precedent that other local governments, resentful of their minority
populations, might follow.
·
Political
Instability. Frequent cabinet changes,
policy shifts impeachment threats and rifts between the political parties
suggest a lack of leadership consensus and the possibility of politically
connected violence. Bombings incidents
in Jakarta and Surabaya, attacks on various party headquarters and public
protests are signs that political instability could turn violent.
·
Weaknesses
in Law and Order: The lack of a credible legal system means that opportunities
for peaceful resolution of perceived injustices are limited indeed. In areas
marked by long-standing conflicts (Aceh, Irian Jaya, Moluccas), Indonesia’s
limited institutional capacity to foster ethnic reconciliation constrains
Governments ability to prevent violence.
While the probability of regional conflict is perhaps higher
in certain regions (Aceh, Irian Jaya) than in others, large parts of the
archipelago remain at risk. In such an environment, minor incidents can trigger
widespread violence. Where and when such triggers will occur cannot be
predicted in advance. What can be said
is that large portions of the country could become potential IDP-generating
“hot spots” if such triggers were to occur.
It is worth remembering that internal displacement and
severe food insecurity also results from natural disasters. The El Nino drought of 1997-1998 contributed
to severe food insecurity in Eastern Indonesia, affecting upwards of 12 million
persons. Forest fires resulting from dry El Nino conditions contributed to crop
loss and smog-related health problems.
El Nino type droughts tend to reoccur every five to seven
years. Few measures have been taken to
prevent or plan for the likely adverse effects of the next El Nino. In the next
one to three years, the risk of an El Nino shock disrupting food supplies and
livelihoods in eastern Indonesia remains high.
Government’s ability to cover gaps.
The degree to which the Government is able to assume responsibility for
those WFP is now assisting depends on the resources available to them and their
institutional capacity to respond effectively to those in need. While there is
reason to believe that Government can play a growing role in delivering food
security services in the long-run, prospects are more limited in the
short-term.
The first and foremost constraint is simply one of severe
fiscal constraints. Public spending is
highly constrained by the debt overhang and the high cost of servicing the
debt, the small domestic tax base, a widening deficit and political resistance
to implementing cost-saving measures. In many regions, fiscal decentralization
has contributed to the emergence of wide imbalances between expenditure
requirements and revenue availability at the local level. In 2001, the Government deficit was forecast
to be 55 trillion rupiah (or approximately US$600 million) at the start of the
year. Forecasts have now been revised
upwards to 85 trillion rupiah (or US$720 million). Pressures to contain the budget deficit have
resulted in long delays in the release of the development budget and
under-expenditures on a number of agreed central and local government
programs. The 2001 budget has also been
under pressure due to delays in the release of IMF assistance, cancellation of
some multilateral assistance and the release of other assistance conditional on
IMF support.
Looking ahead, Government is bound to face a very difficult
fiscal outlook for at least the next four to five years. Government has committed itself to major
expenditure cuts and revenue enhancements in order to reduce the fiscal deficit
and lower the level of public debt (to a target of some 60 percent of GDP).
Moreover, the Government’s major donors (World Bank, Asian Development Bank)
have expressed their intention to sharply curtail the level of assistance
provided to Indonesia in the forthcoming years.
While terms of assistance from the multilateral banks are being
softened, the reduction in assistance flows will create an additional gap for
Government to finance. Pressures to
eliminate the deficit and slash the public debt mean that all public spending
is bound to come under greater scrutiny and cost-cutting pressure. The
Government’s ability to secure and ensure timely release of even small amounts
of counterpart funding for WFP programs from the budget may be difficult. What counterpart funding is available for
donor-assisted projects from the Government’s development budget is liable to
be allocated to the larger projects first. While Government may be willing and
mindful of the need to cover the cost of providing lifeline foods to IDPs or
ensuring that food security is met in the urban slums, it is unlikely that they
will have the fiscal ability to do so.
Government also faces internal management and institutional
capacity constraints that limit its ability to assume responsibility for those
vulnerable households that WFP is now assisting. Many of those residing in the slums and
peri-urban areas of the major cities are either illegal squatters or households
without the permits required residing in these cities. It is still difficult for local Government
to offer assistance to those households, especially when it does not recognize
their legal rights to reside where they are.
Moreover, with local governments facing severe fiscal constraints, they
tend to concentrate their efforts elsewhere.
At the national level, the Government has little ability to prepare for
emergencies, to collect and assess information on IDP’s or to respond in a
rapid and sustained manner to the needs of the IDPs. This reflects both the traditional allocation
of emergency response responsibilities to local Government (ie. the Governor’s
office) and to the sudden emergence of a large number of conflict related IDP
communities all at once.
The decentralization process and the desire by Government to
foster greater regional autonomy imply a change in the local of public sector
decision making. Local governments now
play a greater role in decision making, but the division of labor and authority
between local and central government is uncertain and evolving. This makes it especially difficult to reach
decisions that are both approved centrally and implemented locally.
WFP’s Ability to Operate Effectively.
Government will need to actively support food security programs and to
facilitate WFP activities if WFP’s assistance is to be efficiently and
effectively utilized. To date, the WFP has enjoyed a high level of cooperation
and assistance from the authorities, and the working relationship between WFP
and its partners in Government is generally good. But governance is constantly evolving in
Indonesia, and changes in political conditions and decision-making processes
can occur quickly. Shifts in public policy that could inhibit WFP’s ability to
effectively manage its programs include: demands by various Government
officials that only locally procured foodstuffs be used for food assistance
rather than imported grains; under and late-financing of the counterpart
requirements for selected WFP programs; and a national policy decision to
discontinue all social-safety net type assistance programs. While there are some signs of the first two
concerns, and periodic threats of the third, the risk that adverse policy
changes will happen and inhibit WFP’s ability to effectively operate its
programs is considered to be small.
Continued International Support for WFP Activities. The international donor community has
been generous in its support of WFP’s activities in Indonesia. WFP’s main Indonesia food aid donors do
foresee a need for continued support, particularly in light of the sluggish
economic recovery, deepening urban poverty and social conflict related
risks. Within the donor community,
however, support for food-assistance, or for relief efforts in general, is mixed. The World Bank, for example, has declared
that Indonesia has passed the worst of the crisis and that the immediate
challenge is to quickly reduce social safety net spending and focus instead on
pro-poor growth oriented poverty-reduction activities. The Bank has cancelled the second tranche of
their Social Safety Net loan. While the World Bank is a highly influential
donor, this view is not shared by all of Indonesia’s development partners. The Asian Development Bank (2001), in its
recent poverty assessment, argues that social protection (and safety net
programs) should be in place to help the poor and food insecure in both crisis
and non-crisis situations. The debate
within the donor community on the merits and demerits of social assistance is
bound to continue for some time to come. How it is resolved by the Indonesian
authorities is bound to affect the degree of policy support that Government
provides for WFP supported food-assistance programs.
V. Future Strategic Priorities
Meeting the Emergency Needs of the Internally Displaced Persons
Indonesia’s volatile ethnic, regional
and political situation has caused some 1.1 million persons to be either
internally displaced or to become refugees within Indonesia’s borders. Until
there is democratic consolidation and a significant easing of regional,
religious and ethnic tensions, one of WFP’s main roles will be to provide food
to meet the emergency needs of the internally displaced persons (IDPs) and
refugees. WFP is currently assisting
350,000 IDPs in Maluku and North Maluku.
Assistance to refugees in West Timor is currently suspended and
Government is providing food assistance there now to some 260,000 persons. It is also planned to provide assistance for
65,000 Madurese IDPs in East Java and for IDPs in Central Sulawesi.
If the security situation improves, it
should be possible to bring the assistance programs in West Timor to a close in
some two to three years. While WFP
should be prepared to continue providing food to bona fide and eligible
refugees in West Timor, there is concern that such assistance does not foster a
cycle of long-term dependency. In the
future, WFP should not support the maintenance of refugees in West Timor but
concentrate its assistance in repatriation and resettlement packages. WFP
should insist that combatant elements are somehow segregated from the civilian
populations since the combatants are a security risk, undermine fair relief
distribution and WFP is expressly forbidden to provide food assistance to
combatants. The main focus of future WFP support in West Timor should be on
repatriation and local resettlement. For
repatriation, the main priority is to establish a system in which ration cards
are traded-in for a repatriation ration.
In terms of local settlement, WFP support could provide for the food
requirements of households establishing their own homesteads for a period not
to normally exceed six months.
Given the nature, in which conflicts
both erupt and subside in the Malukus, it is impossible to accurately predict
the level of food assistance needs in 2001 or beyond. However, progress currently being made
towards reconciliation in North Maluku could reduce the number of IDP’s and
thus the need for food aid in that Province.
There is less room for optimism in Central Maluku because little progress
has been made towards reconciliation in Ambon and the surrounding islands.
The latest figure of IDP’s resulting
from the Maluku crisis is estimated to be just below 500,000 persons, of whom
some 320,000 require external assistance and support. WFP has fed some 320,000 persons on average
in the North and Central Maluku in the first quarter of 2001. By the end of the year, the total anticipated
number of beneficiaries is forecast to be as low as 200,000 persons.
WFP’s regional planning was based on
the assumption that the number of IDP’s that will require its assistance will
decline by more than fifty percent at the end of 2001. In the first two months of 2001, however, the
total number of IDPs in Indonesia has increased by some 25 percent, and there
are few signs that regional conflict pressures are abating. Contingency planning missions have been
conducted in Aceh and parts of Kalimantan.
Sustained conflicts in either of these Provinces could potentially
generate large numbers of IDPs.
Government and WFP are aware that the
number of IDPs could increase dramatically and with short notice. For this reason, the recently introduced
agreement between WFP and Government calls for BULOG to maintain a stock of 20,000
tons of rice that could be used for WFP emergency requirements in any part of
the country.
While each IDP situation is entirely
unique, the adequacy of the emergency response effort is constrained by, inter alia, a lack of a clear policy
framework between Government and WFP outlining the role of the Agency in
supporting emergency operations, weaknesses in the central and local Government
capacity to engage in contingency planning and other forms of emergency
preparation, rigidities in the government budgeting process and a lack of effective
coordination of the relief response effort between Government, the
international donors and the NGO community.
The combination of a lack of a clear policy framework, limited progress
made in reconciliation and a Government
coordination failure contributes to uncertainties regarding the allocation of
responsibilities, differences in the coverage and assistance provided to
similar groups of IDPs in the same region and a lack of clarity regarding
resettlement and repatriation policy.
Added to this is a difficult and often volatile security situation in
several of the IDP camps, particularly when combatants are effectively
indistinguishable from other IDPs and government is seen to be culpable for the
disaster.
In the lack of a strong, government-led
IDP coordination effort, WFP is inclined to establish assistance policies for
IDPs on a case-by-case basis. WFP’s implicit emergency response policy has been
to prepare contingency plans when there are signs of impending need (as in Aceh
and Irian Jaya), to try and assess the numbers of IDPs that will be assisted by
Government and the main humanitarian international NGOs, and to respond rapidly
to supply the food needs of those not covered by other assistance
providers. A food relief coordinating
group, chaired by WFP, provides periodic updates of the IDP situation and helps
to encourage the exchange of information on the relief situation.
As a first step in improving emergency
response, WFP will endeavor to develop a clear letter-of-understanding with
Government regarding policies for involving WFP in humanitarian response. This would serve to establish a policy
framework under which WFP’s response to each individual situation will be
structured. The remit of such an MOU could include burden-sharing arrangements,
emergency-financing procedures, contingency public food stocks and arrangements
under which WFP would assist Government to build emergency preparedness
capacity.
In the long run, the effectiveness of
the emergency response effort would be considerably improved if the agencies in
central and local government responsible for IDPs (ie. Bakornas, Satkorlak and
the Kanwil Social) were more effective in informing and coordinating
humanitarian assistance efforts. Over
the next two to three years, WFP should endeavor to build the institutional
capacity of Government to respond effectively to the emergency food
requirements of the IDPs. There appears
to be strong donor support for such institution building activities. Assistance
could be provided to Bakornas and the local Satkorlak’s in contingency
planning, emergency preparation management, assistance provider coordination
and the monitoring and reporting of food assistance flows[2]. Efforts need to be made to involve
Bakornas, BULOG and the Ministry of Finance in this effort. Accelerating the
pace of decision-making on emergency response, including the timely release of
funding for IDPs and refugees is also a major concern. Towards this end, WFP would work closely with
Bakornas, the Poverty Reduction Agency, BULOG, the Ministry of Finance and
other concerned stakeholders to develop operational mechanisms for policy
decision-making that would be more sensitive to the adverse effects of delays
on emergency operations.
To date, WFP has worked in partnership
with a range of international NGOs in delivering humanitarian food
assistance. While international NGOs
have and will continue to play an important role in providing humanitarian
relief, there is also a need for Indonesia to develop its local capacities to respond
to situations of man-made emergency.
WFP can help foster greater local civil
society capacities to respond to emergency situations by involving local NGOs
in the delivery of food relief to IDPs.
A start is being made in this direction with the planned involvement of
the Indonesian Red Crescent Society in the delivery of food assistance to
Madurese refugees in Java. Involving
local NGOs in the delivery of humanitarian relief will require an element of
capacity building on WFP’s part. But
this investment is bound to pay positive returns if, in the future, these
institutions become partners with Government in planning and executing relief
operations.
The UN System as a whole is planning to
enhance its emergency relief coordination efforts. An inter-agency task force,
headed by OCHA, is planning to encourage inter-agency contingency planning and
help build data bases on IDP needs. WFP
will certainly play an important role in this task force, and the proposed
activities can complement WFP’s investment in building disaster mitigation
capacity in Government. Moreover, there is a need for contingency planning for
“predictable” environmental shocks, such as the next El Nino, that may well
strike Indonesia in the next few years.
This could be a suitable topic for the inter-agency task force to
address, bearing in mind the lead-time required for a complex undertaking of
this sort.
The OPSM Program and the Urban Food Insecurity Challenge
WFP started OPSM in March 1999 with a pilot project
involving two NGOs and reaching 15,000 households in the slums of Jakarta. Under the emergency operation, during August
1999/ April 2000, OPSM assisted approximately 580,000 households in 750 urban
neighborhoods in four cities, Jakarta, Bandung, Semarang and Surabaya, in
partnership with 14 local NGOs. Since
October 2000, OPSM-WFP has been operating with 20 local NGO implementing
partners to assist a total of 524,000 household in Jabotabek (340,000
households), Bandung (40,000 households), Semarang (53,000 households) and
Surabaya (91,000 households). At the
end of the current operations in 2001, WFP hopes to reach around 550,000
households with OPSM-WFP.
A beneficiary impact survey of OPSM-WFP was conducted in
November 1999 and March 2000. The survey
concluded that the vast majority of OPSM beneficiaries are working as low-paid
factory workers, construction workers and street vendors with irregular
income. The average income of an
OPSM-WFP recipient was some 23 percent below the poverty line, and the average
household spent 74% of their income on food.
The impact assessment concluded that OPSM-WFP was well-managed, reaching
the intended target group, has a significant direct impact on food consumption
levels and an indirect impact on the ability of the household to afford
education and other household essentials.
That study also concluded that the manner in which OPSM is managed and
implemented are worth adopting by Government to improve its OPK program.
There continues to be a need for the
OPSM-WFP program in the urban areas for the next two to three years at the very
least. Average wages for unskilled
workers in the cities, measured in terms of their ability to purchase rice,
have recovered in the year 2000 and 2001, but measured in terms of their “rice
purchasing power”, these are still some 60 to 70 percent of what they were
prior to the crisis. Moreover, inflation
is accelerating in the wake of Indonesia’s recent currency devaluation, pricing
food staples out of the reach of the many urban poor. Prior to the crisis, the vast majority of
households living in the urban slums would have been classified as below
Indonesia’s poverty line, and hence vulnerable to poverty. With real wages still far below levels
reached prior to the crisis, and little prospect for wages to catch up until
the recovery accelerates, private investment resumes and inflation subsides,
the “crisis” is far from over for those households in the urban slums that WFP
is assisting.
In the future, there may be a
number of ways of improving the impact and effectiveness of the OPSM
program. First, to improve operational
efficiency and reduce what seems to be an operating overload on the program’s
NGO partners, consideration may be given to switching to a biweekly rather than
a weekly rice distribution. Prior to
this switch, a small-scale assessment should be made to assess whether or not a
significant number of beneficiary households would be unable to generate the
savings needed to meet a Rp.10,000 biweekly co-payment. Second, targeting should be sharpened using
the information available in the latest rounds of the BKKBN welfare
surveys. Those peri-urban areas in
Bekasi and Tanggerang that are not now covered may be included, and those
regions of Jakarta and Surabaya in which the poverty incidence has witnessed a
sharp decline can be phased-down. To
reduce the risk of duplication with the Government’s OPK program, that program
should be phased out in Jakarta and Surabaya and WFP given clear authority to
implement the program in those cities.
And third, there may be a need to revisit BULOG’s concerns regarding the
terms and procedures for swapping “low quality” rice and the procedures used to
account for losses and damages with imports.
The OPSM-WFP program was established as
an alternative approach for implementing the OPK program in the urban slums. It
was intended that Government would progressively absorb OPSM in its OPK program
as resources and institutional capacity permit.
WFP should promote the first stage of this hand-over during the next one
to three years. In the first stage,
BULOG has indicated its interest in assuming responsibility for OPSM
beneficiaries in Bandung. To effect this
hand-over, BULOG will require training in the management and supervision of an
NGO-based program. Mechanisms will also
need to be put in place to involve local government in the supervision of the
NGO program implementers. In the second
stage, WFP should hand-over responsibilities for the operation of program
activities in Semarang. For the next
two to three years, WFP should concentrate its efforts on implementing OPSM-WFP
in Jakarta and Surabaya (the two largest urban centres with the highest
concentration of urban poor, while actively assisting Government assume
responsibilities for OPSM-WFP beneficiaries in Bandung and Semarang.
As presently designed, the OPSM-WFP
program is mainly an income transfer scheme.
The longer the scheme continues the greater the risk of beneficiary
dependency. Efforts are needed to promote initiatives that will help OPSM
beneficiaries work their way out of poverty.
In 2001, it is estimated that some $ 10
to 12 million will be generated through the sale of subsidized rice and will be
available in the OPSM-WFP special fund.
Depending on the success in the pilot test of community development
activities, a small amount of fund may be allocated to support community
development activities. This can help
test establishing a process of sustainable development to combat hunger and
future continued assistance by the government.
Community development initiatives
should be operated and managed by the NGO partners some of which may be already
involved in the distribution of the OPSM rice.
These activities should be developed in full consultation with the
community beneficiaries. Proposals for
community development projects should be solicited from the NGO partners. These initially should be limited to
investments in simple community infrastructure and essential social services,
to ensure that the projects are both manageable by the NGOs and monitorable by
WFP. Guidelines are being prepared for
the implementation of community development projects and a pilot-test is to be
undertaken this year. Over the next two
to three years, a small amount of funds may continued to be allocated to
continue pilot test such an initiative, should the effort from the current
operation is proved to be successful.
From its inception, OPSM-WFP was
designed to provide valuable policy lessons to government on the effective
management of an urban subsidized food transfer program. It is important that OPSM-WFP be regularly
evaluated and assessed in order to distill these lessons and share those with
Government. The OPK program (i.e.
Government’s rice subsidy program) needs to be improved in many respects.
Targeting is poor; the division of responsibility and accountability between
BULOG and local Government has many short comings. Monitoring, evaluation and dispute resolution
procedures are deficient, and NGOs have yet to be tapped for implementation. Working closely with BULOG to help design
improvements in OPK, and to provide their staff with the training in approaches
and methods that will improve the management of that program, can make a significant
contribution to the Government’s food security effort. WFP is the only donor agency working in
partnership with BULOG at present, and it is viewed as a well-respected and
trusted partner in reforming both the program and the way in which the Agency manages
its operations. This inter-institutional
goodwill should be capitalized on to enhance the efficiency and effectiveness
of the OPK program. Ultimately, a
well-run OPK effort can replace WFP’s assistance in the urban areas.
The real value of the implicit income
transfer afforded by the OPSM-WFP subsidy has been eroded by falling market
rice prices and inflation. In the
near-term, consideration could be given to either increasing the implicit
subsidy or to increasing the amount of the monthly ration offered to each
eligible beneficiary. Any such change
should only be made if Government is willing to make the same change to its OPK
program. BULOG and WFP should jointly
assess whether the OPK and the OPSM-WFP implicit subsidy is too low, too high
or still suitable relative to the size of the food-income gap (i.e. the amount
of income required so that the family can afford a 2100 calorie diet).
Provision of Complementary Infant Foods and Nutrition Education
Some forty percent of Indonesia’s
infants suffer from growth faltering and malnutrition. This problem is particularly acute amongst
the low-income population. Ultimately, it leads to the transmission of poverty
from generation-to-generation.
Government has declared that breaking the inter-generational
transmission of poverty is one of its highest priorities and a major effort has
been made to focus attention on the nutrition needs of Indonesia’s
infants.
Due to limited resources, the
Government expects to be able to cover approximately one-half of the low-income
households with food supplements for infants provided (at subsidized prices)
through the public health service. The
balance is to be covered by support provided by the donor community. In addition, the private sector is to be
encouraged to promote and distribute complementary infant foods on a commercial
basis, to boost nutrition awareness and increase the availability of these
products in the marketplace.
Although the nutrition component of the
WFP assistance has been implemented for less than four months, project monitoring
reports suggest that both the nutrition education and the complementary infant
feeding are well-received by the target beneficiary population. During the next year, the efficacy of
DELVITA should be established in both clinical trials and field surveys. There may also be a need to simplify the
program to ensure that coverage can be rapidly expanded. Further fine-tuning of either the nutrition
supplement or the nutrition messages should be based on the results of the
efficacy trials.
There is an opportunity to
significantly expand the reach of complementary infant foods and nutrition
education by teaming-up with UNICEF in this area. WFP and UNICEF have signed an
MOU to cooperate in food and nutrition matters.
This MOU provides a framework for cooperation that can be put into
practice on the infant-feeding challenge.
Over the next two to three years, WFP
and UNICEF should cooperate in developing an infant nutrition program that
covers both the main urban areas (where OPSM-WFP is operating) and the 40 rural
districts (in which UNICEF operates). WFP should take responsibility for
ensuring that the complementary infant food is produced (through local
manufacturers) and that it is effectively delivered from the factory to either
the ultimate beneficiaries (in the case of OPSM-WFP) or to the health points at
which UNICEF operates[3].
UNICEF should be responsible for supervising nutrition education and
outreach efforts as well as the provision of any complementary input (weighing
scales, health-related inputs). UNICEF
and WFP could make a joint appeal for the food commodities to meet the needs of
the infant population in both the urban areas and the 40 districts in which
UNICEF operates.
Cooperation with UNICEF on the
provision of fortified food offers WFP an important opportunity to
significantly expand the benefits of complementary infant feeding to
Indonesia’s most vulnerable group.
Moreover, it provides an opportunity to test two different, but
complementary approaches, to tackling the infant growth-faltering problem. For WFP, the urban approach has been to use
complementary infant foods to help prevent growth faltering and micronutrient
deficiency. UNICEF, by contrast, prefers
to integrate the provision of complementary infant foods more closely with
nutrition monitoring in the public health service and to provide these only
when there is evidence of growth faltering due to a lack of food or purchasing
power. This could be considered a more
“fine-tuned” or curative approach to supplementary infant feeding. Both approaches may be suitable for different
settings----where nutrition information and awareness at the household level is
readily available, a curative approach may be more cost-effective. Where such information can only be obtained
at a high cost, or is subject to considerable error, a “preventative” approach
may be more cost-effective. In practice,
the two approaches may well prove complementary.
The ultimate challenge, however, is to
ensure that all low-income families have access to suitable nutrition education
and, where required, affordable complementary infant foods. This implies that the WFP and UNICEF
complementary infant feeding initiatives should be mainstreamed into Government
programs as quickly as possible. WFP and
UNICEF should plan in advance to mainstream these initiatives (i.e. have them
incorporated into routine government programs) by close involvement of
Government agencies (especially the health ministry) in the design and program
formulation processes[4]. While “curative” type initiatives
might be appropriately mainstreamed into some of the ongoing Ministry of Health
programs, “preventative” initiatives might be more suitably mainstreamed into
the food subsidy distribution activities that BULOG operates.
Given the importance of eventually
mainstreaming these initiatives, it is essential that the impact and the
efficacy of a future infant supplementary feeding and nutrition education
effort be carefully monitored and its impact accurately measured. Hard, well-documented evidence will be needed
for the Government to decide whether or not there is merit in mainstreaming and
scaling-up these initiatives to cover the nation as a whole, and if so, what
form it should take.
The Urban School Program
The urban school program is
aimed at combating drop-outs in poor urban areas and augmenting the food intake
and purchasing power of poor urban children.
The program is in line with WFP’s global initiative to support school
feeding. The program has suffered from
delayed releases in counterpart funds which, in turn, have disrupted and
delayed the delivery of dry rations to the schools. This problem has increased over time and now
threatens to undermine the third round of program support. Other problems include difficulties in
beneficiary selection, sale of what was intended to be free rice and the use of
part of the assistance by the teachers themselves.
While the latter problems have
weakened the efficacy of the program, it has been the late release of
counterpart funds that has been most responsible for disrupting the program
implementation. The fact that Government
has been unable to provide timely release of counterpart funds reflects the
fact that Government’s fiscal situation has become increasingly precarious in
the past two years. There is little
sign that this will improve in the future. Indeed, the Government has
requesting WFP to fully finance any future school feeding efforts. Proposals have been submitted by Government
for a school feeding plan that would involve the provision of food commodities
to private agro-processors who would, in turn, deliver processed food packets
to the participating urban schools at no cost to government.
At this juncture, it is worth
reconsidering both the need and the merits of an urban slum school feeding
program. Research by Oey-Gardiner
(1999), World Bank (2001) and the Asian Development Bank (2001) shows that
there has been remarkably little change in drop-out rates during the crisis and
that aggregate enrollment rates have remained very high indeed, especially at
the primary school level. Apparently, in
most urban areas, the vast majority of poor children continue attending primary
school despite the enormous deterioration in economic conditions. Oey-Gardiner argues that this can be
explained by a combination of the high value that parents attach to children’s
schooling, the provision of school scholarship programs as part of the
Government’s social safety net and the relatively low cost of primary school
fees compared to other items in the household’s budget[5]. Indonesia’s school feeding program in the
rural areas continues to work reasonably well, and this involves a large
measure of community participation and the use of locally (and often
collectively) cultivated foodstuffs.
There is little merit in undertaking an
urban school feeding program in which Government makes no counterpart
contribution whatsoever and in which the private sector is obliged to prepare
and deliver a range of “pre-cooked” meals.
The lack of a counterpart contribution would mean that such programs are
hardly sustainable in the long-run. The fact that the new program concept
relies not on the distribution of WFP commodities but on processed
lunch-packages makes it difficult to mobilize resources for such an effort and
practically impossible to monitor.
A number of Government officials argue
that a large-scale school program in Indonesia’s urban schools is perhaps
inappropriate at this point in time.
They note that most schools lack cooking and food storage
facilities. The immediate priority for
these schools is not to add cooking and food storage facilities, but to repair
dilapidated facilities, purchase school supplies and to attract and motivate
teachers. Efforts to upgrade school
quality, they argue, would have far more impact on raising returns to education
than would the provision of school lunches.
After the current round of the school
program is completed, it is recommended that this program be brought to an
end. Consideration could be given to
reaching school drop-outs more directly, by supporting establishment of schools
for street children and drop-outs as one of the WFP-supported NGOs (PARAM) has
already done in Jakarta. Other donors, such
as the ADB, are also providing funding support for a range of street children
programs.
Government should be encouraged, as
part of WFP’s policy dialogue, to examine a range of options for ensuring that
low-income urban children’s school feeding requirements are met. Linking school feeding to educational
achievement and to improvement in school facilities may have some merit, and
there is much that can be learned from experience with such programs in other
countries.
Vulnerability Monitoring and Analysis
Responses that protect the poor will be
considerably easier to design if more is understood on how crises affect food
security of different sectors and groups within sectors. Indonesia needs to
develop analytical tools that are more helpful in describing the structure of
an economy and its sectors, that distinguish more clearly between socio
economic groups, gender and age distribution, and that allow us to model the
impacts of shocks and the likely outcomes of the policy responses to a much
higher degree of accuracy than seems possible at present. We also need to understand much better the
linkage between household vulnerability, coping strategies and livelihood
options. Poverty, food insecurity and
malnutrition are related but not identical concepts, and the role of food
assistance depends very much on whether or not an inability to afford food is
part of the problem.
Vulnerability analysis becomes
even more important now as the Indonesian economy begins to recover. Such analysis can be used to identify
segments of the population that are still likely to be food insecure. It can also be used to help capture the
population shifts from “food secure” to “food insecure” that arise when
commodity prices change, exchange rates devalue, government budgets decline or
regional conflicts erupt. In this sense,
vulnerability analysis techniques have an important role to play as a tool for
better targeting, for contingency planning and for explaining the likely
consequences of rapidly changing economic and social conditions.
One simple “vulnerability” indicator
that should be monitored as a leading indicator of urban welfare adequacy is
the rice-purchasing power of the daily wage.
Prior to the crisis, urban workers were able to afford 15 to 18 kg of
rice with their daily wage. This has now
fallen to 9 to 11 kgs, while the relative price of luxury food and non-food
necessities has increased sharply.
Monitoring daily wages, and what that wage can buy in terms of rice
offered in the retail markets, will provide an approximate measure of the
adequacy of food entitlements for many of the urban households that WFP is
assisting.
The WFP has developed a good analytical
reputation and has established a useful network of food security contacts for
vulnerability analysis. In the years to
come, it can play an increasingly important role in at least three
respects. First, VAM must become
intimately involved in evaluating the impact and efficacy of ongoing WFP
programs. In an era of limited
resources, WFP must demonstrate that its resources are used as efficiently as
possible and are adequate for coping with the food insecurity task at
hand. Indeed, little is known about the
efficacy and impact of several of the ongoing WFP programs. Better information
can help steer these programs in the right direction. More importantly, this information can be
used to help advocate for incorporating the lesson’s learned from WFP supported
initiatives in the Government’s own programs.
Second, the use and refinement of VAM tools can help Government
better target its limited OPK (and other food social safety net) resources.
Drawing on a sound understanding of the theory, practice and pragmatics of
program targeting (See van der Walle 1998, Gelbarth 1998 and World Bank Social
Protection Web Site), the WFP can provide a range of useful tools and insights
into approaches that can be adopted to enhance the cost-effectiveness of food
assistance programs. Capacity building
with BULOG and the Ministry of Agriculture’s BIMAS Food Security Agency on
program targeting should be accorded a high priority. Third, there is an urgent need to
work with Government on the development of short and long-term monitoring
systems which can deliver timely, accurate data to be put in place as part of
any strategy to deal with future crises. Good data must include a list of those
persons, households or communities likely to require food assistance at one
point of time or another. Development of
a timely, periodically updated “potential beneficiary list” is especially
important in the urban and peri-urban areas because scope for self-selection
there in food-based social assistance programs is limited.
Food Security Policy Reform
The experience in Indonesia and many
other countries shows that there is a pressing need for governments to reform
policies and institutions to deliver an acceptable level of food security to
all segments of the society in as cost-effective way as possible. Each of the
three dimensions of food security -- food availability, access and utilization
-have to be addressed in advance of crises if governments are to be able to
respond quickly and overcome acute problems of inadequate food entitlements,
malnutrition and starvation. Clearly, the availability of foodstuffs is
conditional on the weather, the distribution infrastructure and any constraints
on movement of food from surplus to deficit areas that may arise, for example,
during civil disturbances. Governments need to secure adequate basic food
imports in partnership with the private sector, to build public grain stocks
and to have reliable distribution channels to meet the crisis needs. They must
be ready to inject foodstuffs into the domestic market to stabilize supply and
to have sufficient stocks on hand to meet welfare needs. They must have robust social protection
programs that ensure that vulnerable groups have the purchasing power needed to
meet minimal food requirements. And they
must ensure that the special food needs of the vulnerable group, infants,
under-5’s and pregnant and lactating mothers—are protected at all times.
WFP assistance in the food security
area has improved information exchange and helped strengthen understanding of
food security challenges for the vulnerable and the poor. Fostering informed
debate, serving as an honest broker, building networks of individuals and
agencies concerned with improving food security and advocating on behalf of the
food secure should be continued by WFP. WFP advocacy has been important in
keeping food insecurity on the policy radar and ensuring that food security
concerns are reflected in major national planning documents.
But despite these efforts, Government’s
food security policy is still in a state of flux. Programs and policies choices appear to be
ad-hoc and taken in response to crisis-related shocks rather than by a well
thought-out strategy for long-term food security reform. The “crisis” has, however, sensitized policy
makers to the need to restore food security and ensure that the needs of
vulnerable groups are met.
WFP should continue to support
effective food security policy debate, but should do so in a way that is both
more analytical and policy change oriented.
To enhance the analytical foundations for WFP’s advocacy efforts, more
effort needs to be put into monitoring the impact of the various ongoing WFP
programs addressing the concern for the poor and the food insecure. High-quality impact evaluations should be
conducted in order to demonstrate (and quantify where possible) the possible
implications of such programs on a range of welfare outcomes. Impact evaluations should also be used to
assess and identify options for managing problems that arise with practically
any assistance scheme (i.e. targeting error, adverse incentives, moral hazard,
and dependency) and to solicit local participation in the assessment of program
efficacy.
Given that WFP activities are well
monitored in practice, evaluation work becomes perhaps more important from a
policy vantage point than it does from a program management standpoint.
Government must be convinced that these programs are effective and efficient
before they take over these programs.
Better impact assessment information
can also provide a valuable source of practical, experience-based information
for public policy advocacy. Towards this
end, WFP should consider assisting in policy work on food and nutrition
security, possibly in partnership with agency such as UNICEF. The preparation
of a policy paper would provide an excellent opportunity to synthesize what is
known about the changing food security and nutrition situation, best practices
in tackling food and nutrition insecurity while helping Government identify
core policies and programs to bolster food security for the poor in the years
to come. BAPPENAS uses such Papers to
stimulate debate and foster shared understanding in public policy reform.
Indeed, Bappenas has requested UNSFIR assistance in preparing white papers on
five different topics, including one on social policy. In as much as food and nutrition security is
one aspect of the broader social policy nexus, the work outlined above could
also provide valuable inputs into the broader UNSFIR effort.
If the Government has a sound and
effective food security policy, this will provide clear program guidance to a
number of the Government and civil society organizations involved in delivering
food assistance. By helping Government
strengthen its food security policy, WFP is aiming to help Government put such
a framework in place. This, unto itself,
will significantly diminish the need for external food assistance.
Alternative Initiatives and Building on Core Competence
In developing this strategy a range
of additional initiatives has been considered.
Food-for-work programs, rural food assistance and assistance linked more
directly to rural development schemes have been discussed. In recent years, the Government’s public
works programs have had a poor track record, and it is no longer Government’s
policy to support such initiatives. The
majority of the hungry poor are in the rural areas. While WFP does address one segment of this
population (the IDPs and refugees), it does not directly provide assistance to
the others. The main reason for avoiding
new, rural programs is that the Government already operates a large-scale rice
subsidy program (OPK) in the rural areas.
WFP can be most effective in helping the hungry rural population by
working with Government to improve the efficacy and impact of its OPK program,
rather than by intervening directly to reach this target group. While there may be some merit in linking food
aid more directly to agriculture and rural development, Indonesia's
decentralization process makes it impossible, at this point in time, to obtain
government concurrence or budgetary support for such initiatives.
One of the lessons learned by WFP was
that the closure of operations in 1996 and the re-start in 1998 was a costly
experience. Precious time was needed
after WFP’s operations were re-established to assess needs, recruit staff,
engage appropriate partners, design suitable programs and develop trust and
credibility with key Government interlocutors. Given the precariousness of Indonesia’s
economic, political and security situation, closing down operations too soon
could pose very high costs in the years to come. At this juncture, WFP has a number of high
impact programs that are reaching large numbers of vulnerable, hungry
poor. WFP can build on the solid track
record it has set with its assistance programs and build on its core
institutional competence to assist Government and civil society gradually
assume these assistance responsibilities.
VI. Implementation Issues
Program Planning, Monitoring and Evaluation
WFP will be under greater
pressure to show that its program plans are sound and to demonstrate results if
it is to secure adequate donor and government support for its future
activities. This is especially the case
as the program moves beyond an initial to a more extended recovery operation.
While it is fortunate that WFP is building on a strong core of effective and
innovative programs, fierce competition for assistance resources dictates that
rigorous program planning, monitoring and evaluation procedures be adhered
to.
To help focus attention (by
donors and WFP’s development partners) on the expected results, goals and
objectives of WFP assistance, it is suggested that a logical framework be
prepared for each program. To enhance
program governance, information should be widely disseminated, suitable
complaint resolution mechanisms need to be established and ample resources
devoted to program monitoring and dispute resolution. Regular process and impact evaluations of WFP
programs should be supervised by a panel of in-house and external experts (such
as those from the SMERU institute) to ensure that the methodologies are sound
and the results credible.
Government food security
policy makers should be closely involved in the process of WFP program
evaluation, particularly since it is expected that the lessons from these
exercises will help better inform food security policy making. Efforts should be made to ensure that the
findings of program evaluation studies are widely disseminated, through the
Food Security Working Group, the media and public presentations.
Institutional governance is a
problem in Indonesia today but better accountability measures are slowly
evolving. Whether one is working with
Government agencies, the private sector or with NGOs, corruption and
malfeasance is a concern and must be vigilantly combated. WFP should continue
to stress its intolerance on corruption of any kind and the agency’s
monitoring, accounting, auditing, financial management and reporting efforts
are designed to avoid, detect and combat such problems. WFP’s implementing partners continue to be
periodically reminded of the importance that the agency attaches to
accountability and good governance in the delivery of food assistance. Sound financial management procedures,
careful monitoring and objective program evaluation have been found to be
effective ways of ensuring program accountability and maintaining the
credibility of WFP’s assistance effort.
Staffing
WFP Indonesia currently
consists of 12 international regular and 55 national professional and support
staff. WFP Indonesia has its main office
in Jakarta and sub-offices in Surabaya, Semarang, Kupang and Atambua. By global standards, WFP’s operations are
highly cost-effective, with the total costs of food delivered to beneficiaries
less than the average domestic cost of the equivalent foodstuffs (or an alpha
ratio under 1).
There may be a need to change
both the size and composition of the staff in the future. If the school program is brought to an
orderly close and if the Government assumes responsibility for OPSM activities
in Semarang, than staff involved in those tasks could be deployed elsewhere.
Greater emphasis on capacity
building with Government and NGOs, in the areas of IDP and refugee relief
planning, OPSM-hand over and food security policy may require to expand staffing
(and use of local and international consultants) in these areas. WFP may wish to post staff within the
counterpart agencies such as Bappenas to assist in food security policy
analysis and WFP program management within agencies; BAKORNAS to assist in emergency
preparedness planning and relief coordination; and a small number of staff in
BULOG to assist in OPK reform. This can
contribute to capacity building in WFP’s key counterpart organizations while
also enhancing the operation of WFP’s ongoing programs.
Program Resources
Generous assistance to WFP has
been provided by a wide range of donor agencies. Australia, France, Germany, Italy, Ireland,
Japan, the Netherlands, Norway and the USA have contributed some 284,000 tons
of food aid to support the first emergency operation. In terms of their share of this tonnage, the
USA (52%), Australia (21%) and Japan (16%) were the major donors. A total of 108, 000 tons has been donated to
date for the PRRO operation. Japan (44%)
and the USA (55%) are the major donors and the Netherlands has provided support
for the purchase of pulses and salt for the IDPs.
The strategy discussed above
anticipates the need to provide support for approximately 300,000 low-income
urban OPSM recipients for the next few years.
This would require approximately 70,000 tons of rice per annum. While estimates of IDP and refugee needs
remain highly uncertain, and assuming that WFP continues to meet an average of
about one third of the food needs of these IDPs (and the Government the
remainder), this would imply that some 350,000 IDPs/ refugees will continue to
require WFP support. An additional
50,000 tons of grains would be needed to meet the needs of this group. For medium-term planning purposes, the total
annual rice requirement is estimated at approximately 120,000 tons. In addition, for the complementary infant
feeding programs (ie. Delvita) that WFP and UNICEF are planning to mount,
approximately 10,000 tons of fortified food will be needed each year.
VII.
Conclusions
Optimistically, the Indonesian
economy will recover rapidly, democracy and national unity will be restored,
IDPs and refugees will quickly return home and Government will assume all
responsibility for addressing the needs of the hungry poor and vulnerable
groups. In such a scenario, WFP could
plan to exit Indonesia quite soon, and be confident that the food security
challenges facing Indonesia are adequately addressed.
In a worst case scenario,
Indonesia’s recovery is delayed for a decade or more by the crushing debt
overhang and an inability to mount deep structural reform and restore investor
credibility. Social tensions erupt in
various parts of the country triggering a significant expansion in the numbers
of internally displaced persons.
Government faces tremendous budget pressures and is simply unable to
address the needs of a rising number of hungry poor households. In this case, WFP would have to concentrate
its limited resources on the poorest of the poor, which in this case would be
the IDPs and other victims of natural and man-made disaster.
The most realistic scenario, however,
is that economic recovery begins in earnest after 3 to 5 years; that a
broad-based recovery significantly reduces the number of food insecure
households; that social and ethnic conflicts abate in two to three years time;
and finally, as progress is made in reducing the public debt overhang and
increasing domestic resource mobilization, Government does devote more
resources to combating food insecurity.
In this context, WFP should plan to continue operations in Indonesia for
another three to five years.
The program should give highest priority to
meeting the emergency needs of the IDPs, both through direct assistance to
about half of this population, through ongoing food assistance coordination
efforts, by strengthening Governments emergency preparedness capacity and by
involving competent local NGOs in the delivery of assistance. The urban OPSM program should be continued, but
its focus should be limited to Jakarta and Surabaya. WFP will draw on the
lessons from its success in OPSM to assist Government improve the effectiveness
of its large OPK program and to integrate OPSM and OPK activities in the major
urban centers. More attention should be
accorded to the nutrition component of WFP, and a potential joint initiative
with UNICEF can expand the reach of complementary infant foods to a large
segment of the vulnerable population.
Efforts to assist Government improve its food security policies should
continue, through a combination of partnership with key agencies involved in
generating policy reform recommendations and, at the request of Government and
in partnership with UNICEF, assistance in the preparation of a policy paper on
food and nutrition security. These
activities are clearly linked to a well-defined set of target groups and to
programs that are operating and have been shown to be highly effective. While Indonesia’s evolving economic and
security conditions are difficult to predict, WFP can set the stage for its
exit over the next three to five years by assisting in the repatriation and
relocation of refugees and IDPs, enhancing the emergency preparedness and
response capacity of Government, assisting government to improve the efficacy
and impact of OPK (its national food assistance program), scaling-up the
complementary infant feeding initiative, involving civil society organizations
in all facets of assistance, nutrition and community development in the major
urban slums and helping Government forge a more robust food security
policy.
There should be two main
objective indicators used to measure the degree to which WFP interventions are
needed in the major urban areas and to assist the IDPs and refugees. For the former, a recovery in the real daily
wage will indicate the degree to which those low income households in the urban
slums can afford to meet minimum food requirements with what are likely to be
casual earnings for some time to come.
Prior to the crisis, the
“daily” wage in the major cities could buy 15 to 17 kilograms of rice at retail
market prices. In rice purchasing power
terms, this fell sharply in 1998 and 1998 and started to recover in 2000. At
present, in Jakarta the average daily wage is sufficient to buy just 10-12 kgs
of rice per day, still far below the levels prevailing prior to the
crisis. With respect to the refugees
and IDPs, the key exit indicator is the number of persons who are classified as
IDPs and for which neither government, other donors or international NGOs, can
assist. If the number of IDPs is reduced
to a few hundred thousand, and if Government and other NGOs are adequately
assisting this group, emergency operations can be phased out.
To pave the way towards an
orderly exit, the key challenge is to assist Government and civil society to
develop the capacity to assume responsibility for assisting the target groups
that WFP is presently concentrating on before WFP ceases operations. In the case of OPSM, the near-term challenge
is to hand over (and assist in)
implementation of that program to BULOG for Bandung and Semarang. This will need to be coupled with capacity
building assistance for BULOG aimed at helping that organization draw on the
lessons from OPSM to improve its OPK program.
Over time, the OPK and OPSM efforts could be effectively merged and
Government could assume responsibility for distribution of subsidized rice to
the poor in both urban and rural areas.
Likewise, efforts should be
made to strengthen Government emergency preparedness and coordination
capacity. If this capacity is put in
place, and if appropriate financing and relief management mechanisms are
developed, Government should be able to meet the emergency food needs of the
vast majority of those internally displaced.
The nutrition program is to be
mounted in partnership with UNICEF.
While this is a very high priority initiative, the tons of food involved
are quite small. Once the program has been up and running for two to three years,
it should be possible to either turn over responsibilities for coordinating of
this activity to UNICEF and for the Government to operate this as a routine
nutrition program.
Efforts to assist Government develop a food security
policy will be complete if a policy framework that sets forth a medium-term
vision and clear set of entitlements and programs is established and
approved. The contribution in the
preparation of food security policy paper is aimed at making a substantial
contribution towards this objective.
WFP
Indonesia
April
2001
Sources Consulted
Amang, B., N. Soetrisno and Sapuan.
1996. "Can Indonesia Feed Itself?" Paper presented at the second
conference of ASAE, Bali, Indonesia, August 1996.
Asian Development Bank & World
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[1]
Average food prices fell by 5.2% in nominal terms in 1999 and by 1.4% in
2000. Similar declines were registered
in China. Modest increases in food
prices were registered in all other major Asian states (Farm Foundation 2001).
[2]
This is in line with the WFP (2000) global strategy on adopting a strategic
approach to disaster mitigation.
[3]
These include some of the most densely populated provinces, accounting for
close to half of the total rural population and just under two-thirds of the
rural poor.
[4]
This does not imply that Government agencies would necessarily implement these
initiatives. The choice of the
implementing partners, from Government, NGOs, CBOs and the private sector,
would depend on which had the likely institutional capacity to undertake these
activities in the most effective manner.
[5]
For the poorest decile of households interviewed in the SUSENAS survey, school
fees accounted for 2 to 3 percent of total household expenditures compared to
some 75-80 of household expenditures on food items. Gardiner (1999) concludes that parents have
tended to degrade the household diet, as well as cope in other manners, to
ensure that adequate resources were available to meet the school fee requirement.
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