Indonesia and bilateral trade agreements (BTAs) |
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Authors: | Alexander C. Chandra |
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Affiliation: | The Institute for Global Justice (IGJ), Jl. Diponegoro No. 9, Menteng , Jakarta, 10310, Pusat, Indonesia |
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Abstract: | Abstract This paper analyses the perspectives of Indonesian state and non-state actors towards their country's increasing tendency to use bilateral trade agreements (BTAs) as part of its foreign economic policy. Unlike the other original members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), the Indonesian government has been rather slow in pursuing a BTA policy with non-ASEAN member countries. Nevertheless, due to the proliferation of BTAs in other ASEAN countries' foreign economic policies, it was inevitable that Indonesia would pursue similar agreements with its non-ASEAN major trading partners. Despite this, it remains questionable whether Indonesia's participation in such trade agreements will produce such positive results for Indonesian economy. The attitude of the majority of Indonesian domestic constituents to date remains sceptical to this type of agreement. This is not only because BTAs create specific obligations on a range of issues, from trade and investment regimes, this trade strategy also involves deeper and more comprehensive commitments that those agreed at the multilateral level. |
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Keywords: | Indonesia ASEAN bilateral trade agreements foreign economic policy state and non-state actors. |
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