Culture Matters!
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Gary Dean, May 2001
Reference:
http://okusi.net/garydean/works/culturematters.html
[Note: The views contained within this article are entirely
my own and do not necessarily reflect past or present
opinions or policies of any other person or organisation.]
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Culture really matters when doing business, especially in
Indonesia. An understanding of the cultures, outlooks, perceptions of
the people with whom we do business, as well as an understanding of our
own cultures and values, has enormous real practical application
and value. What follows is an email reply I sent to Mr. Dennis De Tray,
the former country director of the World Bank in Indonesia at the time
of the economic crisis. It briefly discusses why "culture matters".
----- Original Message -----
From: "Gary Dean" <xxxxxxxx@xxxxx.xxx>
To: "de Tray, Dennis" <xxxxxxx@xxx.xxx>
Subject: RE: Your "Analysing the end of Suharto's Indonesia"
Date: Wed, 16 May 2001 13:53:27 +0700
Hello Dennis
It's taken me a while to get back to this. I've just got back from my
project in the wilds of Tasikmalaya (West Java).
> The IMF address temporary (a two-year assignment here in Hanoi)
> but is not as important as the fact that I was the World Bank's
> country director in Jakarta from '94 to April '99. You probably
> knew this, but just in case.
Well, actually, it did not ring a bell until you mentioned it 8-).
Reassembling your name into the right order brought back fond memories
of the "good old days", when life was full of New Order certainty, and
all the trains ran on time ... ;-)
> By the way, the problem with cultural views of
> countries and development is that they don't
> generally have practical implications. That
> doesn't of course mean that one should ignore
> them, but it is hard sometimes to know what
> to do with them.
This statement of yours has been rolling about in my brain off and on
for the past few weeks. The problem for me is that what you say seems
to embody some inherent truth. However, such a view seems to completely
contradict much of what I have been about these past five years as a
practising business consultant in Indonesia.
In my opinion, a "culturalist" approach is absolutely essential for any
foreigner doing business with Indonesians and/or in Indonesia. To take
any other approach is to invite disaster, as the constant procession of
Western businesspeople leaving Indonesia with their tails between their
legs these past few decades should testify. For me there is not a day
or hour that goes by without me needing to deal with often complex
matters that always have some kind of basis in traditional Indonesian --
usually "Javanese" - cultures.
For me as a Westerner doing business in Indonesia, a deeper than average
knowledge of Indonesian culture has very direct and practical
applications. Just to cite one isolated example from my current
experience: I am presently engaged as a management consultant to an
American firm in Tasikmalaya producing items for office/home use made
from pandan and coconut wood. 100% of the product is exported to the
American HQ in San Francisco, amounting to about 4-5 large containers
per month. 350 Sundanese workers are directly employed by this
enterprise, and a largish network of dependant outside suppliers of raw
materials and services is also supported.
Several years ago an Indonesian manager - an ostensibly "Westernised"
Javanese from Jepara called "Suharto" (no (direct) relation!) - was
employed to handle the day to day operations of the factory. Over a
period of time, however, the owners noticed that his behaviour becoming
increasingly "strange" and distant. Communication was difficult,
internal affairs of the factory increasingly opaque, and accountability
virtually nil.
The enterprise was being operated in classic Javanese fashion, with the
manager "reigning" more than managing, and with huge power distance
between himself and others in the factory. Information flows between
sections in the factory were disjointed and highly inefficient. Various
informal factions formed within the factory, with the beneficiaries of
the manager's largesse clearly siding with him. The rest of the workers
comprised a discontented, frustrated and powerless mass. These
conflicts and divisions were consciously invoked by the manager in order
to keep the workers in a constant state of instability.
By mid-2000 it was becoming clear that this manager was organising for a
forceful takeover of the factory, enlisting the assistance of the local
bureaucracy and black magic practitioners (dukun santet), and invoking
nationalism as his principal catch cry.
More than six months ago I was called in to retrieve the situation; to
"depose" Suharto, to restore control to the legitimate owners, and to
establish new legal and administrative structures for the enterprise.
The ensuring "war of the shadows" was intense and sometimes dangerous,
with Suharto pulling out every stop to regain control, including trying
to get all the foreign parties involved (including myself) deported
and/or arrested, and seriously stirring up the workers with a barrage of
half-truths, lies and mystic terror.
There were a few occasions when the lives of both myself and my
management team, foreign and Indonesian, were directly threatened by
large near-hysterical mobs mobilised by Suharto. The factory workers
were tense and confused, not knowing who or what to believe, and alarmed
all the more by the frequent discovery of remains of black magic
ceremonies within the factory grounds, along with santet writings on
walls and floors. Snakes, real and perhaps some imagined, were
appearing everywhere in and around the houses of people closely
associated with my management team, including at the houses of the local
auditor I employed, the foreign owner representative, and some key
factory workers. Snakes are the favourite weapon of the dukun santet
when their magic requires a little kick along.
[Tasikmalaya, much like Banyuwangi, is a renown major centre for dukun
santet, and like Banyuwangi a few years ago, very many alleged dukun
santet have been ritually murdered here recently. Tasik combines an
explosive mixture of powerful forces, including the indigenous animist
traditions, traditionalist syncretic Islam (NU), and modernist Islam
(Muhammadiah), each of them competing for power and influence over the
local population and its resources, with often lethal consequences.]
Though intensive efforts, my team finally managed to wrest control of
the factory and to neutralise the influence of Suharto, though even now
he occasionally casts shadows over the enterprise.
Anyway, this message is getting quite out of hand so I'll try to get to
my points: In my view culture really matters! And it matters even more
in Indonesia, I think. An understanding of the cultures, outlooks,
perceptions of the people with whom we do business, as well as an
understanding of our own cultures, has enormous practical application
and value. For example, such an understanding would lead me to never,
ever give a loan to an Indonesian businessperson, especially a Javanese,
without absolute watertight security up front, and even then ... . The
"janji manis" (sweet promises) of Indonesians are notorious, even
amongst Indonesians themselves! (Similarly, the word "akan" (will) used
by ABRI brass a few years ago was the subject of derision and much
hilarity for a period of many months in the local media.) Statements,
promises and commitments by Indonesians, elites especially, frequently
have a purely symbolic quality and not always have any basis in
intention and are not always meant to be taken too seriously, even when
they are on paper in black and white!
The tangled and tortuous personal finances of the average Indonesian
should be warning enough as to their understanding of the concept of
money and its value. Many Indonesians are in a perpetual cycle of debt
to friends and relatives, and are easy prey to demands for money from
these same people. I frequently have employees who request that I not
give them their full wages when they want to go home to visit their
village, because they will be obliged to share it to their relatives.
The obvious question I used to ask was: "well, why can't you just put it
in your bank account??" The problem is, if it's in their bank account,
then it's technically in their possession, and many Indonesians would
not feel good about lying about this, especially to their parents. If I
retain wages for these employees, they can say with "honesty" that they
haven't got any money.
Bank savings is still a relatively novel concept to the vast majority of
Indonesians. Many Indonesians even nowadays still "save" by buying gold
jewellery; rings, bangles in particular, and also in the form of
consumer goods such as electronics. If an "emergency" occurs these
goods are sold or pawned. I recall reading somewhere that PT Pegadaian
(Persero), the state-run pawn broking agency, is one of the most
profitable of all the Indonesian government operations (I can't check
the truth or otherwise of this at the moment). Every single Ramadan, PT
Pegadaian is overrun with people pawning their valuables so that they
can celebrate Idulfitri. The same happens if a family member needs
sudden medical treatment. (I can sometimes know if a married female
employee is going through a difficult patch financially if she is not
wearing her gold wedding band. The band usually/hopefully reappears a
few months afterwards .)
Anyway, enough of this. I hope I have managed to convince you a little
of the practical implications of culture, especially as it applies to
"doing business" in Indonesia. Now whether these comments could be
applied universally to other traditional cultures in other countries, I
could not be certain; Indonesia is certainly a "hard case" when it comes
to these matters! And, to what extent such comments could be applied to
the heady world of international finance, as opposed to direct
investment, I really don't know.
Salam
Gary Dean
http://okusi.net/
http://okusi.net/garydean/
----- Original Message -----
From: "de Tray, Dennis" <xxxxxxxx@xxx.xxx>
To: "'Gary Dean'" <xxxxxxxx@xxxxx.xxx>
Sent: 23 April 2001 9:28
Subject: RE: Your "Analysing the end of Suharto's Indonesia
Gary:
The IMF address temporary (a two-year assignment
here in Hanoi) but is not as important as the fact that
I was the World Bank's country director in Jakarta
from '94 to April '99. You probably knew this,
but just in case.
Thanks for the other references. I look forward to
reading them.
By the way, the problem with cultural views of
countries and development is that they don't generally
have practical implications. That doesn't of course
mean that one should ignore them, but it is hard
sometimes to know what to do with them.
Dennis
----- Original Message -----
From: "de Tray, Dennis" <xxxxxxx@xxx.xxx>
To: "Gary Dean" <xxxxxxxx@xxxxx.xxx>
Subject: Your "Analyzing the end of Suharto's Indonesia
Date: Fri, 20 Apr 2001 23:02:15 -0400
Gary:
I have been doing some reflecting and writing on the Indonesia story, both
the crisis and the pre-crisis successes. In that context I was looking for a
good summary of the role of "Javanese" factors leading up to Suharto's
demise because I don't think one can understand the depth or breadth of
Indonesia's crisis without understanding the Java connection. I have many
times said that Indonesians, even well- educated Indonesians, "knew" in the
fall of 1997 if not before that for Suharto it was no longer "if" but
"when." Your paper of the above title sets out this argument succinctly and
clearly. Although the paper is directed at political scientists and
sociologists, in their own way economists are also at risk of making a major
mistake in analyzing the causes of Indonesia's problems if they ignore the
points your paper makes.
I have not read your more recent work but look forward to doing so. Thanks
again for a useful paper.
Dennis de Tray
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