Two weeks back I attended a public discussion on Indonesia’s economy and democracy, featuring Marcus Mietzner and Bivitri Susanti. As someone who has spent more than 25 years working across the Australia–Indonesia corridor, I found myself listening less as a political observer and more as someone who has spent a career navigating the practical consequences of institutional change.
The Question That Stayed With Me
The question put to Bivitri was simple: can electoral democracy still deliver meaningful correction in 2029?
As I understood her argument, electoral autocracy is not the absence of elections. It is the gradual weakening of the institutions that make elections meaningful — checks and balances, independent oversight, civic space, and public accountability. The vote remains; what erodes is everything around it.
Marcus Mietzner’s contribution, drawn from his recent book Ruling Indonesia, offered a complementary lens. As I took it, his analysis rested on three themes underpinning Jokowi’s conception of democracy: that democracy is legitimate insofar as it delivers development (kesejahteraan); that legitimacy can be read directly from what the majority wants, best understood through polling; and that this should be exercised “politely,” consistent with Asian values of seniority and deference. What I appreciated most was his discipline in separating analysis from advocacy — laying out why these ideas resonate with a large constituency of Indonesians, rather than simply dismissing them as a democratic failure.
Between the two, a shared diagnosis emerged: Indonesia’s institutions are not collapsing. They are being used, often through entirely legal means, in ways that quietly narrow what they once protected.
Why This Matters Beyond Politics
For many people, these debates can feel distant from everyday life. But over the years I have learned that institutional quality has a way of showing up in unexpected places — including in a meeting room, when a long-discussed partnership quietly stalls for reasons no one wants to name directly.
From my experience brokering bilateral research and education partnerships, successful collaboration is rarely built on shared interest alone. It rests on institutional trust: confidence that commitments will endure beyond individual projects, leadership changes, or political cycles. Partners need assurance that agreed priorities and channels of cooperation will remain stable enough to justify a long-term commitment — because international partnerships are rarely built in a single funding cycle. They take years of relationship-building before meaningful outcomes emerge.
Policy evolution is natural and necessary; no country stands still. But there is an important difference between adaptation and unpredictability. When strategic direction shifts abruptly, institutions become more cautious about investing their time, expertise, and resources. The most enduring bilateral partnerships are anchored in strong institutions and a shared understanding that meaningful collaboration is built over decades, not electoral terms.
This is particularly true in higher education. Leading international universities are drawn to environments that demonstrate academic freedom, intellectual openness, and predictable governance — the conditions under which researchers can pursue inquiry independently and collaborate across borders with confidence. Universities also make decisions on timelines that extend well beyond electoral cycles: research centres, joint degrees, and branch campuses require investments of funding, reputation, and human capital that must be justified years in advance. Before committing, partners inevitably assess not just the opportunity itself, but the institutional environment in which it will operate.
Indonesia’s ambitions in this regard are considerable. Successive governments have sought to attract greater international investment, research collaboration, and world-class universities. Yet the very institutions being invited to make long-term commitments are often evaluating the same questions about predictability, governance, and institutional continuity that feature in domestic debates about democratic quality.
This is part of why Indonesia’s pursuit of greater international engagement is, in some ways, a harder task than it appears. Attracting world-class partners takes more than invitations or incentives. It requires confidence that the institutional conditions enabling those partnerships will outlast any single administration.
A Case in Point
I recall a period when a major private-sector development sought to attract a leading international university as the anchor institution for an ambitious mega urban development project in Indonesia. The proposition was compelling: substantial financial backing, strong public visibility, and the prospect of a new model for international higher education engagement in the country.
But projects at that scale depend on more than funding. They require confidence that the broader enabling environment — regulatory settings, political support, institutional arrangements — will remain consistent over the long term. When those conditions became uncertain, momentum disappeared remarkably quickly. What once looked transformational became, within a few years, unviable.
It was a clear reminder that political systems are often discussed in the abstract, but their effects are felt through thousands of practical decisions: what can be researched, funded, challenged, or built. Whether one views Indonesia’s trajectory through Marcus’s development-first lens or Bivitri’s concerns about electoral autocracy, the question for international partners tends to converge on the same point: do Indonesia’s institutions still provide the confidence necessary for long-term cooperation?
Why 2029 Matters
The significance of 2029 is not simply who wins. It is whether citizens — and institutions, and partners — continue to believe the system remains capable of self-correction.
Elections matter. But so do the institutions surrounding them: the courts that adjudicate disputes, the oversight bodies that constrain power, the civic space that allows dissent to be heard before it curdles into something more disruptive. As I recall, Bivitri’s pessimism centred on exactly this — the absence of meaningful progress on electoral law reform, with the window for it narrowing each year that passes without action.
The question, then, is not only whether Indonesia remains democratic in a procedural sense. It is whether its democratic institutions retain enough strength, legitimacy, and independence to adapt when circumstances require correction.
Closing Thought
One lesson from years of working at the intersection of international education, research collaboration, and bilateral engagement is that long-term partnerships are built on confidence in continuity. Universities think in five-, ten-, even twenty-year horizons. Predictability does not require perfection — but it does require confidence that institutions can hold a stable enough frame for collaboration to grow within it.
From that perspective, the significance of 2029 extends well beyond the outcome of an election. It lies in whether Indonesia’s institutions continue to provide the stability, accountability, and capacity for self-correction that long-term cooperation depends on. For those of us who work in the space between countries, that question isn’t abstract — it shapes where partnerships, resources, and opportunities ultimately flow.
Sovi Arinta is an independent consultant based in Jakarta with more than 25 years of experience in international higher education, bilateral engagement, and stakeholder partnerships across the Australia-Indonesia relationship. She has held senior roles with Austrade, the Victorian Government Trade and Investment office, and the University of Queensland’s Indonesia office.
