APSN Banner

Newly jobless

Source
New York Times - January 28, 1998

Seth Mydans - Jakarta, Jan. 28 One,by one, most of Minarsih's friends at an electronics factory here were taken aside and quiety fired. Too ashamed to tell her, they simply disappeared, returning to the villages they had left years ago in search of fortune in the big city.

Mrs. Minarsih's turn came a few days aga, and she too left without goodbyes, one of the latest victims of an economic disaster that is expected to see milllons of Indonesians lose their jobs in the coming months.

All I could think of was my son: how will I feed him now?" said Mrs.Minarsih who is 25. Four years ago, like countless other rural people, she fled the poverty of her village, leaving her son with her parents and sending home part of her pay to help support them.

This week defeated in her hopes for a better life, she boarded a train for the I2-hour journey home to Surabaya in eastern Java, part of an ebb tide after a decade of surging prosperity for the 200 million Indonesians.

These newly unemployed are one force the Government fears, a growing mass of suffering and angry people who could rise up in violent protests and shake its hold on power. Small food riots have already begun in Java, and the economic crisis is becoming a political threat.

The Surabaya train was hot and noisy and packed with travelerers joining a vast annual exodus of city dwellers heading home for the holiday that marks the end of the Muslims' holy month of Ramadan.

But this year is different. Like Mrs. Minarsih, many people boarding the train had lost their jobs and would not be retruring when the holiday is over.They will remain in villages that are already deep in poverty, sharing with their families the coming privation.

Their hardships will be compounded by the worst drought in 50 years, which has caused crops to fail across Indonesia and is now bringing catastrophic flooding as heavy rains hit.

Indonesia's falling currency, failing banks and huge foreign debt have caused panic in financial markets and among economists from Washington to Tokyo who fear a worldwide economic crisis. This week the Government announced a freeze on payment of corporate debt and a broad reorganization of banks.

Here at home, the crisis has already cut into the lives of millions of people, forcing up the prices of rice and cooking oil and milk and electricity, and shrinking the value of money they can no longer save.

Officials and labor leaders say they expect 2 million people or more to lose their jobs in the coming year, in addition to the 4.4 million already unemployed and the millions more who live hand to mouth with parttime work.

And the number of unemployed could rise even higher. More than two million people leave school and enter the work force each year, and with most economists predicting a deep recession, only a few may be able to find work.

Foreign economists say the true extent of unemployment is higher than these numbers suggest. People who may work only an hour or two a week are officially "employed."

The fear is that deepening hardship will bring a wave of riots. Over the years, the highhandedness of the Government and its favoritism toward wealthy business executives has mostly been tolerated because life in Indonesia grew steadily more comfortable. But after 32 years in power, President Suharto has begun to lose the support of much of the middle class and there is growing talk of change, though he is expected to be anointed by an obedient legislature to a new five-year term in March.

Mass protests, violence and an overreaction by security forces such a chain of events could turm even the elite against him, though senior military officials say they are ready to quell any violence, and some 14,000 troops are being deployed in Jakarta to maintain order during holidays.

Over the last 18 months, Indonesia has seen dozens of riots in towns across the country, protesting everything from land

seizures to police abuses. Much of the violence has been directed at the Chinese minority, who are seen as economically privileged, and at Christians.

In the last two weeks, several small riots have broken out in eastern and central Java over increases in food prices. Small protests strikes have also been staged at tories over wages and working conditions.

The Government is bracing for the possibility of a violent reaction on Sunday when it stops beans, sugar and flour, and on when it removes price supports from fuel and electricity.

"We cannot underestimate the frustration of our own people," said Amien Rais, a Muslim leader who has become a leading critic of the Government. They look friendly they look innocent, they look patient, but all of a sudden they transform themselves into tigers and do very destructive things".

Mrs. Minarsih, who like many Indonesians uses only one name. seems typical. "I was sad when I lost my job," she said, "but I was really angry, too. I was angry, but I didn't show it. I've been working there for four years. I've done my job. I was never in trouble. So how can they just let me go?"

Like other economy-class passebgers, she had received a 70 percent discount – to about 20 cents – on her ticket home as part of a Government effort to clear the capital of its new mass of restive unemployed. But the city's deepening poverty may be thwarting this plan: Some of Jakarta's poorest people say they can't afford even 20-cent tickets home.

The train to Surabaya was a sort of Noah's ark of the city's disadvantaged: jobless factory workers, market vendors, food-stall operators, part-time security guards, day laborers, bus-fare collectors, newsboys and purveyors of plastic bottles of water to motorists stuck in traffic.

As the train waited to depart, vendors filled the aisles selling wash cloths, baseball caps, small packets of tissues, mock-leather wallets and rubber monkey masks.

Feeding her 3-month-old baby with bits of mashed banana, Surateni, 27, squeezed onto a crowded seat, her belongings at her feet in a cardboard box tied with pink plastic string.

She was bringing a cluster of rambutans – the only gift she could afford – to the two sons waiting for her in her village. The price of rambutans, small clusters of fruit, has tripled in recent days.

The rising prices have all but eliminated the livelihood that supported Mrs. Surateni, who fries and sells catfish at a market stall in central Jakarta. Both rice and cooking oil have doubled in price, she said, reducing her daily profit to 5,000 rupiah, or less than 40 cents at the latest exchange rate.

She has cut the portions she serves her customers, she said, but if prices rise any more – as they will with the austerity planned by the Government – she will have no profit.

Mrs. Surateni already lives at the bottom of the economic scale, so she is prepared for hardship. "We'll find a way to survive," she said. "We don't have any choice."

Country