Democracy and/or Development? Reflecting on the Lee thesis in Indonesia

Crawford School of Public Policy

Event details

Indonesia Study Group

Date & time

Wednesday 23 October 2024
12.30pm–2.00pm

Venue

Hybrid

Speaker

Zulfan Tadjoeddin

8:30-10:00am WIB // 12:30-2:00pm AEDT

Join in-person: McDonald Room, Menzies library, ANU

Join online: bit.ly/indonesia-study-group-2024

About the seminar

Indonesia’s democratic transition was a success, and now is in the third decade of democratic experience. But it has been backsliding, bringing the country to the edge of competitive authoritarianism. During the three-decades of Suharto’s authoritarian rule, the economy grew at 7% annually, while the democratic Indonesia grew only at around 5%. Higher authoritarian growth resonates with the so-called Lee thesis, popularised by the founding Prime Minister of Singapore, Lee Kuan Yew. It is argued that that development requires some restraints on democracy, famously put as a choice between two “D’s” - democracy and development or between democracy and discipline. Its proponents hold the view that poor developing countries are not fit for democracy.

The Lee thesis is supported by high growth phases under the authoritarian rules of Singapore under Lee himself, Mahathir’s Malaysia, Park Chung-hee’s South Korea, and Chiang Kai-shek’s Taiwan. Authoritarian China’s phenomenal growth since the early 1990s has also provided credence to the thesis. Thus, temptations to authoritarianism can also be seen in other developing Asian and African countries. However, it is argued that democratic growth is more stable and more resilient to crises. AK Sen argued that it is wrong to ask whether a country is fit for democracy; rather a country becomes fit through democracy. Entering the second half of the third decade of its current democratic experience, Indonesia will have to decide whether to stay with the path of democratic growth or returning to an authoritarian path.


About the speaker

Zulfan Tadjoeddin is Associate Professor in Development Studies at Western Sydney University. Was visiting scholar at University of Oxford (UK), Institute of Social Studies (The Hague), and Ateneo De Manila University (The Philippines). His co-authored book “Structural transformation as development: Path Dependence and Geopolitics” by Palgrave is coming out soon.

Image: Ambon island 2024

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