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Surviving Sukarno: British Business in Post-Colonial Indonesia, 1950–1967*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 November 2011
Abstract
Drawing principally upon a rich vein of previously unexploited business records, this paper analyses the experience of British firms in Indonesia between the achievement of independence and the beginnings of the Suharto regime. As in The Netherlands East Indies, British enterprises occupied a significant position in post-colonial Indonesia in plantations, oil extraction, shipping, banking, the import-export trade, and manufacturing. After the nationalization of Dutch businesses from the end of 1957, Britain emerged as the leading investing power in the archipelago alongside the United States. However, during Indonesia's Confrontation with British-backed Malaysia (1963–1966), most UK-owned companies in the islands were subject to a series of torrid (albeit temporary) takeovers by the trade unions and subsequently various government authorities. Most of these investments were returned to British ownership under Suharto after 1967. But, in surviving the Sukarno era, British firms had endured 15 years of increasing inconvenience and insecurity trapped in a power struggle within Indonesia's perplexing plural polity (and particularly between the Communist Party and the military). Indeed, the Konfrontasi takeovers themselves, varying in intensity from region to region and from firm to firm, were indicative of deep fissures within Indonesian administration and politics. The unpredictable and unsettled political economy of post-colonial Indonesia meant that the balance of advantage lay not with transnational enterprise but with the host state and society.
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References
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64 OA, 2385, Holt to Hobhouse, 26 October 1958.
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92 OA, 1696, ‘Indonesia. Dutch Disputes’, confidential translation, 13 November 1964.
93 Ibid., Gleichman to Holt, 17 November 1964; notes by Holt, 30 November and 16–19 December 1964.
94 Anspach. ‘Indonesia’, p. 197.
95 UA, Acc 1997/127, 43, SCMOC, 23 June 1965, Quarles van Ufford report.
96 H&CA, 37274, Strachan to Branches, 17 October 1963; extract from Deli Times, 3 November 1963 enclosed in Strachan to Branches, 3 November 1963; 37259, Paris to Branches, 28 May 1964.
97 H&CA, 37274, McLeod to Branches, 10 December 1963.
98 H&CA, 37259, Paris to Branches, 13 February 1964.
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103 H&CA, 37259, Thwaites to Branches, 26 September 1963.
104 H&CA, 37274, private letter from Johnstone, 11 February 1964.
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106 H&CA, 37259, Paris to Branches, 13 February 1964.
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110 Ibid., Cole report, 19 February 1960.
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121 Ibid., 17 Nov. 1961; 43, SCM, DCM extract, 1 November 1963.
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127 RGACM, 24863/67, 7 January 1957, RIC.
128 BoE, OV 85/5, note by Tomkins, 2 February 1962.
129 H&CA, 37259, Paris to Strivens, Branches, 21 September 1963.
130 UA, Acc 1997/127, 43, SCMOC, 10 February 1964 and 23 June 1965, Quarles van Ufford report.
131 H&CA, 37259, Paris to Branches, 13 February 1964.
132 H&CA, 37274, McLeod to Gilchrist, 3 October 1963; McLeod to Branches, 27 January and 10 February 1964.
133 Ibid., McLeod to Branches, 7 and 29 April 1964.
134 Pugh. Great Enterprise, p. 188.
135 UA, Acc 1997/127, 43, SCMOC, 23 June 1965, Quarles van Ufford report. On the bewildering reorganizations see Dick. ‘Nation-state’, p. 187; Lindblad. Bridges, pp. 197, 204.
136 Ibid., 44, SCMOC, DCM extracts, 21 July and 17 November 1967.
137 Ibid., 9 February 1967, attached report by Quarles van Ufford.
138 H&CA, 37258, Gilchrist to Michael Stewart, UK Foreign Secretary, 16 April 1968.
139 HSBC, GHO 336, Report on Djakarta Office. Results for Year Ended 31 December 1970.
140 UA, Acc 1997/127, 43, SCMOC, DCM extract, 5 November 1965.
141 HSBC, MB Hist 2166, MCAGB Circular No. 190, 28 January 1966.
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147 RGACM, 24863/75, 7 March 1966, ‘Draft Report for 1965’; 24863/77, 1 April 1968, ‘Draft Report for 1967’.
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151 Booth, Indonesian Economy, p. 319.
152 UA, Acc 1997/127, 43, SCMOC, Quarles van Ufford reports, 4 February and 17–27 May 1966. As early as 1959, Unilever directors had been disturbed by restrictions on Indonesian Chinese trading in rural areas, as well as mass repatriations to mainland China, disrupting both the distributive system and labour supply. Ibid., 42, SCMOC, 23–27 January 1959; Cole report, 19 February 1960; 23 August 1960.
153 Pilger, J. (2001). Globalisation in Indonesia: Spoils of a Massacre, Guardian Weekend, 14 July.
154 Fieldhouse. Unilever, p. 313.
155 Lindblad. Bridges, p. 207.
156 H&CA, 37274, second message from Jakarta to FO, 10 February 1964.
157 HSBC, 1459/2.04, semi-official copies out to Jakarta, Turner to King, 7 May 1958.
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