Title: Indonesia: Public-Private Partnership Governance

Language: English

Type: Document

Nature: Report

Published: September 1, 2012


Region: East Asia and Pacific

Country: Indonesia

Topic: Transparency, Good Governance and Anti-corruption

Keywords: About PPP, Knowledge Lab

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Document Summary:

This background report analyzes the institutional set-up and use of policy instruments in Indonesia. It was peer reviewed by the OECD Senior Budget Officials Network on Public-Private Partnerships on 26 March 2012, with the participation of officials of the Government of Indonesia, and concludes with policy options for their consideration.


Document Details:

The OECD Review of Regulatory Reform in Indonesia is one of a series of country reports carried out under the Regulatory Reform Programme of the OECD, in response to the 1997 mandate by OECD Ministers.

Under this programme, the OECD has assessed the regulatory management policies of 24 member countries, as well as Brazil, China and Russia. The reviews aim at assisting governments to improve regulatory quality – that is, to reform regulations to foster competition, innovation, economic growth and important social objectives. The review methodology has developed over two decades of peer learning. It draws on and is grounded in a number of OECD instruments including: the 1995 Recommendation of the Council of the OECD on Improving the Quality of Government Regulation; the 2005 Guiding Principles for Regulatory Quality and Performance; the 2009 OECD Recommendation on Competition Assessment; the 2012 OECD Recommendation of the Council on Regulatory Policy and Governance; and the 2012 OECD Recommendation for Public Governance of Public-Private Partnerships. This is the first review in this series to be undertaken under the auspices of the OECD Regulatory Policy Committee, which was formed in 2009.

This background report was drafted by Ian Hawkesworth, co-ordinator of the OECD Network of Senior PPP Officials and Philippe Burger, Professor of Economics at the University of the Free State, South Africa.


Updated: June 20, 2022