ABSTRACT

In Indonesia, coordination seems to be the hardest word in government decision-making overall, not just regarding Public Private Partnership (PPP) infrastructure development. One of the most important differences was the use of a more generic term to describe long-term cooperation between the public sector and corporations in general under a contractual agreement that specified terms and conditions governing the delivery of infrastructure services to end-users: public-corporate partnership (PCP). By enacting Presidential Regulation sixty seven in November 2005, the GoI laid a new foundation for infrastructure development under a non-public traditional public procurement system. In addition to government guarantee, the GoI provides other contingent and non-contingent support in various forms to deal with certain issues that can substantially hinder infrastructure development. The flow begins with project identification, selection, and prior prioritization, which is undertaken by ministries, lembaga or local governments after a thorough examination and public consultation.