Between Development and Democracy: A Comparative Analysis of Neo-Developmentalism in Indonesia and Singapore

Authors

  • Yusa Djuyandi Universitas Padjadjaran, West Java, Indonesia
  • Luis Fiska Rahayu Universitas Bina Bangsa, Banten, Indonesia
  • Herry Soesanto Institut Pemerintahan Dalam Negeri, West Java, Indonesia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.52690/jswse.v7i3.1568

Keywords:

Civil Liberties, Democratic Rights, Indonesia and Singapore, Neo-Developmentalism

Abstract

This article provides a comparative analysis of developmentalism and neo-developmentalism in Indonesia and Singapore, two Southeast Asian states with divergent political systems but shared development aspirations. While Singapore is widely recognized as a model developmental state, Indonesia under President Joko Widodo has been characterized as adopting a neo-developmentalist approach. This study asks: what are the key preconditions for successful developmentalism, and what are its political implications in these two contexts? Using a qualitative, comparative case study design based on secondary sources, we find that Singapore’s success rests on prior, deep bureaucratic reforms including anti-corruption measures and meritocracy that enabled effective state intervention. In contrast, Indonesia’s neo-developmentalism prioritizes debureaucratization and deregulation (e.g., the Omnibus Law), reflecting a stronger neoliberal influence. Both countries, however, show a similar consequence: the subordination of civil liberties and democratic rights to developmental goals. The article concludes that pre-conditions matter more than policy slogans, and that the trade-off between development and political freedom remains unresolved in both models.

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Published

2026-05-26

How to Cite

Djuyandi, Y., Rahayu, L. F., & Soesanto, H. (2026). Between Development and Democracy: A Comparative Analysis of Neo-Developmentalism in Indonesia and Singapore. Journal of Social Work and Science Education, 7(3), 2042–2062. https://doi.org/10.52690/jswse.v7i3.1568

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