|
WOMEN GET DOWN TO BUSINESS IN
ACEH
April 12, 2005 - (Christian Science Monitor) In
Ibu Yuniarti's class, 20 middle-aged women prepare themselves for
the rough-and-tumble world of the free market. Dividing themselves
into small groups, they plow through a Harvard Business School-style
case study on a proposed motel project in an Indonesian village.
They study every detail - the finances, the marketing, the pluses
and minuses - and write their recommendations in neat columns on
sheets of butcher paper and present them to the class.
One group says the project is wonderful, because it will provide
employment to local villagers. Another group declares the project
unworkable: No one has surveyed the location and whether it would
be attractive to customers.
It's just another day at one of the more innovative projects in
Banda Aceh, Start or Improve Your Business, a United Nations-funded
effort to get people back on their feet through self- employment.
With so many people left homeless by the Dec. 26 tsunami, such a
class might seem premature, but UN officials say the key to recovery
in this region is to get the economy going again, and giving business
people the tools and the financing to generate income for themselves
and employment for others.
"This program is about equipping entrepreneurs to prepare themselves
for starting businesses," says Peter Piawu, a master trainer
for the International Labor Organization, the UN agency that is
funding the class. "Of course, running a business is always
risky. But when you give them all the information, then you can
take reasonable risks in starting a business."
Women Take the Lead
For those outsiders who are unused to Indonesia's relatively moderate
Islamic culture, it may be surprising that half of the participants
in this program are women. (A separate program for men and women
is being run by the Islamic Students Association.) But women have
always been active in the business community of Banda Aceh. Some
have also been active in politics. One of the last and most successful
sultans of Banda, before the arrival of the Dutch East India Company,
was a woman.
Most of the women in this classroom, for instance, were accomplished
businesswomen before the tsunami. Cut Humry ran a catering business;
now she wants to open a cafe. Sri Anitha owned a phone-booth and
faxing business that was wiped out by the waves. Many owned fashion
businesses and embroidery shops, but one woman, Emi Yuliani, owned
a gas station that she wants to rebuild.
For most of these women, the biggest plus is their business experience.
Most are natural optimists who have confronted their worst nightmare,
and survived.
Usually, their biggest obstacle is not male chauvinism or cultural
restrictions, but lack of basic machinery. Most lost all their equipment
to the surging waters that pulverized Banda's business district.
Many also lost some of their top employees. Starting over is a dream
they can believe in. But without money and equipment, it is still
only a dream.
"I can't say if it is because of my high skill level, but I
have made clothes for President Megawati," says Agustina, owner
of a garment
and embroidery business that was destroyed. She is wearing one of
her own creations, a gorgeous white tunic with pink floral embroidery.
"I still have orders coming in," she adds with a wry smile,
including orders from the current Indonesian president's wife. "But
I can't do the work for them because I don't have the machines."
Disaster cachet
TIME TO MAKE THE DOUGHNUTS?
Asriyani ran a catering business before the tsunami struck. A UN-funded
small-business course is helping her figure out whether to open
a doughnut shop and invest in a mixer.
Banda Aceh certainly has a level of name recognition that even good
Madison Avenue money can't buy. A scarf made in Banda Aceh would
fly off the shelf at Barney's, just as Afghan scarves and dresses
did a few years ago. Yet business owners like Agustina say that
they have to be realistic and focus on the needs of the local market.
Right now that market is too uncertain to hire new employees, or
to take out expensive loans to buy new sewing machines.
"I'm thinking that it's difficult to make people wear beautiful
dresses these days because people aren't thinking about beautiful
things or parties. They just want basic clothes, and they are putting
their money into important things."
In short, the market has changed, and Agustina knows she has to
change with it. "I know that I can make clothes, but I'm not
sure if I can sell them. If you're not sure of the market, you can't
take a risk with it."
Wider Benefits for Economy
Nur Asmah, vice president of the Indonesian Women's Business Association,
which is running classes with funding from the International Labor
Organization, says that businesswomen can have a significant effect
in the local economy.
"Nowadays, a lot of husbands are getting help from their wives.
And mothers who have businesses can help their families pull themselves
up," says Mrs. Asmah, who owns an interior-design business
that was destroyed in the tsunami. "We hope that if more women
start businesses, their children will be able to stay in school
instead of having to go to work, and in the long term, this can
have a good effect on society."
Asriyani, who ran a catering business before the tsunami, dreams
of opening a doughnut shop. But to make enough doughnuts to see
a reasonable profit, she needs to mechanize her operation. Until
now, she's made all her cakes and sweets by hand.
It's a risky decision, but Asriyani says the opportunities are too
great to ignore. "A good mix machine in Medan costs 5 million
rupiah [about $550], but if I buy that, maybe my income will go
just to pay off the machine," she says. "But I'm confident,
and motivated, and I have ambition."
From: http://search.csmonitor.com/search_content/0412/p04s01-woap.html
|