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The 83,000 experiment: Indonesia is running ASEAN’s largest test of risk management at scale

Two weeks ago, I sat across from the new chairman of a cooperative in West Java. He had been appointed three months earlier under Indonesia’s Koperasi Merah Putih programme. He asked me, sincerely and without embarrassment, how he was supposed to know which risks his cooperative was actually carrying — and whether he had to file a report about it this quarter.

I have spent fifteen years inside Indonesian risk functions — banking, insurance, sharia microfinance — and I have heard versions of that question before. But never at this scale, and never with this little time to answer it.

That conversation is happening in 83,000 cooperatives across Indonesia right now. Each one has been required, under the Prabowo administration’s flagship Koperasi Merah Putih initiative, to implement formal risk management on day one — to identify the risks it is carrying, document the controls in place against them, monitor early warning signs, and record incidents as they happen. For most of these institutions, it is the first time anything that could be called governance has been written down.

The scale of the rollout is unlike anything ASEAN has attempted before.

The unprecedented scale

To put 83,000 cooperatives in context, it is roughly seventy times the number of commercial banks in Indonesia, and more institutions than there are public companies on the Indonesia Stock Exchange. The combined economic activity flowing through these cooperatives, even at modest per-unit volume, will touch tens of millions of households inside two years.

Indonesia has run financial inclusion experiments at scale before. Microfinance, sharia banking, branchless banking — each one produced lessons the region eventually absorbed. But none of them required formal enterprise risk frameworks on day one. The Koperasi Merah Putih programme is the first time a population-scale financial inclusion initiative has been launched with risk management embedded as a prerequisite, not as a maturity stage.

That decision is consequential. It is also extraordinarily ambitious.

Also Read: Business judgment on trial: Indonesia’s corruption courts are getting it backwards

What can go wrong

Three failure modes are predictable enough that they deserve to be named while there is still time to design around them.

Paper compliance. With deadlines this tight, the easiest response for cooperative leadership is to download a template, fill in the fields, file it, and move on. The documents exist on paper, but nobody on the ground is using them to make a decision. Within twelve months, they are stale, the staff have moved on, and the framework that was supposed to govern operations has become a binder in a drawer.

Supervisory dilution. Indonesia’s regulators — OJK, Kementerian Koperasi UKM — are themselves resource-constrained. Supervising 83,000 newly-launched institutions to a standard that takes years to build inside a commercial bank is, realistically, not going to happen at full depth. The risk is that the framework exists in policy but is enforced inconsistently, which is the worst of both worlds: cost without protection.

Loss-event blindspots. Cooperatives sit closer to their members than commercial banks do. They will be exposed to risks that traditional banking frameworks do not measure well — local social capital risk, agricultural cycle risk, informal credit chain contagion. A framework written in the language of banks will under-detect the things cooperatives are actually exposed to.

What needs to be in place

The next eighteen months will decide whether this becomes the largest financial inclusion success in Southeast Asia’s history or its most expensive policy lesson. Three things will determine which.

Training depth must outrun the deadline. Cooperative leaders need apprenticeship support, not certification cycles. Practical, hands-on coaching from people who have actually run risk frameworks inside real institutions — not slide decks — is what turns paper compliance into actual practice.

Also Read: Business judgment on trial: Indonesia’s corruption courts are getting it backwards

Tooling must be priced for the unit. The compliance software that costs ninety thousand dollars a year inside a large bank cannot be the model for a cooperative serving two thousand members. The tooling that works at this scale is cloud-native, modular, priced in tens of dollars per month, and operable by someone without a finance degree. The price point is, as it turns out, the easy part. The hard part is making the framework legible to someone who has never read a policy document before.

Reporting must aggregate upward. The supervisory burden cannot be solved by visit-each-cooperative auditing. It will only be solvable by data flowing up — from cooperative to district to regional to national — so regulators can spot anomalies at scale. That requires a deliberate reporting backbone, not an ad-hoc PDF submission system.

What ASEAN should learn from watching

The Philippines has cooperatives and rural banks facing similar inclusion-with-governance tensions. Malaysia and Thailand have parallel structures. Vietnam is beginning to formalise its financial cooperative sector. None of them has yet tried risk management at this scale on day one.

If the Indonesian experiment works, the model will be exported across the region within five years. The first institutions, supervisors, and operators to make it work at scale here will have an outsized influence on how the rest of ASEAN learns to do this.

If it fails, the lesson will be the more important one. Mandating governance at scale, without proportionate investment in capability and tooling, does not produce governance. It produces forms.

Either way, eighteen months from now we will know which of those outcomes Indonesia chose. The rest of ASEAN should be paying attention right now — because their version of this question is coming next.

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The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of e27.

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