I read Catcher in the Rye rather too late. Of all places, it was Fopp records store in Sidney Street, Cambridge, England, that I bought that small red book from. And for the rest of that night, I feverishly followed Holden Caulfield's life, ignoring even the charm of English pub in that alluring ancient college town.
Since then, cliche as it may sound, Catcher in the Rye set my standard and becomes the best book I've ever read. I even always had it on my desk back in Salemba, along with Che Guevara poster. I recall Aco, then my office roommate, in the midst of a deadline for a research report on rice liberalization, grudged as he had to try really hard not to reread that book upon seeing it between my messy piles of stuff.
I am never sure why I really like Holden Caulfield, but maybe somehow I can relate what he felt to be a young man in an uncertain world where (almost) everything seem very wrong. A rite of passage before you end up living as economist, barista, et cetera, and see some things not that wrong after all, and now you remember that time with smile or grin.
Today the man who introduced us to the life and angst of Holden Caulfield passed away. Salute and rest in peace, JD Salinger.
Friday, January 29, 2010
Wednesday, January 27, 2010
Sunaryo The Faux Editor
Our cafe's office boy, Sunaryo Sunaryoto, has had lots of spare time yesterday (Yes, Kate was not around). So, while enjoying his daily somay intake, he idly edited page four, the Opini section, of Kompas daily. This time, he did the last section of Professor Liek Wilardjo's op-ed, Etika Penyelamatan Century, Kompas, 1/26/10. He gave his editing on the paper's hard copy, as follows (in Bahasa Indonesia)*
Normatif?*Naryo reedited the old version on my fb notes.
Dengan asumsiKSSKPansus berpegang pada etika normatif,secara aksiologisdengan ukuran kualitas dan nilai-nilai kebaikan, tentuKSSKPansus berusaha menghadirkan kebaikan tertinggi (summum bonum). Kalaulebih deontologisdengan ukuran ketaatan pada aturan , komite ini menunaikan apa yang diyakini sebagai kewajibannya dan tunduk padaimperatif kategoris yang diyakininyastandar moral tertinggi yang ingin dicapai.Apakah summum bonum atau imperatif kategoriApa bentuk kebaikan tertinggi dan standar yang ingin dicapai itu,yang tahuhanyaSri MulyaniBambang Soesatyo danBoedionoGayus Lumbun (danTuhanFahri Hamzah) yang tahu
Kalaumerekaseperti Immanuel Kant, mereka melakukan ”kehendak baiknya” secara otonom dengan menempatkan manusia bukan sebagai sekadar alat. Tekanannya terletak pada niatnya, tidak pada konsekuensinya. Namun, mereka tidak boleh cuci tangan ala Pontius Pilatus. Mereka harus mempertanggungjawabkan keputusan dan menerima risikonya kalau salah.CendekiawanSetiap orang memang harus begitu.
Lain halnya kalauKSSKPansusmemeluk antinomianismemenganggap dirinya berada di luar hukum. Dalam hal ini,KSSKPansus memasuki proses pengambilan keputusan itu tanpa bekal norma moral apa pun. Keputusannyaad hoc, impromptu, danditentukan oleh apa yang dirasakan dan dipikirkannya ”di situ dan pada saat itu juga”. Ini bisa terjadi kalauKSSKPansusmengidap gnostisisme, yakni paham yang penganutnya mendaku memiliki adi nurani (superconscience). Merekamerasa (sok paling) tahu apa yang harus dilakukan.
Konon ketikaMiranda Goeltompendukung Pansus diberi tahu bahwaBurhanuddin Abdullah dan Anwar Nasutioncafesalemba mencelakeputusan KSSKsidang-sidang Pansus,iamereka mengatakan bahwakedua tokohbarista-barista culun itusudah berada ”di luar”tidak mengerti politik dan tidak dapat merasakan apa yang dirasakan”orang-orang dalam”rakyat kebanyakan. Kemungkinanadanya Einfuehlungempati terhadap orang lain yang notabeneberpengalaman di dunia perbankantidak tidur di kelas pengantar ekonomi dinafikan. Suasana menghadapi krisis yang sudah di depan mata(imminent crisis)akibatgagalnyapenyelamatan Century dianggap unik dan merupakan momeneksistensialyang menentukan kelangsungan hidup rakyat. Oranglainyang belajar ekonomi tidak berhak menjadi ”hakim kursi malas” yang memvonis dari posisi yang aman. Kalau benar begitu, anarkisme mewarnaikeputusan penyelamatan Centurysidang-sidang Pansus.L WilardjoSunaryo SunaryotoGuru Besar Fisika Universitas Kristen Satya WacanaOffice Boy, Cafesalemba
Tuesday, January 26, 2010
Don't Swap Horses in the Middle of the Stream
Jim Hamilton of UCSD wrote in Econbrowser:
and
Update: Even Krugman said
I sometimes hear Bernanke's critics speak as if there is some kind of shallowness to his world view, as if he is somehow incapable of seeing what is obvious to those with common sense. If you want a bumper-sticker-size summary of what he's all about, here it is-- Bernanke believes strongly that a credit crunch can be devastating to regular people, and has done everything in his power to mitigate that damage. You may agree or disagree with his claim that the extraordinary steps taken under his leadership "averted the imminent collapse of the global financial system." But you must agree with two things: the global financial system did not collapse, and preventing its collapse is the reason Bernanke did what he did. If you think his motives were anything other than this, you have been sucked into a groupthink far shallower than the world view sometimes ascribed to Bernanke.Sound apt and ring a bell? Hint: Pansus.
and
I shake my head when I look at the list of senators who say they'll vote "no." How could there possibly be an alternative whom Barbara Boxer (D-CA) and Jim DeMint (R-SC) would both prefer to Bernanke?Ring another bell? Hint: Those lawmakers and their political parties.
Update: Even Krugman said
But — and here comes my defense of a Bernanke reappointment — any good alternative for the position would face a bruising fight in the Senate. And choosing a bad alternative would have truly dire consequences for the economy.Again, still relevant to us
Saturday, January 16, 2010
Good News
Andi Suruji of Kompas, today in his column, makes a good argument in supporting Asean-China FTA. Thumbs up.
Wednesday, January 06, 2010
Market for Lemons, Jobs, and Friends
The year 2009 ended with "moral hazard" becoming a household phrase, so it is only appropriate to start 2010 with a post on "market for lemons". Our on-and-off favorite sociologist Roby will soon be returning to Indonesia where we suspect he will continue to pester the Cafe baristas with his sometime acidic and bitter but often useful (just like lemons!) questions, comments, notes, links, and whatnot. In this intriguing post, Roby ponders his foray into the job market back home which led him to enter the market for friends, and explains why many times what one finds in those markets are "lemons". - Kate
Market for Lemons, Jobs, and Friends
by Roby
I have decided to return to Indonesia and before experiencing Jakarta’s infamous traffic, undependable electricity, and dysfunctional bureaucracy in Jakarta, I must first solve the most important problem while I’m still here: getting a job.
If I were applying for jobs here things would be much simpler. Although getting a good job is still a challenge, the process of getting a job is simple. Just look at job ads where they are looking for someone resemble my qualifications, send dozens of applications, and wait until you get a response. When the first batch of applications doesn’t work, then repeat the process and send another batch and so on.
It is very unlikely that the above method works in Indonesia. I think, in Indonesia most jobs that are advertised are lemon jobs in the same way that the market for used cars are saturated with lemon cars. The mechanism is the same. People try to move out from bad jobs just as they try to sell bad cars. While if they find good jobs they will keep it. Therefore, the average quality of advertised jobs tend to be lower than the quality distribution in the population. Moreover, the worst job tends to circulate more rapidly.
The best strategy to avoid getting lemons is to get inside information. Typically, this inside information comes from social networks. Furthermore, the best inside information tend to come from friends. Not because friends have better knowledge or better judges, but because they have incentives to not ruin us. Thus, the rational thing to do in a lemon market is to ask friends.
I asked around and got some potential job offers. Being a sociologist, however, I know that I’m surrounded by people who tend to have the same information. To get more diverse information, strong ties are less useful than weak ties. Strong ties tend to create cliques and the same information tends to circulate among the same person. On the other hand, weak ties eliminate redundancy and expose us to novel information. Wanting to throw a wider net, I started making new acquaintances in new communities. In short, in addition to be in job market, I’m also in friends market.
It turns out friends market is a lemon market as well. In a new community, our first acquaintances tend to be lemons. People who are not pleasant to be with tend to have more free time – because others who know avoid them - and hence it is more likely to meet them. Again, inside information is imperative in this case.
Markets solve matching problems. But how markets look like depend on the kind of goods. In lemon markets, it could be that the market mechanism is highly embedded in social relations because people strive for inside information; renders the outcome depends as much on social structure as on individual preferences.
Sunday, January 03, 2010
More books to ban?
According to the Jakarta Post (3/1), 20 books are considered "very dangerous to the public" by Justice and Human Rights Ministry. The Minister will "soon ask the AGO to ban them".
Some people never learn.
Saturday, January 02, 2010
So Long, Gus Dur
Like many of my peers, I first learn about Gus Dur from his writings in Tempo and then from writings about him in the same magazine (where else?). It was in the mid 80s – I was in high school- that I realized that Gus Dur was not “just” a columnist but also a leader of the largest Islamic organization in Indonesia, the NU. There were a number of articles in Tempo at that time that dwelled on NU’s decision to adopt Pancasila as the azas tunggal and to return to their 1926 khittah, and what those would mean for the coming election.
For someone like me, who spent most of my childhood in Jakarta, who had no deep roots in either NU or Muhammadiyah, and at that time was attending a catholic high school1, it pained me a lot to have to learn about the word "khittah" just to get through an edition of Tempo. But I remember buried in the dull and tedious discussions about party politics and NU internal politics, was Gus Dur’s argument about Islam being compatible with pluralism.2 Being in confined comfort of a school where religious and racial tensions were non-existent, I thought his argument was compelling if not relevant.
During my college years when, to my shock, I found college to be much more heterogenous than high school (duh!) Gus Dur’s views suddenly became more relevant to me. Dynamics between majority and minority as well as racial and ethnic differences became more apparent in college. I started to consciously seek what he and other “public intellectuals” had to say about the issue. When tensions between racial or religious groups became highly charged, I learned that Gus Dur often was the figure who helped resolve these tensions. During these years there were very high profile cases such as where he defended the right of Arswendo for free speech in the Monitor case, very much a lonely figure. But it was the little skirmishes, the low profile battles that he fought, that impressed me more. Our campus in Salemba was very close to LBH Jakarta where Gus Dur sometimes came to give a talk. I remember attending a talk he was giving there on the marriage rights of a couple who were Confucians. Their marriage had been presented before a court because of legal and administrative issue and Gus Dur was an expert witness of some sorts, in favor of the couple. I never knew who the couple were but during the talk Gus Dur was defending their case like they were his own relatives. There were many low profile events similar to that, and I tried to attend some that didn’t require much effort on my part. It helped a lot that Gus Dur had such an acute sense of humor, and one did not need to be a student activist steeped in rethorics to be able to digest and enjoy his talks. I was never an activist and never saw myself as one anyway, so I only read from the printed press the more vocal (and more political) views that he made as the chairman of Forum Demokrasi. Our Salemba campus was also close enough to STF Driyarkara where Gus Dur was often invited for discussions - and almost always came late. It was always worth skipping a few neoliberal (ha!) economic classes for those events.
Then 1998 happened. During the tumultuous years, I was away. Like many others, I was somewhat surprised by the turns of events that resulted in Gus Dur being elected the president. But I remember being very proud to have a man of such conviction becoming the leader of our nation.
As I read through his obituaries in recent days, while trying to recollect what I learned from the man, it strikes me how often people use the word “erratic” (=highly inconsistent), to describe his short presidency and even his personality. This is perhaps the biggest irony, since of all the public figures who were his contemporaries, no one is as consistent in sticking to his principles on humanity, pluralism and democracy as Gus Dur.
Thank you, Gus Dur, and so long.
1 Like many of my peers in high school, I was interested in the 1987 election primarily because election campaigns were fun (Truck convoys! Free t-shirts! Free concerts!). Incidentally, most students in my school were PDI fans, at least outwardly. Gugun Gondrong was the only student coming to school donning a non-PDI attributes (he wore green PPP headband while riding his motorbike across the schoolyard, but that is another story).
2 I’ll leave it for historians to debate how much of Gus Dur’s NU maneuvers were driven by political pragmatism, appeasement, or NU internal politics.
3 As a student studying economics in Salemba, I was perhaps already predisposed against IPTN and everything that had to do with it (funny how an undergraduate thinks). It was not surprising that when ForDem was formed partly as a reaction to the establishment of ICMI, my preference was clear.
For someone like me, who spent most of my childhood in Jakarta, who had no deep roots in either NU or Muhammadiyah, and at that time was attending a catholic high school1, it pained me a lot to have to learn about the word "khittah" just to get through an edition of Tempo. But I remember buried in the dull and tedious discussions about party politics and NU internal politics, was Gus Dur’s argument about Islam being compatible with pluralism.2 Being in confined comfort of a school where religious and racial tensions were non-existent, I thought his argument was compelling if not relevant.
During my college years when, to my shock, I found college to be much more heterogenous than high school (duh!) Gus Dur’s views suddenly became more relevant to me. Dynamics between majority and minority as well as racial and ethnic differences became more apparent in college. I started to consciously seek what he and other “public intellectuals” had to say about the issue. When tensions between racial or religious groups became highly charged, I learned that Gus Dur often was the figure who helped resolve these tensions. During these years there were very high profile cases such as where he defended the right of Arswendo for free speech in the Monitor case, very much a lonely figure. But it was the little skirmishes, the low profile battles that he fought, that impressed me more. Our campus in Salemba was very close to LBH Jakarta where Gus Dur sometimes came to give a talk. I remember attending a talk he was giving there on the marriage rights of a couple who were Confucians. Their marriage had been presented before a court because of legal and administrative issue and Gus Dur was an expert witness of some sorts, in favor of the couple. I never knew who the couple were but during the talk Gus Dur was defending their case like they were his own relatives. There were many low profile events similar to that, and I tried to attend some that didn’t require much effort on my part. It helped a lot that Gus Dur had such an acute sense of humor, and one did not need to be a student activist steeped in rethorics to be able to digest and enjoy his talks. I was never an activist and never saw myself as one anyway, so I only read from the printed press the more vocal (and more political) views that he made as the chairman of Forum Demokrasi. Our Salemba campus was also close enough to STF Driyarkara where Gus Dur was often invited for discussions - and almost always came late. It was always worth skipping a few neoliberal (ha!) economic classes for those events.
Then 1998 happened. During the tumultuous years, I was away. Like many others, I was somewhat surprised by the turns of events that resulted in Gus Dur being elected the president. But I remember being very proud to have a man of such conviction becoming the leader of our nation.
As I read through his obituaries in recent days, while trying to recollect what I learned from the man, it strikes me how often people use the word “erratic” (=highly inconsistent), to describe his short presidency and even his personality. This is perhaps the biggest irony, since of all the public figures who were his contemporaries, no one is as consistent in sticking to his principles on humanity, pluralism and democracy as Gus Dur.
Thank you, Gus Dur, and so long.
1 Like many of my peers in high school, I was interested in the 1987 election primarily because election campaigns were fun (Truck convoys! Free t-shirts! Free concerts!). Incidentally, most students in my school were PDI fans, at least outwardly. Gugun Gondrong was the only student coming to school donning a non-PDI attributes (he wore green PPP headband while riding his motorbike across the schoolyard, but that is another story).
2 I’ll leave it for historians to debate how much of Gus Dur’s NU maneuvers were driven by political pragmatism, appeasement, or NU internal politics.
3 As a student studying economics in Salemba, I was perhaps already predisposed against IPTN and everything that had to do with it (funny how an undergraduate thinks). It was not surprising that when ForDem was formed partly as a reaction to the establishment of ICMI, my preference was clear.
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