This book examines the relationship between foreign companies and
government within the Indonesian oil industry. It is concerned in
particular to identify those factors which determine the balance between
central regulation and untrammelled company activity, in order to
evaluate the choices which the government has to make in the creation of
its policies. Given the extent of foreign investment in the mineral
extractive industries of many of the less-developed countries, such
policies are of major importance. From his study of the operation of
Indonesian oil contracts, Dr Khong concludes that the formal terms of an
agreement may well give a misleading impression of the actual allocation
of the benefits from petroleum extraction. The common perception that a
basic shift in favour of host governments has occurred is shown to be
largely misplaced, whatever relative advances they may have achieved.