This thesis examines the advice given by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to Indonesia, during and after the Asian crisis and the impact that this had on corruption and subsequently Foreign Direct Investment (FDI). It argues that the key mistake made by the IMF was the assumption that foreign business is averse to corruption and state involvement in economic development. This assumption relied on a key tenet of neo-liberalism — that the only state intervention in the economy should be to ensure the primacy of the so-called free market. While the aim of the IMF’s Structural Adjustment Program (SAP) in Indonesia was to stem the crisis and facilitate economic recovery, Indonesia’s economic, social and political situation continued to dete...