DCC, I enjoyed reading the synopsis of your article on this topic and I agree wholeheartedly that sobriety is essential when considering any real estate endeavor in Bali.
Who among us can forget our first encounter with this seductive mistress we call Bali? Who among us were not overcome with a lust to have a part of her? I can easily see newcomers to Bali as cannon fodder for slick villa developers fueled, as you point out, by a lack of regulations and laws governing real estate activity or marketing ethics.
Uluwatu, I understand your sentiments regarding foreign land ownership in Indonesia, however, it may surprise you that the vast majority of expats support that law, especially as it concerns Bali.
At the root of this issue is the aspect that with ownership goes the right of passage of that ownership to heirs. That is simply not acceptable to Balinese, and I personally support them in any efforts they undertake to preserve their land for their heirs. Among the Balinese, land ownership is directly linked to the adat dharma as it concerns ancestors. Some would say, and I would agree, this is all tied into the animist roots of Balinese culture.
Who can argue that even with land ownership laws as they currently exist, Western cultural expansion and real estate development has reached frightening levels in Bali. Can you imagine the horror of what would come if those laws were modified to typical Western laws? How long would it take, if those laws were changed, before Bali became another Disney Land or just one huge theme park?
Any foreigner who wants to make Bali their home can do so quite easily under the current laws as they apply to land ownership. I for one, pray those laws never change to allow foreign ownership of Balinese land. That would be the beginning of the end.
Peter, I hope you don’t have too many coconut palms on the other side of your high walls!