Wow, I forgot I started this thread. I nearly started another thread with the same topic.
Now...for 'practical' reasons. Keeping my US assets (retirement accounts, etc) is easier with my citizenship...and although social security ain't much, but it'll be nice to receive it when the time comes vs zero pension in Indonesia.
Downsides to being WNA for me so far: The hassle of dealing with KITAP/MERP, and not to mention...costs associated with them. Also, not being able to inherit the family business (without making it a pt pma which i a hassle)... I have no intention in inheriting anyway...once my parents move on from this life, very likely I'll just cash out whatever shares/portion, get bought out whatever possible and just retire..
Thanks for this posts, it's helped to make me think about my situation. For me all that's mentioned in the quote above are part of my FOR regaining my WNI:
-I don't have any assets abroad unless you want to count a bank account. No social security etc. So I won't feel or I won't lose anything if I were to regain the WNI.
-The whole thing with Imigrasi is not so much the hassle but the game-playing part of it. Long story short, for me at least, unless you come across as knowledgeable and assertive, people (officials and agents alike) will direct you to what's good for them (1 year Kitas) when you're already qualified to apply for something else.
-The legal stuff (inheritance, owning property etc.) is something I haven't even scratched the surface of. But on a superficial level the impression I got is that the WNA status makes things more complicated. Unless I find something out that make things workable on this front, it's another reason for regaining the WNI.
I would have thought the work permit \imta would be the most annoying part, trying to find an employer willing to do that
Oddly enough I've tried applying for an office job just for the hell of it in my time here. Did well in the interviews to the point of being verbally accepted to the job in a few of the interviews but immediately crashed and burned when I disclosed my status. "Wow this is more complicated than we expected but we'll check what our options are regarding that" was the uniform response followed by radio silence. One asked "Did you say you're on a Kitas or a Kitap?" before radio silence and I'm wondering if being on a Kitap would make it easier to apply for these jobs because the employee would only have to pay for the IMTA instead for the Kitap as well.
The whole grey area/informal work/Manpower Law says you can't work without a permit but Immigration Law says you can so pay attention to that comes across to me like a temporary but not a permanent solution. If that grey area/informal work begins to grow and expand, you would want to be on more firmer ground, right?
If something significant was to happen on the legal and work fronts for WNAs, the case for regaining the WNI would significantly weaken because it's mostly the legal and economic rights that I'm concerned about now.
For the sake of balance, the arguments AGAINST regaining the WNI:
-Less hassle when going overseas (I've been on trips where I'm the only one in the group that doesn't have to worry about applying for a visa or having to show how much funds I have in my bank account).
-The "What if something like May 1998 happens again and you need to move overseas?" or "What if Indonesia collapses and you need to move overseas?" hypotheticals that have come up in conversation with family members.