Claim Missing Document
Check
Articles

Found 2 Documents
Search
Journal : Sosiohumaniora

SOSIOECONOMIC ASPECT OF AGRIBUSINESS AFFECTED DURING COVID-19 PANDEMIC Mariyah Mariyah; Saripah Nurfilah; Dina Lesmana; Agung Enggal Nugroho
Sosiohumaniora Vol 23, No 1 (2021): Sosiohumaniora: Jurnal Ilmu-Ilmu Sosial dan Humaniora, MARCH 2021
Publisher : Universitas Padjadjaran

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.24198/sosiohumaniora.v23i1.29585

Abstract

Agribusiness is a business in the agricultural sector that consists of providing input, production, marketing, processing and supporting which are interrelated and many actors are involved. The research purpose was to determine the socioeconomic aspect of agribusiness affected during the Covid-19 pandemic based on general public perception. This research was conducted in June-July 2020 by distributing questionnaires online from 18 June 2020 to 30 June 2020 using google form. The total respondents who filled in were 87 people. It’s consists of academics, practitioners, and the general public. Data were analyzed using qualitative analysis with a Likert scale. The results showed that agribusiness during the Covid-19 pandemic was positively impacted with an average score of 114.6. Socioeconomic aspects that have been positively affected, among others local input is sought, local input prices increase, import inputs are limited, food demand, food production, and output prices increase, food availability becomes the focus, local production sought after, imported products decreased, various marketing patterns varied, online order services and delivery order increased, marketing was increasingly creative, demand for fresh food increased, demand for processed food and household processing industries increased, prices for processed food increasing, processing innovations are increasingly diverse, online financing transactions, massive information dissemination, extensive sharing of agricultural experiences, price information increasing, multi-stakeholder meetings increasing, changes in agriculture policy. The research implication is that the Covid-19 pandemic provides an important lesson for agribusiness that agricultural is an important sector and the ability of business units to adapt and innovate is needed.
ANALYSIS OF MARKET INTEGRATION AND PRICE TRANSMISSION OF RICE IN EAST KALIMANTAN Mariyah, Mariyah; Juraemi, Juraemi; Mariati, Rita
Sosiohumaniora Vol 26, No 3 (2024): Sosiohumaniora: Jurnal Ilmu-Ilmu Sosial dan Humaniora, NOVEMBER 2024
Publisher : Universitas Padjadjaran

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.24198/sosiohumaniora.v26i3.53418

Abstract

Market integration and transmission elasticity are indicators of achieving marketing efficiency. Marketing rice as a staple food commodity is important for economic purposes. The objective research was to identify trends in rice prices at the producer and the retailer, to determine market integration, and the elasticity of rice transmission. The research was conducted in East Kalimantan Province. This study used secondary data. The secondary data used are weekly series data of January-December 2023, from The National Strategic Food Price Information Center, Bank Indonesia. Data obtained by Bank Indonesia through The Daily Food Price Survey is a survey conducted by Bank Indonesia. Trends in rice price were analyzed using descriptive analysis, market integration was analyzed using Index Market Connection (IMC), and price transmission was analyzed using price elasticity transmission. The results showed that trends in retail rice prices faced price volatility at 4.62 percent and rice prices at the producer level faced price volatility at 5.37 percent. The rice market in East Kalimantan is not integrated in the short run, but integrated in the long run with IMC > 1 and the integrated coefficient is 1,0949. Transmission elasticity of rice prices in East Kalimantan was 0,7896. Rice prices have not been transmitted efficiently. The policy implication for the government is to improve market price information and rice stock management as a market intervention. Government collaboration with market players, especially rice distributors, can be an alternative to ensure the availability of rice in the region. To improve local food security, regulating planting time, and planting frequency, increasing farm productivity, and guaranteeing output prices is the focus of improving market mechanisms in the region.