Rohmana, Yana
Universitas Pendidikan Indonesia

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DOES PROFITABILITY, FIRM SIZE, AND MACROECONOMIC VARIABLE AFFECT YIELD TO MATURITY OF CORPORATE SUKUK? Utami, Suci Aprilliani; Rohmana, Yana
The International Journal of Business Review (The Jobs Review) Vol 2, No 2 (2019): The International Journal of Business Review. December 2019
Publisher : Fakultas Pendidikan Ekonomi dan Bisnis

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.17509/tjr.v2i2.20921

Abstract

The purpose of of this research is to examine the influence of profitability, firm size, and macroeconomic variable on the yield to maturity of corporate sukuk. The yield to sukuk maturity that will be received by investors illustrates the level of investor profit but the yield level also describes the level of risk borne by investors. This research was conducted on all companies listed on the Indonesia Stock Exchange in the 2015-2018 period which issued sukuk ijarah and published its financial statements during the research period. The research samples is 54th ijarah sukuk This research was conducted using a quantitative approach with panel data. The data analysis technique used in this study is panel data regression with a fixed effect model. The results showed that profitability projected with Return on Asset did not affect the yield to maturity of sukuk ijarah, the size of the firm negatively affected the yield to maturity of sukuk ijarah, the BI-Rate variable had a positive and significant effect on yield to maturity of sukuk and inflation had a negative effect on yield of ijarah sukuk.
The Performance Of Islamic Banking Based On Sharia Maqashid Index (SMI) Suci Aprilliani Utami; Yana Rohmana; Firmansyah Firmansyah; Ripan Hermawan
Review of Islamic Economics and Finance Vol 4, No 2 (2021): Review of Islamic Economics and Finance : December 2021
Publisher : Universitas Pendidikan Indonesia

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.17509/rief.v4i2.41115

Abstract

AbstractPurpose – The purpose of the study must be stated in abstract.  Ideally in one sentence, the primary objectives should be clear. This section also contains scope of the study or the reasons why the paper was conducted.Methodology - An abstract of a scientific work may include specific models or approaches used in the larger study. Other abstracts may describe the types of evidence used in the research. The methodology used in the paper should be presented clearly. Findings - The abstract must be written in English. The abstract should be in one paragraph with no more than 250 words. It uses Times New Roman 11, single space, and italic. The abstract should contain purpose, methodology, findings, novelty, research limitation, research implication, keywords, and paper type. Novelty – The paper should have originality or novelty. This term means something completely different. To a researcher and a funding source, a novel idea means something that is unique in the field or scope being analyzed. It can be a new methodology or a new design that sets the stage for new knowledge. Research Limitation - The weaknesses of the study, often outside of control of the researcher should be written in this study. These could include things like time, access to funding, equipment, data or participants.Research Implication - How does this work add to the body of knowledge on the topic? Are there any practical or theoretical applications from your findings or implications for future research?Keywords: It is a maximum of 5 keywords in English with apparent meaning. The keywords are separated by a semicolon (;). For example, Islamic bank; profit sharing; customer satisfaction.
Consumption: Ethical Perspective of Islamic Economics Yana Rohmana
Review of Islamic Economics and Finance Vol 5, No 1 (2022): Review of Islamic Economics and Finance : June 2022
Publisher : Universitas Pendidikan Indonesia

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.17509/rief.v5i1.52164

Abstract

AbstractPurpose – The problem of consumption in the framework of Islamic economics is how to fulfill needs so that satisfaction is achieved, full of ethics by adding social preferences and benefits, and hoping to achieve the pleasure of Allah SWT.Methodology - Such consumer behavior should be based on Islamic moral consumption ethics with the guidelines of the Qur'an and Sunnah. The principles of consumption within the framework of Islamic ethics, namely (i) the principle of permissibility and generosity; (ii) Responsibility and Simplicity Principles; (iii) Principles of Balance and Fairness; and (iv) Priority and Morality Principles.Findings - All consumption ethics are aimed at achieving falah, which is a noble and prosperous life in this world and the hereafter with the fulfillment of the needs of human life in a balanced way. The fulfillment of community needs will have an impact called mashlahah (individual and social welfare) in the hope of achieving the pleasure of Allah SWT. So it is fitting that the consumption of a Muslim is as a means of help to worship Allah SWT. So its consumption must conform to the hierarchy of essential (darūriyyāt), complementary (hājiyyāt) and embellished (taḥsīniyyāt) needs. Islam forbids consumers to take extreme actions (up to the upper limit) in the form of excessive consumption (israf) or wasteful consumption (tabdhir), and also avoid stingy consumption. The prohibition set is not to limit mankind, but to ensure the benefits are maintained and harm is avoided in consumption.Keywords: Consumption, Ethics, Islam, Falah
Inflation Through the Transmission Of Islamic And Conventional Monetary Policy In Indonesia Rohmana, Yana; Utami, Suci Aprilliani
AMWALUNA (Jurnal Ekonomi dan Keuangan Syariah) Vol 7, No 1 (2023)
Publisher : Univeristas Islam Bandung

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | Full PDF (477.213 KB) | DOI: 10.29313/amwaluna.v7i1.11214

Abstract

This study aims to identify the transmission of Islamic and conventional monetary policy through the interest rate channel, credit channel, and exchange rate channel to inflation in Indonesia using the Vector Error Correction Model (VECM). VECM estimates show that all variables in the short term have no effect on inflation. The results of the Impulse-Response Function (IRF) show that all variables in the model are able to stabilize the inflation rate within three to seven months, while stabilizing real sector growth takes four to eight months. The results of the Forecast Error Variance Decomposition (FEVD) show that Total Conventional Banking Credit (CRED) has the most influence on inflation, while Bank Indonesia Certificate (SBI) is the variable that has the most influence on the real sector. Sharia monetary instruments play a big role in controlling inflation, but the effect is not as big as conventional monetary instruments. So that the relevant authorities are expected to develop more sharia monetary instruments based on the real sector based on underlying assets in order to be able to strengthen their influence on inflation.