Angelita Titis Pertiwi
Universitas Kristen Satya Wacana

Published : 2 Documents Claim Missing Document
Claim Missing Document
Check
Articles

Found 2 Documents
Search

Pengaruh Ekspor, Investasi, Inflasi Dan Pengangguran Terhadap Pertumbuhan Ekonomi Di Indonesia Tahun 1990-2020 Angelita Titis Pertiwi; Ivonni Regina; Gatot Sasongko
Ekonika : Jurnal Ekonomi Universitas Kadiri Vol. 8 No. 1 (2023): April
Publisher : Fakultas Ekonomi Universitas Kadiri

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.30737/ekonika.v8i1.3115

Abstract

This study analyzed the effect of export, investment, inflation, and unemployment to the constant gross domestic product (GDP) used to see the economic growth in Indonesia in 1990 to 2020. Time series data in this study are analyzed using ECM (Error Correction Model) to investigate the long-run and short-run effects of the independent variables, including export, investment, inflation, and unemployment, on GDP. The results suggest that there is no evidence to conclude that export affects GDP significantly in both long-run and short-run period. In terms of short-run period, investment gives positif effects on GDP, but inflation and unemployment are associated with negatif effects on GDP. Regarding long-run period, only investment and inflation significantly gives positive effects on GDP
The Factors Associated with Risk and Time Preferences: Evidence from Australian Data Angelita Titis Pertiwi
Journal of Interdisciplinary Socio-Economic and Community Study Vol. 2 No. 2 (2022): December 2022
Publisher : Universitas Brawijaya

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.21776/jiscos.02.02.05

Abstract

Risk and time preferences are crucial to economic growth because they can influence people's decisions about saving and investing. These preferences may partially explain inequality, the reason why the poor will always be poor. The aims of this study is to investigate the potential factors contributing to the heterogeneity of risk-taking and patient behavior in Australia using cross-sectional data from 2019. This investigation looks for the association between risk-taking and patient behavior and sociodemographic characteristics using the OLS (Ordinary Least Squares) assessment. Age, gender, education, socio-economic index, household formations, indigenous individuals, spoken language at home for daily conversation, and country of birth are the variables. The key finding in terms of patience is that people with higher levels of education, people who live in areas with higher levels of socio-economic advantage, and individuals who live in a home with couple-family have higher levels of time preference. Moreover, persistence is adversely related with native endlessly individuals brought into the world in principally English-talking foundation nations. As far as hazard inclinations, the primary outcome is that ladies are more gamble unwilling than men. Besides, risk-taking way of behaving is decidedly related with individuals living in regions encountering lower levels of financial drawback, individuals living in a solitary parent family, and individuals brought into the world in basically non-English talking foundation nations.