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Journal : International Journal of Economics Development Research (IJEDR)

Work Experience, Accounting Expertise, and Organizational Culture as Economic Factors in Improving Financial Statement Quality in Jayapura Cooperatives Wambon, Thomas Sergius; Salle, Agustinus; Matani, Cornelia Desiana
International Journal of Economics Development Research (IJEDR) Vol. 6 No. 2 (2025): International Journal of Economics Development Research (IJEDR)
Publisher : Yayasan Riset dan Pengembangan Intelektual

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.37385/ijedr.v6i2.7310

Abstract

This study aims to examine the effect of work experience, accounting understanding and organizational culture on the quality of financial reports in cooperatives in Jayapura city. This questionnaire was distributed to 60 respondents in 26 cooperatives consisting of cooperative leaders, staff involved in the preparation of financial reports and cooperatives that have published financial reports. The sampling technique used purposive sampling. Data processing in this study used the WarpPLS 8.0 software application. The results of the study showed that work experience did not show a significant effect on the quality of financial reports in cooperatives while accounting understanding and organizational culture had a significant effect on the quality of financial reports in cooperatives in this study.
Autonomy Without Accountability? The Governance Challenges of Papua’s Special Fiscal Regime Siahay, Adolf Z. D.; Salle, Agustinus; Sobirov, Bobur; Abdullah, Siti Intan Nurdiana Wong
International Journal of Economics Development Research (IJEDR) Vol. 6 No. 4 (2025): International Journal of Economics Development Research (IJEDR)
Publisher : Yayasan Riset dan Pengembangan Intelektual

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.37385/ijedr.v6i5.8895

Abstract

Papua’s Special Autonomy Fund represents one of the most ambitious asymmetric decentralization initiatives in Southeast Asia. Yet, over 20 years later, the region remains among Indonesia’s most underdeveloped. This paper investigates the governance failures underlying this paradox, including regulatory overlap, elite capture, and weak local fiscal capacity. It reviews recent evaluation studies and government reports to assess how decentralization design flaws and implementation gaps have constrained service delivery. The analysis offers policy recommendations to restructure the autonomy framework toward greater accountability, data-driven planning, and inclusive development.