Akmal Asman
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Is Generation Z Willing to Consume Halal-Certified Products to Support Sustainable Development? Abdullah, Abdullah; Hasan Bisri; Jeyhan Ali Azhar; Akmal Asman
El-Qish: Journal of Islamic Economics Vol. 5 No. 1 (2025): El-Qish: Journal of Islamic Economics
Publisher : LPPM Universitas Terbuka

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.33830/elqish.v5i1.12267.2025

Abstract

This research aims to determine Gen Z's desire to consume halal-certified products to support sustainable development. This study uses a questionnaire and expands the TPB theory popularized by Ajzen by adding religiousness and halal literacy variables, which aim to measure the extent to which these variables have an impact on the research object. The analytical model for this research (PLS-SEM) was adopted to test the research model on 357 samples obtained from five islands in Indonesia. The research results show that, first, testing perceived behavioral control and attitude has a significant effect on religiousness, while subjective norms and halal literacy do not have a significant effect on religiousness. Second, perceived behavioral control, attitude, subjective norms, and halal literacy have a significant effect on the willingness to consume sustainable development. Third, the religious variable does not show significant results on the willingness to consume sustainable development. This research proposes implications that emphasize increasing halal literacy for Gen Z throughout Indonesia by providing broad accessibility for an integral understanding of halal.
Green Policy Divergence In The Developing World: The Nexus Of Energy, Finance, And Religious Affiliation Basri, Basri; Akmal Asman; Yusuf Rahim; Yusri, Yusri
ORGANIZE: Journal of Economics, Management and Finance Vol. 5 No. 1 (2026): Economic Transformation and Development
Publisher : Perkumpulan Dosen Fakultas Agama Islam Indramayu

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.58355/organize.v5i1.205

Abstract

This study assesses the impact of energy, fiscal, monetary, green economy, and ICT policies on carbon emissions. Using a dynamic GMM estimator, it analyzes panel data from 38 OIC and 81 non-OIC developing countries from 2012 to 2021. The findings reveal divergent policy impacts: while renewable energy reduces emissions, fossil fuel use also shows an emission-lowering effect, potentially through efficiency gains. Conversely, electricity consumption increases emissions. In fiscal policy, tax revenue correlates with higher emissions, whereas government spending and industrial activity suppress them. Paradoxically, key green economy indicators the human development index and forest cover are associated with increased emissions, alongside the effects of ICT development. These complex results underscore the need for nuanced, integrated policy design. The study concludes that a strategic policy mix harmonizing fiscal, energy, and technological interventions is crucial for developing nations to achieve sustainable, green economic growth and contribute effectively to global climate mitigation.