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IMPLEMENTASI PRINSIP GOOD CORPORATE GOVERNANCE PADA BANK SYARIAH DI INDONESIA Nona Azzahra Nasution; Tri Ibnu Ramadhanu; Nurul Fadilah; Ahmad Wahyudi Zein
JURNAL ILMIAH EKONOMI DAN MANAJEMEN Vol. 4 No. 1 (2026): Januari
Publisher : CV. KAMPUS AKADEMIK PUBLISING

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.61722/jiem.v4i1.8250

Abstract

: This study analyzes the implementation of Good Corporate Governance (GCG) principles in Indonesian Islamic banks through qualitative document analysis of annual reports from BSI, BJB Syariah, and BCA Syariah for 2022-2025. Findings reveal GCG implementation at "Good" level (average score 3.20/4.0) with transparency (3.42) and fairness (3.35) as main strengths driven by BSI's digital disclosure platform (92% index), while DPS independence (2.85) emerges as critical systemic weakness (77% average vs POJK 100% target) due to BJB Syariah's Commissioner-DPS dual position and BUMN intervention in BSI. BSI leads (3.40) through Rp780T scale economy, BCA Syariah sets independence benchmark 100% (3.20), and BJB lags (3.00) due to regional capacity constraints. Results confirm agency theory that GCG is essential to prevent profit-sharing moral hazard, recommending POJK 55/2016 Article 15 enforcement, digital GCG mandate, and national sharia HR capacity building for 3.5 score target (2027).
Evaluasi Peran Perbankan Syariah terhadap Ketahanan Ekonomi Global Pasca Krisis Finansial Nona Azzahra Nasution; Muhammad Alvin Novanda
JURNAL RUMPUN MANAJEMEN DAN EKONOMI Vol. 3 No. 3 (2026): Mei
Publisher : CV. KAMPUS AKADEMIK PUBLISHING

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.61722/jrme.v3i3.9659

Abstract

This study aims to evaluate the role of Islamic banking in strengthening global economic resilience after the financial crisis. The study emphasizes how the principles of risk-sharing, prohibition of speculative activities (gharar), and avoidance of interest (riba) in Islamic finance provide stability compared to the conventional interest-based system. The research adopts a qualitative approach through literature review and comparative analysis of financial data from international institutions such as the IMF and the Islamic Development Bank (IsDB). The findings reveal that Islamic banking contributes to reducing systemic risk by promoting asset-backed financing and ethical investment principles. Post-crisis recovery in several Muslim-majority countries shows that Sharia-based financial institutions maintain better liquidity and solvency ratios. The study concludes that the integration of Sharia-compliant mechanisms can serve as an alternative model for sustainable and crisis-resilient global finance.