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Contact Name
Muslim
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advancesresearch@gmail.com
Phone
+6282194548786
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advancesresearch@gmail.com
Editorial Address
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INDONESIA
Advances in Economics & Financial Studies
ISSN : -     EISSN : 29857562     DOI : https://doi.org/10.60079/aefs
Core Subject : Economy,
Founded in 2023, Advances in Economics & Financial Studies publishes original research that promises to advance our understanding of Economics & Financial Studies over diverse topics and research methods. This Journal welcomes research of significance across a wide range of primary and applied research methods, including analytical, archival, experimental, survey and case study. The journal encourages articles of current interest to scholars with high practical relevance for organizations or the larger society. We encourage our researchers to look for new solutions to or new ways of thinking about practices and problems and invite well-founded critical perspectives. We provide a forum for communicating impactful research between professionals and academics in Economics & Financial Studies research and practice with discusses and proposes solutions and impact the field. Advances in Economics & Financial Studies addresses a broad range of issues within the fields of finance and economics. Research involving financial institutions, financial policy, control issues for firms, central bank policy, risk and uncertainty, and the economics and financial dimensions of market and non-market phenomena, as well as more specialized topics, all fall within its purview.
Articles 2 Documents
Search results for , issue "Vol. 4 No. 2 (2026): February - May" : 2 Documents clear
Asymmetric Impacts of Palm Oil Expansion and Industrial Downstreaming on Ecological Footprint: Evidence from Indonesia Manulusi, Muhammad Ridwan; Kaseger, Juan Gabriel; Adlu, Abd Malik; Tungka, Estelita Monika; Sendow, Sifra Jelita
Advances in Economics & Financial Studies Vol. 4 No. 2 (2026): February - May
Publisher : Yayasan Pendidikan Bukhari Dwi Muslim

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.60079/aefs.v4i2.777

Abstract

Purpose: This study empirically investigates the asymmetric impacts of palm oil production, downstream industrialization, and trade openness on the ecological footprint. The primary objective is to determine whether environmental degradation responds differently to positive and negative macroeconomic shocks. Research Method: The research employs a nonlinear autoregressive distributed lag framework to analyze annual time-series data spanning 30 years. The analytical procedure involves descriptive statistics, unit root tests to confirm stationarity, nonlinear bounds testing for long-run cointegration, and short-run Granger causality tests. Results and Discussion: The empirical findings reveal a statistically significant asymmetric relationship. A positive shock in palm oil production exacerbates environmental degradation, while a negative shock is associated with measurable ecological recovery. Furthermore, downstream industrialization marginally reduces the ecological footprint in the long run, suggesting the potential for adopting circular economy practices. Conversely, trade openness slightly increases environmental pressures, indicating a global telecoupling effect in which international demand influences domestic industrialization and upstream expansion. Implications: To mitigate imported environmental burdens, producing nations must implement robust integrated policies. Strategic interventions, such as enforcing strict forest moratoriums, facilitating land swaps to degraded mineral soils, and accelerating sustainable certification for smallholders, are critical for achieving long-term ecological resilience. Originality: This research breaks new ground by employing a nonlinear framework to reveal asymmetric "ecological hysteresis," in which environmental recovery fails to keep pace with the degradation caused by palm oil expansion.
The Impact of Effective Digital Onboarding on the Growth of Islamic Bank Customers in Indonesia Saleha, Salwa Latipah; Muhammad Arif
Advances in Economics & Financial Studies Vol. 4 No. 2 (2026): February - May
Publisher : Yayasan Pendidikan Bukhari Dwi Muslim

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.60079/aefs.v4i2.822

Abstract

Purpose: This study aims to analyze the relationship between the effectiveness of digital onboarding and the acceptance of digital banking services at Bank Syariah Indonesia in Medan. Research Method: This study employs an associative quantitative approach with a cross-sectional design. Data were collected through a questionnaire distributed to 100 respondents who had used the digital onboarding service at Bank Syariah Indonesia in Medan. Data analysis was conducted using simple linear regression in SPSS, supported by tests of validity, reliability, normality, and heteroscedasticity. Results and Discussion: The study indicates that digital onboarding has a positive and significant relationship with the acceptance of digital banking services. Ease of registration, time efficiency, flexibility of access, and ease of use of the system shape the public’s positive perception of digital banking services. These findings support the Technology Acceptance Model (TAM) and the Diffusion of Innovations Theory. Implications: This study offers practical guidance for Islamic banking institutions on improving the quality of digital onboarding services to enhance public acceptance of digital services and advance financial inclusion. Originality: This study focuses on digital onboarding as an initial mechanism for adopting digital services in Islamic banking in Medan

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