cover
Contact Name
Nur Azisah
Contact Email
jegarprofessorline@gmail.com
Phone
+6285298727078
Journal Mail Official
jegarprofessorline@gmail.com
Editorial Address
Jl. Dg. Ngadde Raya, Parangtambung, Makassar, Sulawesi Selatan, Indonesia
Location
Kota makassar,
Sulawesi selatan
INDONESIA
Journal of Economic Growth and Development Review
ISSN : 30629209     EISSN : 30629217     DOI : -
Core Subject : Economy,
The research scope of this journal is the issues of economic growth and development in Indonesia and the world. The journal accepts contributions in the form of theoretical, empirical, and policy articles that address one or more of the following topics: 1. The sources and drivers of economic growth and development 2. The measurement and indicators of economic growth and development 3. The impact of globalization, trade, and foreign direct investment on economic growth and development 4. The role of institutions, governance, and corruption in economic growth and development 5. The relationship between economic growth and development and human capital, innovation, technology, and entrepreneurship 6. The challenges and opportunities of economic growth and development in the context of climate change, environmental degradation, natural resources, and energy 7. The inequality and poverty implications of economic growth and development 8. The social and cultural dimensions of economic growth and development 9. The political economy and history of economic growth and development 10. The regional and comparative analysis of economic growth and development
Articles 5 Documents
Search results for , issue "Volume 2 Issue 2 September 2025" : 5 Documents clear
Socio‑Cultural Capital and Endogenous Growth in Coastal Capture Fisheries: A Study of Sangihe, North Sulawesi Lungari, Fitria Fresty; Palawe, Handoko Jayaputra; Sirait, Evi
Journal of Economic Growth and Development Review Volume 2 Issue 2 September 2025
Publisher : Professorline

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.62012/jegar.vi.21

Abstract

This study examines the role of socio-cultural capital as a driver of endogenous economic growth in coastal capture fisheries, focusing on the Sangihe Islands in North Sulawesi, Indonesia. Based on qualitative fieldwork, including interviews, participant observation, and community profiling, the research identifies six key mechanisms through which social and cultural factors support local economic development: intergenerational knowledge transfer, customary resource governance, trust-based labor and credit systems, communal risk management, cultural identity as economic motivation, and internal differentiation within social structures. These findings show that economic growth in Sangihe is deeply embedded in informal institutions and cultural practices, which function as productive assets. By framing growth as an internally driven process rooted in local relationships and values, the study offers a more holistic and context-sensitive understanding of development in small-scale fisheries. The results carry significant implications for policy, highlighting the need to recognize, protect, and integrate socio-cultural capital into strategies for sustainable and inclusive coastal development.
Economic Growth at the Edge of the Sea: The Political Economy and History of Coastal Fisheries in Indonesia’s 3T Regions (3T: Disadvantaged, Frontier, and Outermost Regions). Bawias, Ishak; Mozes, Getruida Nita; Puspita, Hery Indria Dwi
Journal of Economic Growth and Development Review Volume 2 Issue 2 September 2025
Publisher : Professorline

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.62012/jegar.vi.22

Abstract

This study explores the political economy and historical roots of economic growth in Indonesia’s coastal fisheries, with a focus on the country's 3T regions (disadvantaged, frontier, and outermost). Drawing on qualitative field data and critical policy analysis, the research reveals how historical marginalization, market dependency, legal exclusion, and fragmented governance have shaped uneven development trajectories in these regions. Despite rich marine resources and integration into global seafood markets, small-scale fishers in 3T areas often remain economically insecure and politically invisible. The study highlights how growth has been promoted through centralized, extractive models that prioritize production and capital investment while neglecting community rights and local institutions. However, it also identifies local strategies of resistance, adaptation, and institutional innovation suggesting that endogenous, community-driven growth is possible when socio-political conditions are supportive. By situating fisheries development within a political economy framework, the research calls for a more inclusive and territorially grounded approach to maritime development, one that recognizes coastal communities not as passive beneficiaries, but as central agents in shaping sustainable and just growth. Keywords: Political economy; Coastal fisheries; 3T regions (disadvantaged, frontier, outermost); Marine governance; Inclusive development.
Disempowered by Design: Information Inequality in the Age of Inclusive Growth A'zdom, Muhammad Khofidul; Firnanda , Deviyan Angel
Journal of Economic Growth and Development Review Volume 2 Issue 2 September 2025
Publisher : Professorline

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.62012/jegar.vi.23

Abstract

In an era where inclusive growth has become a global development mantra, this study critically examines a frequently overlooked dimension: information inequality. While infrastructure expansion and digital inclusion are often presented as pathways to empowerment, this research argues that many development efforts are structured in ways that silence marginalized voices, particularly in peripheral regions. Using a qualitative approach combining critical discourse analysis, interviews, and case studies from remote areas in Indonesia the study explores how development communication practices reflect and reproduce power imbalances. Findings reveal that dominant narratives frame poverty as a technical issue, exclude communities from meaningful participation, and centralizing communicative control in elite institutions. At the same time, grassroots actors engage in alternative communication strategies, highlighting their agency and resilience. The study concludes that true inclusion requires not just access, but the redistribution of communicative power, enabling communities to shape the narratives and policies that define their futures. Communication, therefore, must be recognized not merely as a channel, but as a site of justice, voice, and democratic engagement in the age of inclusive growth.
Reindustrializing Indonesia: Human Capital, Innovation, and Entrepreneurial Growth in a Changing Industrial Landscape Pramanda, Ryan
Journal of Economic Growth and Development Review Volume 2 Issue 2 September 2025
Publisher : Professorline

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.62012/jegar.vi.24

Abstract

As emerging economies grapple with post-pandemic recovery and long-term development challenges, the call to "reindustrialize" has gained renewed attention. This paper examines how human capital, technological innovation, and entrepreneurship function as core drivers of industrial transformation, using Indonesia as a case example. Drawing on literature review and policy analysis, it highlights how workforce readiness, innovation ecosystems, and entrepreneurial infrastructure interact within national strategies. While Indonesia has launched bold initiatives in industrial downstreaming, vocational education, and SME digitization, its efforts are constrained by institutional fragmentation, skills mismatches, and uneven regional development. The study argues that successful reindustrialization in emerging economies requires an integrated, people-centered approach one that connects talent with technology and local innovation with global competitiveness. It concludes by offering policy recommendations to align human development, technological capability, and entrepreneurship in support of sustainable and inclusive industrial growth
Sources and Drivers of Economic Growth in the Fisheries Sector: An Analysis of Investment, Innovation, and Market Demand Riyadi, Muhammad; Alam, Sultan; Hadi, Syamsul
Journal of Economic Growth and Development Review Volume 2 Issue 2 September 2025
Publisher : Professorline

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.62012/jegar.vi.25

Abstract

This research demonstrates that the economic growth of the fisheries sector is underpinned by a synergistic interaction among investment, innovation, and market demand. Investment not only expands capacity directly but also enhances innovation capabilities that produce additional growth dividends. Market demand acts as an external driver that spurs producers to expand, upgrade, and diversify. The study achieves its aims: quantifying the relative contributions of the three drivers, revealing the mediating role of innovation, and uncovering spatial and subsectoral heterogeneity. From a policy perspective, the results point to the need for coordinated strategies: capital support, innovation encouragement, and market linkage must be advanced in tandem and adapted to regional contexts.

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