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Nurhadi Wiyono
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Lembaga Demografi Fakultas Ekonomi dan Bisnis, Universitas Indonesia Gedung N. Iskandar Lt. 2 dan 3 Kampus UI Depok, Jawa Barat Indonesia
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Jurnal Ekonomi Kependudukan dan Keluarga
Published by Universitas Indonesia
ISSN : -     EISSN : 30468590     DOI : https://doi.org/10.7454/jekk
Jurnal Ekonomi Kependudukan dan Keluarga (Journal of Population Economic and Family) or JEKK, is published by the Demographic Institute of the Faculty of Economics and Business, Universitas Indonesia (LD FEB UI). This open-access journal is published twice a year, in January and July. All papers published in JEKK undergo peer review. JEKK publishes articles related to population economics and family issues, both theoretically and empirically, using quantitative, qualitative, and mixed methods approaches. Topics that can be published in JEKK include population issues, fertility mortality, migration, labor markets, education and human resources, poverty, household inequality, family planning, marriage and divorce, and child labor. JEKK welcomes submissions from various professional backgrounds, such as researchers, lecturers, students, government and private sector employees who are interested in population economics and family issues.
Articles 6 Documents
Search results for , issue "vol. 3, no. 1" : 6 Documents clear
Kerentanan Kemiskinan di Sulawesi Selatan: Analisis Vulnerability As Expected Poverty dan Klaster Spasial Triany, Nur Hilda
Jurnal Ekonomi Kependudukan dan Keluarga Vol. 3, No. 1
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This study aims to analyze the determinants of poverty vulnerability in South Sulawesi by integrating spatial dimensions into risk estimation models. Using micro-data from the March 2024 National Socio-Economic Survey (Susenas) with individuals as the unit of analysis, this study applies the Vulnerability as Expected Poverty (VEP) and Local Indicator of Spatial Association (LISA) methods, estimated through an integrated logistic regression model. Empirical results indicate that while the average vulnerability is relatively low, risk distribution is highly concentrated in specific regional clusters. Key findings reveal that health insurance ownership and household assets are the dominant protective factors that drastically reduce vulnerability risk, outweighing the influence of employment status. Contrary to common assumptions, female individuals demonstrate better resilience compared to males. Spatially, residing in poverty clusters (hotspots) proves to be an independent determinant that strictly increases risk, confirming the existence of spatial poverty traps. This study recommends a policy reorientation towards strengthening universal health protection and implementing place-based policies in vulnerability pockets.
Statute Meets Custom: Explaining Provincial Variation in Child Marriage After Indonesia’s 2019 Reform Yudisthira, I Made; Setyonaluri, Diahhadi
Jurnal Ekonomi Kependudukan dan Keluarga Vol. 3, No. 1
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This study investigates whether Indonesia’s 2019 Marriage Law reform, which raised the minimum legal age of marriage to 19, has been associated with lower child marriage prevalence. Using province-level aggregates from the 2022 Indonesian National Socio-Economic Survey (SUSENAS, N = 1,237,946), we distinguish documented and undocumented unions and estimate Ordinary Least Squares models with controls for poverty, education, assets, rural residence, religious composition, and marriage dispensations. Descriptive maps show prevalence is highest in South Kalimantan (18%), East Java (17%), and West Java (17%), with undocumented unions concentrated in West Nusa Tenggara (7%), Banten (5%), Papua (5%), and West Sulawesi (5%). Regression results indicate that provinces with a larger share of adolescents aged 16–19 in 2019—the cohort directly exposed to the reform—exhibit higher child marriage prevalence, with a coefficient of 4.626 (p This study investigates whether Indonesia’s 2019 Marriage Law reform, which raised the minimum legal age of marriage to 19, has been associated with lower child marriage prevalence. Using province-level aggregates from the 2022 Indonesian National Socio-Economic Survey (SUSENAS, ), we distinguish documented and undocumented unions and estimate ordinary least squares models by controlling for poverty, education, assets, rural residence, religious composition, and marriage dispensations. Descriptive maps show child marriage prevalence is highest in South Kalimantan (18%), East Java (17%), and West Java (17%), with undocumented unions concentrated in West Nusa Tenggara (7%), Banten (5%), Papua (5%), and West Sulawesi (5%). Regression results indicate that provinces with a larger share of adolescents aged 16–19 in 2019—the cohort directly exposed to the reform—exhibit higher child marriage prevalence, with a coefficient of 4.626 (p
Estimasi Proporsi Pekerja Anak Pulau Maluku & Papua: Pendekatan Small Area Estimation Hierarchical Bayes Distribusi Beta sofiana, apriani; Afininnas, Fauzana; Mochti, Fachrol; Prayoga, Angga; Husna, Shafira; Istiana, Nofita
Jurnal Ekonomi Kependudukan dan Keluarga Vol. 3, No. 1
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Pekerja anak merupakan isu krusial yang memerlukan penanganan segera untuk mendukung pencapaian target pembangunan global. Pengentasan isu ini menuntut ketersediaan data yang akurat hingga wilayah kecil guna mendukung perumusan kebijakan yang tepat sasaran. Penelitian ini bertujuan menduga proporsi pekerja anak usia 5–17 tahun di kabupaten/kota Pulau Maluku dan Papua tahun 2024 menggunakan metode Small Area Estimation (SAE) Hierarchical Bayes (HB) distribusi Beta. Lima variabel penyerta dari PODES dan regsosek dipilih melalui stepwise regression dan dieksplorasi secara spasial. Hasil pemodelan HB Beta Pulau Maluku dan Papua menunjukkan sebagian besar wilayah masih memiliki RSE tinggi. Untuk meningkatkan presisi, dilakukan klasterisasi wilayah sebelum pemodelan ulang per klaster. Hasil menunjukkan pendekatan HB Beta per klaster lebih presisi dan sesuai untuk wilayah heterogen. Hasil estimasi menunjukkan bahwa klaster 1 dan 3 merupakan daerah rawan pekerja anak. Masih ada sekitar 68 persen daerah di Pulau Maluku Papua dengan proporsi pekerja anak di atas angka nasional
Pengaruh Real Mismatch terhadap Upah Pekerja di Indonesia Pyansahcilia, Jawani Eka; Handayani, Dwini
Jurnal Ekonomi Kependudukan dan Keluarga Vol. 3, No. 1
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This study aims to analyze the effect of real mismatch on the wages of workers with medium and higher education levels in Indonesia using the ordinary least squares (OLS) method. The data used in this study are derived from the National Labor Force Survey (Sakernas) conducted in August 2023 to identify instances of mismatch and analyze its impact on workers' wages. In 2023, the incidence of vertical mismatch only was recorded at 14.58 percent, horizontal mismatch only at 31.73 percent, and real mismatch reached 25.24 percent. The estimation results indicate that workers experiencing vertical mismatch only receive a wage premium, applicable to both undereducated only and overeducated only workers. In contrast, workers experiencing horizontal mismatch only and real mismatch incur a wage penalty. Moreover, differences in the patterns of mismatch status effects on wages were observed when the estimation was conducted on subsamples based on ISCO-08 skill levels, while also considering individual and occupational characteristics. These findings provide valuable insights into the impact of educational level and field mismatch on workers' welfare through wages, with relevant policy implications for improving efficiency and alignment between education and labor market needs.
Bukan hanya Tugas Istri: Pengaruh Penggunaan Kontrasepsi Suami terhadap Kesehatan Mental Istri Saputra, Aldo Savira Adha; Pardede, Elda L.
Jurnal Ekonomi Kependudukan dan Keluarga Vol. 3, No. 1
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Male participation in contraceptive use in Indonesia remains very low, while women continue to bear a disproportionate reproductive burden, including mental health impacts from contraceptive side effects. This study aims to examine the effect of husbands’ contraceptive use on wives’ mental health. The analysis utilizes data from the fifth wave of the Indonesia Family Life Survey conducted in 2014. Wives’ mental health is measured using the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale - 10. The results of the binary logistic regression model indicate that husbands’ contraceptive use lowers the likelihood of wives experiencing depression. Additionally, being aged 25-49, having good self-rated health, having autonomy in household decision-making, being active in social participation, having a higher level of household income, and living in a safe environment are associated with a lower likelihood of depression. Conversely, being employed, having a history of adverse pregnancy outcomes, having a chronic illness, and having four or more children are linked to a higher likelihood of depression. These findings highlight the importance of husbands’ involvement in contraceptive use as a form of social support that contributes positively to wives’ mental health and overall family well-being.
Bibliometric Analysis of Research on Women’s Labor Force Participation and Household Economics Dupi, Muhamad; Baloch, Inayat Ullah
Jurnal Ekonomi Kependudukan dan Keluarga Vol. 3, No. 1
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Studies of women labor participation (WLFP) and household economics have grown in size in the last two decades and more research and policy focus are given to gender equality, labor markets and household welfare. Nevertheless, the available literature is still in pieces by region, theme, and institutional settings and a complete bibliometric review of this area of study is yet to be done. The objective of the proposed study is to trace the world-wide literature on the topic of women participation in the labor force and household economics through the analysis of the patterns of publications, networks of cooperations, and the development of the topic. The research design adopted in this study is bibliometric research design, which focuses on the analysis of 502 peer-reviewed journal articles, which have been indexed in the Scopus database and published in the English language between 2000 and 2025. The bibliographic data was processed and visualized using VOSviewer (version 1.6.20) and co-authorship analysis, bibliographic coupling, and keyword co-occurrence analysis were used to determine the influential countries, institutions, journals, and publications as well as strong research themes.The results show that the research output has been increasing steadily, and especially at the beginning of the COVID-19 period. Nevertheless, the high concentration of scholarly production and collaboration in Global North countries and the few and loosely-connected contributions of the Global South lead to a high level of control over the field. Thematic evolution demonstrates the progressive development of the general socio-demographic visions to more pragmatic ones, which are the household income, participation in the labor market, and the distribution of income.

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