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Contact Name
Inayati Nuraini Dwiputri
Contact Email
inayati.dwiputri.fe@um.ac.id
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jesp.journal@um.ac.id
Editorial Address
Editor in Chief Thomas Soseco, Universitas Negeri Malang (Scopus ID: 57194284145), Indonesia Editorial Board Dr. Inayati Nuraini Dwiputri, Universitas Negeri Malang (Scopus ID: 57213149507), Indonesia Ekaterina Meltenisova, Novosibirsk State University (Scopus ID: 56731311600), Russian Federation Etty Soesilowati, Universitas Negeri Malang (Scopus ID: 57194207100), Indonesia Prof. Imam Mukhlis, Universitas Negeri Malang (Scopus ID 57198446914), Indonesia Prof. Irwan Trinugroho, Ph.D, Universitas Sebelas Maret (Scopus ID: 56178586300), Indonesia Prof. Devanto Shasta Pratomo, Ph.D, Universitas Brawijaya (Scopus ID: 37005935600), Indonesia Febry Wijayanti, Universitas Negeri Malang (Scopus ID: 57216149842), Indonesia Yudistira Hendra Permana, Ph.D, Universitas Gadjah Mada (Scopus ID: 57194026381), Indonesia Assoc. Prof. Dr. Nasikh Nasikh, Universitas Negeri Malang (Scopus ID: 57192685029), Indonesia Bagus Shandy Narmaditya, Ph.D, (Scopus ID: 57194286237) Faculty of Economics, Universitas Negeri Malang, Indonesia Prof John Lynham, University of Hawai'i (Scopus ID: 24833243300), United States Lustina Fajar Prastiwi, Universitas Negeri Malang, Indonesia Dr. Richardson Kojo Edeme, Department of Economics, University of Nigeria (Scopus ID: 57196469833), Nigeria Assoc. Prof. Mahirah Kamaludin, Universiti Malaysia Terengganu (Scopus ID: 56102066600), Malaysia Assoc. Prof. Dr. Thanet Wattanakul, Khon Kaen University (Scopus ID: 56195492400), Thailand
Location
Kota malang,
Jawa timur
INDONESIA
Jurnal Ekonomi dan Studi Pembangunan (JESP)
ISSN : 25027115     EISSN : 20861575     DOI : 10.17977
Core Subject : Economy,
Jurnal Ekonomi dan Studi Pembangunan focuses on scientific papers related to development economics include critical analysis of economic development issues, local economic development, community economic development, economic growth, international trade and finance, fiscal and monetary policy, welfare economy, and development policy concering the Small and Medium Entreprises. Special consideration is given to research paper that critically studies using multi perspectives such as sosio-economic, cultural-economic, political-economic, historical and geographical, and technological perspectives.
Articles 129 Documents
The Effect of Political and Economic Dimensions on Poverty in Indonesia Atik Purmiyati; Asan Ali Golam Hassan; Dyah Wulan Sari; Vandi Romadhoni; Nonny Anggela; Laila Rahmadani
Jurnal Ekonomi dan Studi Pembangunan Vol 15, No 2 (2023)
Publisher : Universitas Negeri Malang

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.17977/um002v15i22023p018

Abstract

This study aims to identify and analyze the factors that influence poverty of 33 province in Indonesia at 2010-2019. In this study using panel data regression using the Random Effect Model (REM). The independent variables used in this study consisted of the Indonesian Democracy Index (IDI), Economic Institutions, Regional Minimum Wage, Gross Regional Domestic Product (GRDP), Open Unemployment Rate, Mean Years School and Life Expectancy. The results of the study show that simultaneously all independent variables have a significant effect on poverty variables in Indonesia and partially economic institution variables, mean years school, life expectancy, have a negative effect and open unemployment rate variables have a positive effect on poverty in Indonesia in 2010-2019. In addition, IDI, Regional Minimum Wage, GRDP have no significant effect on poverty in Indonesia in 2010-2019.
Variables Affecting Extreme Poverty of Agricultural Sector Households in Indonesia Syafira Karunia Sari; Nucke Widowati Kusumo Projo
Jurnal Ekonomi dan Studi Pembangunan Vol 17, No 1 (2025)
Publisher : Universitas Negeri Malang

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Abstract

This research aims to describe the characteristics of households and the variables that influence extreme poverty in agricultural sector households in Indonesia.This research used the Socio-Economic Survey 2022 with descriptive analysis and binary logistic regression. The results show that 20.78 percent of agricultural sector households are extremely poor. The characteristics of an extremely poor household are: the average number of household members is 5-6 people, the household head is male, the household head is of productive age, lives in a rural area, the maximum education level of the household member is junior high school/equivalent, more than half of the household members have health insurance, and experience food insecurity, does not own their residence, no assets, no credit, not receivingnon-cash government assistance, receivingFamily Hope Program, the proportion of household members working is a maximum of 0.5, sanitation condition are poor, and no electricity available. Variables that influence the status of extremely poor households are the number of household members, age of household heads, classification of area of residence, food insecurity, asset ownership, credit ownership, Family Hope Program, housing ownership, proportion of household members working, sanitation condition, and availability of electricity.
The Relationship between Public Expenditure, Corruption and Poverty in Nigeria Ali Madina Dankumo; Suryati Ishak; Yasmin Bani; Hanny Zurina Hamza
Jurnal Ekonomi dan Studi Pembangunan Vol 11, No 1 (2019)
Publisher : Universitas Negeri Malang

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.17977/um002v11i12019p076

Abstract

Poverty in Nigeria affects about 67% of the population who have insufficient means of supporting their families. World Food Programme have spent $126million on food assistance in Nigeria, yet majority are hungry. Government, through its expenditures, provided public goods to improve welfare and reduce poverty, but all is to no vail because it is mostly affected by bureaucratic bottlenecks and corruption. This paper investigated the long-run consequence of corruption in a model of public expenditures and poverty in Nigeria, to test the hypothesis of “grease or sands the wheels”. The sources of data were; Central Bank of Nigeria, National Bureau of Statistics Nigeria, and World Bank for 21 years (1996-2016). The study employed the ARDL bounds test. The findings revealed a long-run relationship between public expenditures, corruption and poverty. The aspect of expenditures on economic sector is significant, while that of social sector is not. Corruption is positively related to poverty, this is despite increase in corruption index, which remains below 30% (still corrupt since it’s less than 50%), hence, making the public expenditure not to impact on poverty, sanding the wheels. The study suggested some measures to enhance corruption index thereby allowing public expenditure to impact on poverty.
New Evidence of Individual Level of Happiness in Indonesia: Does Easterlin Paradox Matter? Ellytahatin Indah Sekar Putri; Dwi Prasetyani
Jurnal Ekonomi dan Studi Pembangunan Vol 13, No 1 (2021)
Publisher : Universitas Negeri Malang

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.17977/um002v13i12021p060

Abstract

This study aims to estimate the determining factors of individual happiness of the head of household in Indonesia in 2014 using cross-section data from the Indonesia Family Life Survey (IFLS) batch 5 of 2014 with 5092 respondents estimated by a logit model. The Logit model was chosen due to the ordinal response variable and the dependent variable using a scale of 0 and 1. This study tested 7 independent variables using binary logistic regression. The results showed that the economic factors of employment and income had a significant effect on happiness. It implies that there was no Easterlin Paradox in Indonesia. Individual characteristic factors, comprising age, duration of education, and health showed an influence on the head of household’s level of happiness. This research found that gender and area of residence variables did not show significant results. In other words, the level of happiness of the head of household was not determined by the gender; male or female. The level of happiness of the head of household living in rural or urban areas also showed no effect.
Public Health Financing, Remittances, and Inclusive Growth in Resource-rich Countries: Evidence from Nigeria and Mozambique Sunday Osahon Igbinedion; Favoured Mogbolu
Jurnal Ekonomi dan Studi Pembangunan Vol 15, No 1 (2023)
Publisher : Universitas Negeri Malang

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.17977/um002v15i12023p019

Abstract

The persistent challenge of accelerating economic growth via government health expenditure has been widely acknowledged in extant literature. Though such government expenditures have impacted growth in some cases, but the desire to further stimulate growth has brought about the need to explore more options in that regard. Interestingly, remittance has evolved over time as an alternative. Yet, the relative impact of these two covariates in promoting inclusive growth in natural resource rich countries remains understudied in Africa.The study therefore examines the relative impact of both government health expenditure and personal remittances received on inclusive growth in the two resource-rich countries of Nigeria and Mozambique. Utilizing the Fully Modified Ordinary Least Square Method (FMOLS) and the error correction mechanism on time series data for each of the two countries, the results revealed that economic fundamentals like government health expenditure, personal remittances received, and per capita income are of considerable significance in the task of enthroning inclusive growth in theresource-rich countries of Nigeria and Mozambique.
Basic Dimensions and Community Welfare in the Boti Tribe in the Island of Timor Kamilaus Konstanse Oki
Jurnal Ekonomi dan Studi Pembangunan Vol 16, No 2 (2024)
Publisher : Universitas Negeri Malang

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Abstract

The Boti tribe is the most unique indigenous traditional tribe on the island of Timor and even in the world. In the economic field, the Boti tribe fulfills economic needs independently through farming and refuses all kinds of government assistance, refuses technological production or modernization and formal education for the younger generation. However, the people of the Boti tribe feel very prosperous with their economic and socio-cultural life. The analytical tool used in this research is SmartPLS. The results show that the basic dimensions formed by the dimensions of satisfaction, meaning in life and security needs determine the very prosperous and happy society in fulfilling basic needs and other needs without dependence on the government and other parties
Determinant of Import in Indonesia Muhamad Yunanto; Henny Medyawati
Jurnal Ekonomi dan Studi Pembangunan Vol 17, No 2 (2025)
Publisher : Universitas Negeri Malang

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Abstract

Trade activities such as imports are a research theme that remains interesting to research. This research was conducted to analyze the effect of inflation, Gross Domestic Products (GDP), Bank Indonesia interest rate (BI rate) and exchange rates for Indonesian imports. This study used quarterly time series data from 2010-2022 from Bank Indonesia and the Central Bureau of Statistics, using the Vector Error Correction Model (VECM) as the estimation tool. The main finding was that, in the short run GDP and inflation has no impact on the import. However, Birate and exchange rate variable has a positive and significant impact on the import. In the long run, the results show that the variables, GDP and BI rate have positive and significant on imports. The main contribution of this research is the use of interest rates (Birate-BI7 Day Reverse Repo Rate) to predict imports which has not been widely used by researchers in Indonesia
The Effects of Domestic Demand and Export on Economic Growth of North Sumatra Jongkers Tampubolon; Aaron Loh
Jurnal Ekonomi dan Studi Pembangunan Vol 12, No 2 (2020)
Publisher : Universitas Negeri Malang

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.17977/um002v12i22020p108

Abstract

The objective of this study is to investigate the roles of domestic demand and export in the economic growth of North Sumatra, Indonesia. Specifically, this study examined: (i) the effect of domestic demand and export on economic growth, (ii) the effect of domestic demand components (i.e., private consumption, government consumption, and investment) on economic growth, and (iii) causal relationships between domestic demand, export, and economic growth. Using the autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL) bound test for cointegration, the study revealed thatNorth Sumatra’s economic growth is not driven by export. Export and economic growth do not affect each other, whereas domestic demand and economic growth influence each other dynamically. In the short-run, private consumption and investment have positive and significant effects on economic growth. However, in the long-run, only private consumption has a significant effect. ARDL Granger causality analysis showed that in the short-run, only private consumption has a causal relationship with economic growth. The absence of the causal relationships between both investment and government expenditure and economic growth indicates that the export sector, which is growing rapidly in both monetary terms and its shares in the regional gross domestic products (GDP), is isolated from the regional economic activities.
Technical Efficiency Analysis of MSMEs Fashion Offline and Online in Surabaya Atik purmiyati; Tamat Sarmidi; Reza Pradipta
Jurnal Ekonomi dan Studi Pembangunan Vol 14, No 2 (2022)
Publisher : Universitas Negeri Malang

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.17977/um002v14i22022p214

Abstract

The main purpose of this study is analyzing the level of technical efficiency of MSMEs fashion offline with offline and online in Surabaya, examine the differences between offline with offline and online, and determine the factors that affect technical efficiency. This study uses purposive sampling method with primary data. Non-parametric and parametric approach used with Data Envelopment Analysis, Independent sample T-Test and Tobit Regression. First, the results showed the average level of technical efficiency of offline MSMEs fashion was 65 percent with 8 efficient businesses. Meanwhile, the average level of technical efficiency of online and offline MSMEs fashion is 77.1 percent with 20 efficient businesses. Second, there are differences in the average efficiency of offline and online MSMEs fashion. The result of Tobit Regression on the offline MSMEs fashion show the length of business and number of store offline have positive and significant impact on technical efficiency, while number of workers and capital credit has no significant effect. While on offline and online MSMEs fashion, show the number of online stores and capital credit has a positive and significant impact on technical efficiency, while the length of business and the number of offline stores have no significant effect.
Simulating the Impact of Fuel Prices Rising and Direct Cash Assistance Compensation (BLT BBM) on Poverty in Indonesia Ariful Romadhon; Ardi Adji
Jurnal Ekonomi dan Studi Pembangunan Vol 16, No 1 (2024)
Publisher : Universitas Negeri Malang

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.17977/um002v16i12024p073

Abstract

Crude oil prices have become volatile as geopolitical conflicts that occur in oil-exporting countries make the Indonesian government have to increase fuel prices and plan to provide cash transfers as compensation. This study analyzes the impact of fuel price rising and the direct cash assistance compensation program/Bantuan Langsung Tunai (BLT BBM) on poverty using micro data simulation. Poverty simulation is generated by modifying the poverty line (GK) and expenditure by utilizing leading indicators such as commodities inflation, household consumption expenditure growth, and population growth. The simulation results show that the presence of compensation can reduce the poverty rate compared to the absence of compensation. Without compensation, the poverty rate in September 2022 is predicted to be 10.36 percent (0.82 percent higher than in March 2022), while under the government's scheme where compensation is given to households receiving the Family Hope Program (PKH)/Non-Cash Food Assistance (BPNT), poverty is predicted to be 9.56 percent (0.02 percent higher than in March 2022). Exclusion error in the program of 55.35 percent in the lowest decile is an obstacle in poverty alleviation. Improvement and updating of the database of program recipients is needed so that the program can be more targeted to reach the poor.

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