Structural Transformation of Agriculture and Poverty in Indonesia
Date
2020-03-01Author
ARDIANSYAH, Fitria
DIARTHO, Herman Cahyo
LESTARI, Endah Kurnia
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Show full item recordAbstract
The trend of modern development in some countries is the decline in the
contribution of the agricultural sector to GDP (gross domestic product), as a
consequence of the increased contribution of the non-agricultural sector. So
the development strategy that is often applied is to increase the role of the
modern sector (industry and services) that have a high level of productivity.
The agricultural sector, which has low productivity, often escapes the
development strategy, even though the agricultural sector is a place to make
a living for some poor people who are in rural areas. This study aims to
analyze the effect of economic structural transformation on poverty in
Indonesia. The type of data used in this study is quantitative data, in the
form of time series data between 1980-2017 obtained from World Bank
publications, the World Income Inequality Database, and the Central
Statistics Agency. Analysis of the data used is to use VECM estimation to
see the short-term relationship and the long-term relationship of each
variable. The estimation results of the Vector Error Correction Model
(VECM) concluded that in the long run, the agricultural sector has a
negative and significant relationship to poverty, while the industrial and
service sectors do not have a significant effect on poverty in Indonesia. Per
capita income has a positive relationship with poverty in Indonesia. Based
on the explanation, it concludes that the policy that must be implemented to
overcome the problem of poverty is to develop the agricultural sector.
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- LSP-Jurnal Ilmiah Dosen [7326]