Perkembangan Produk Domestik Regional Bruto Per Kapita 30 Provinsi Di Indonesia Periode 1993-2003: Pendekatan Disparitas Regional Dan Konvergensi

ABSTRACT This research is aimed to identifr regional disparity of per capita GRDP at 1993 constant price of 30 provinces in Indonesia over the period 1993-2001 It attempts to address one fundamental question: to what extent is the economic performance of these provinces converging Or diverging? It u...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Perpustakaan UGM, i-lib
Format: Article NonPeerReviewed
Published: [Yogyakarta] : Universitas Gadjah Mada 2006
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Online Access:https://repository.ugm.ac.id/27209/
http://i-lib.ugm.ac.id/jurnal/download.php?dataId=10261
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Institution: Universitas Gadjah Mada
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Summary:ABSTRACT This research is aimed to identifr regional disparity of per capita GRDP at 1993 constant price of 30 provinces in Indonesia over the period 1993-2001 It attempts to address one fundamental question: to what extent is the economic performance of these provinces converging Or diverging? It used secondary and establishment data BPS (Indonesia's Bureau Statistic). The methods of analysis are Williamson Index, OLS (Ordinary Least Square) regression using panel data, and convergence analysis, The research showed that the regional disparity using Williamson Index tend to decrease towards the equalization. OLS regression analysis showed that key factors that affect significantly increasing speed of convergence the growth of per capita GRDP are initial income, human capital characteristic, dummy resources, and dummy crisis. Convergence analysis indicated that Indonesia should growth at least 4.3 percent per year for its convergence growth. This result is consistent with Williamson index which shows that the dispersion of per capita GRDP reduced over time. This research has a same conclusion with Loll & Yilmrr 9000), about catching-up hypothesis, in which -poor- provinces, as measured by low per capita GRDP, displayed faster growth rates in per capita GRDP than "rich- provinces with higher per capita GRDP. Keywords: regional disparity, convergence, per capita GRDP