Decomposed Impact of Democracy on Indonesia’s Economic Growth


Journal article


Irsan Hardi, Edi Saputra Ringga, Ade Habya Fijay, Ar Razy Ridha Maulana, Rahmilia Hadiyani, Ghalieb Mutig Idroes
Ekonomikalia Journal of Economics, 2023

Semantic Scholar DOI
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APA   Click to copy
Hardi, I., Ringga, E. S., Fijay, A. H., Maulana, A. R. R., Hadiyani, R., & Idroes, G. M. (2023). Decomposed Impact of Democracy on Indonesia’s Economic Growth. Ekonomikalia Journal of Economics.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Hardi, Irsan, Edi Saputra Ringga, Ade Habya Fijay, Ar Razy Ridha Maulana, Rahmilia Hadiyani, and Ghalieb Mutig Idroes. “Decomposed Impact of Democracy on Indonesia’s Economic Growth.” Ekonomikalia Journal of Economics (2023).


MLA   Click to copy
Hardi, Irsan, et al. “Decomposed Impact of Democracy on Indonesia’s Economic Growth.” Ekonomikalia Journal of Economics, 2023.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{irsan2023a,
  title = {Decomposed Impact of Democracy on Indonesia’s Economic Growth},
  year = {2023},
  journal = {Ekonomikalia Journal of Economics},
  author = {Hardi, Irsan and Ringga, Edi Saputra and Fijay, Ade Habya and Maulana, Ar Razy Ridha and Hadiyani, Rahmilia and Idroes, Ghalieb Mutig}
}

Abstract

Indonesia's democratic performance is still classified as a 'moderate' and 'flawed democracy' according to the latest report, even though the ongoing progress of national democracy continues to advance every year. This study addresses the issue by offering a more comprehensive perspective and distinguishes itself by employing a decomposition approach that incorporates 25 indicators of the Indonesian democracy index to assess their individual effects on economic growth, which no prior Indonesian study has explored. The study classifies these indicators into six distinct categories: freedom and civil rights issues, discrimination issues, political and electoral issues, social and cultural issues, law and justice issues, and demonstration and community participation issues. The findings reveal that five out of the six categorized indicators have a crucial role and significantly impact economic growth. This evidence suggests that policymakers should prioritize a multifaceted approach, which includes bolstering the protection of civil rights and freedoms, combating discrimination, as well as reforming electoral and political processes. If implemented with transparency and inclusivity, this approach can pave the way for a more robust and prosperous democracy, leading to better and sustainable economic growth in Indonesia.