Emerging Issues in Economics of Development, Business and Finance

$230.00

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Series: Business, Technology and Finance
BISAC: BUS068000

Emerging Issues in Economics of Development, Business and Finance is a resource for academia, practitioners, and policymakers seeking to take part in the discourses of various most updated issues within the shared prolific intersection of the three domains. It discusses headline topics such as how internet penetration and quality may improve a country’s productivity, how usage of big data can predict customer churn, how connection with global value chain may stimulate demand for worker, how prominence of CSR disclosure in optimizing firm value along with the reflections of other thought-provoking topics.

The configuration of this edited volume manifests the concerted connection between economics of development, business and finance in its four parts, which offer thorough investigation-based evidence on investment, technology and human capital development; corporate social responsibility, big data, and customer behaviour; reporting, auditing, business financial performance; and finance and banking. Articles in these chapters are also completed with executable managerial and policy implications providing handiness to business leaders and policymakers to walk the talk without getting overinvolved with texts and numbers.
(Imprint: Nova)

Table of Contents

Table of Contents

Preface

Section 1: Investment, Technology and Human Capital Development

Chapter 1. Evidence of the Crowding-Out Effect in Indonesia: Comparison of 1990–2002 and 2003–2017
(Raden Rami Ramdana and Beta Yulianita Gitaharie, Department of Economics, Universitas Indonesia, Depok, Indonesia)

Chapter 2. Finding a New Source of Growth: Impact of Internet Towards Productivity in Indonesia
(Muhammad Mufid Martami and Teguh Dartanto, Department of Economics, Universitas Indonesia, Depok, Indonesia)

Chapter 3. Do Workers Benefit from the Global Value Chain? Lessons Learned from the Indonesian Apparel Sector
(Muhammad Anggada Putra Prabowo, Padang Wicaksono and Toni Bakhtiar, Department of Economics, Universitas Indonesia, Depok, Indonesia, and others)

Chapter 4. Money Talks but Education Doesn’t: A Study of Economic Abuse of Married Couple in Indonesia
(Dina Ika Kusumaningsih and Sri Moertiningsih Adioetomo, Department of Economics, Universitas Indonesia, Depok, Indonesia)

Chapter 5. Labor Migration and Economic Agglomeration in Indonesia
(Nimrot Sitorus and Hera Susanti, Departement of Economics, Universitas Indonesia, Depok, Indonesia)

Section 2: Corporate Social Responsibility, Big Data and Customer Behaviour

Chapter 6. The Effect of Board Size and Organisational Slack Resources on CSR Disclosure and Value of Indonesian Manufacturing Firms
(Desi Zulvina, Reztika Putri Ridha, Tri Rina Yunita, Desi Adhariani and Chaerul D. Djakman, Department of Accounting, Universitas Indonesia, Depok, Indonesia)

Chapter 7. Effects of CSR Disclosure on Firm Value: Investigating the Moderating Role of Risk Management
(Anan Werdie Wirawan, Laila Jahidatul Falah, Lydia Kusumadewi, Desi Adhariani and Chaerul D. Djakman
Department of Accounting, Universitas Indonesia, Depok, Indonesia)

Chapter 8. Firm Life Cycle, Corporate Social Responsibility and Firm Financial Performance
(Yossi Septriani, Lindawati Gani, Elvia Shauki and Hilda Rossieta, Department of Accounting, Universitas Indonesia, Depok, Indonesia)

Chapter 9. Predicting Customer Churn in the Indonesia Telecommunications Industry Using Big Data
(Febtriany and Athor Subroto, PT. Telkom Indonesia Tbk., Jakarta, Indonesia, and others)

Chapter 10. Multi-Channel Retailing: Effect of Service Quality and Image Congruity on Intention to Recommend
(Vinny Muthia Sari and Tengku Ezni Balqiah, Department of Management, Universitas Indonesia, Depok, Indonesia)

Chapter 11. Co-Creation in the Video Game Industry through Membership in Virtual Communities
(Aldi Putra Laksana, Tengku Ezni Balqiah and Rifelly Dewi Astuti, Department of Management, Universitas Indonesia, Depok, Indonesia)

Section 3: Reporting, Auditing and Business Financial Performance

Chapter 12. Influence of Intrinsic Motivation and Risk-Taking Propensity on the Financial Performance of SMEs in South Sulawesi, Indonesia with Non-Financial Performance as a Mediator
(Nadira Salsabila and Putri Mega Desiana, Department of Management, Universitas Indonesia, Depok, Indonesia)

Chapter 13. The Determinants of Consumer Vulnerability to Being a Victim of Affinity Fraud
(Yofi Rosameliana and Nureni Wijayati, Department of Accounting, Universitas Indonesia, Depok, Indonesia)

Chapter 14. Effect of Whistleblowing and Codes of Conduct on Reported Fraud in Indonesia’s Banks
(Yohanes Rubencius Prabowo and Fitriany Fitriany, Department of Accounting, Universitas Indonesia, Depok, Indonesia, and others)

Chapter 15. IFRS Convergence and Audit Fees: An ASEAN Cross-Country Study
(Elfira Makarim and Aria Farah Mita, Department of Accounting, Universitas Indonesia, Depok, Indonesia)

Chapter 16. The Effect of Diversity on Boards of Directors and Earnings Management with Audit Committee as the Moderator
(Hanif Ramadhan Widitya and Vera Diyanty, Department of Accounting, Universitas Indonesia, Depok, Indonesia)

Chapter 17. Effect of Other Component Auditor Involvement in Audit Group on Audit Quality: The Role of SA 600
(Aslamia Dini Izzati and Viska Anggraita, Department of Accounting, Universitas Indonesia, Depok, Indonesia)

Chapter 18. Does the Agency Problem Mitigate Effects of Procurement Expenditures on Local Government Performance? Evidence from Indonesia
(Anda Dwiharyadi, Hilda Rossieta, Chaerul D Djakman and Bambang Pamungkas, Department of Accounting, Universitas Indonesia, Depok, Indonesia)

Chapter 19. The Effectiveness of the Board of Commissioners and Audit Committee Alleviating Fraud
(S. Roris Oktian and Vera Diyanty, Department of Accounting, Universitas Indonesia, Depok, Indonesia)

Chapter 20. The Association Among Characteristics of Boards of Commissioners, Audit Committee Members and Audit Fees in Indonesia
(Abraham Zulfikar and Desi Adhariani, Department of Accounting, Universitas Indonesia, Depok, Indonesia)

Section 4. Finance and Banking

Chapter 21. The Impact of Global Financial Distress and Uncertainties toward Sukuk Return Dynamics in Global Market, GCC and Non-GCC
(Meri Andani and Muhammad Budi Prasetyo, Management, Universitas Indonesia, Depok, Indonesia)

Chapter 22. Factors Affecting Funding Decisions of Donation-Based Crowdfunding Projects
(Laras Yunita Rachmaningsih, Liyu Adhi Kasari Sulung and Lidya de Vega, Department of Management, Universitas Indonesia, Depok, Indonesia)

Chapter 23. Effects of Internal Risk Factors and Corporate Governance on Risk-Taking by Indonesian Insurance Companies
(Stefano Girahot Tampubolon and Sylvia Veronica Siregar, Department of Accounting, Universitas Indonesia, Depok, Indonesia)

Index

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