Trade openness, exchange rate, gross domestic investment, and growth in Indonesia

This study examines the relationships among economic growth, domestic investment, real exchange rate, and trade openness in Indonesia. We carried out the unit root test, the Johansen co-integration test and then estimated the VEC model. The results suggest that there exists a long-run relationshi...

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Main Authors: Yusoff, Mohammed, ., Ilza Febrina
格式: Conference or Workshop Item
语言:English
出版: 2012
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在线阅读:http://irep.iium.edu.my/24473/1/Trade_Openness%2C_Exchange_Rate%2C_Gross-.pdf
http://irep.iium.edu.my/24473/
http://iafor.org/acss2012_offprints/ACSS2012_offprint_0108.pdf
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spelling my.iium.irep.244732012-11-06T11:28:39Z http://irep.iium.edu.my/24473/ Trade openness, exchange rate, gross domestic investment, and growth in Indonesia Yusoff, Mohammed ., Ilza Febrina HF3000 By region or country This study examines the relationships among economic growth, domestic investment, real exchange rate, and trade openness in Indonesia. We carried out the unit root test, the Johansen co-integration test and then estimated the VEC model. The results suggest that there exists a long-run relationship among the variables. All the estimated coefficients of the long run equation have the correct positive signs and significant at least at 5 percent level. Specifically, a one percent increase in trade openness leads to about 26.5 percent increase in Indonesian real GDP in the long-run; a one percent increase in domestic investment will spur GDP by 1.8 percent, and a one percent depreciation of rupiah promotes GDP by about 6.4 percent in the long-run. The results of Granger causality test using VECM suggest that all the variables cause real GDP in the short-run. Both the trade openness and gross domestic investment cause growth unidirectionally in short-run, except for real exchange rate. The evidence suggests that trade openness, GDI and exchange rate are important determinants of economic growth. And therefore policy makers should seriously take these variables into account in their policy construct in order to sustain economic growth in Indonesia. Specifically, Indonesia should promote foreign trade, improve the domestic investment climate, and maintain exchange rate stability. 2012-05-03 Conference or Workshop Item REM application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/24473/1/Trade_Openness%2C_Exchange_Rate%2C_Gross-.pdf Yusoff, Mohammed and ., Ilza Febrina (2012) Trade openness, exchange rate, gross domestic investment, and growth in Indonesia. In: The Asian Conference on the Social Sciences 2012, 3-6 May 2012, Osaka, Japan. http://iafor.org/acss2012_offprints/ACSS2012_offprint_0108.pdf
institution Universiti Islam Antarabangsa Malaysia
building IIUM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider International Islamic University Malaysia
content_source IIUM Repository (IREP)
url_provider http://irep.iium.edu.my/
language English
topic HF3000 By region or country
spellingShingle HF3000 By region or country
Yusoff, Mohammed
., Ilza Febrina
Trade openness, exchange rate, gross domestic investment, and growth in Indonesia
description This study examines the relationships among economic growth, domestic investment, real exchange rate, and trade openness in Indonesia. We carried out the unit root test, the Johansen co-integration test and then estimated the VEC model. The results suggest that there exists a long-run relationship among the variables. All the estimated coefficients of the long run equation have the correct positive signs and significant at least at 5 percent level. Specifically, a one percent increase in trade openness leads to about 26.5 percent increase in Indonesian real GDP in the long-run; a one percent increase in domestic investment will spur GDP by 1.8 percent, and a one percent depreciation of rupiah promotes GDP by about 6.4 percent in the long-run. The results of Granger causality test using VECM suggest that all the variables cause real GDP in the short-run. Both the trade openness and gross domestic investment cause growth unidirectionally in short-run, except for real exchange rate. The evidence suggests that trade openness, GDI and exchange rate are important determinants of economic growth. And therefore policy makers should seriously take these variables into account in their policy construct in order to sustain economic growth in Indonesia. Specifically, Indonesia should promote foreign trade, improve the domestic investment climate, and maintain exchange rate stability.
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Yusoff, Mohammed
., Ilza Febrina
author_facet Yusoff, Mohammed
., Ilza Febrina
author_sort Yusoff, Mohammed
title Trade openness, exchange rate, gross domestic investment, and growth in Indonesia
title_short Trade openness, exchange rate, gross domestic investment, and growth in Indonesia
title_full Trade openness, exchange rate, gross domestic investment, and growth in Indonesia
title_fullStr Trade openness, exchange rate, gross domestic investment, and growth in Indonesia
title_full_unstemmed Trade openness, exchange rate, gross domestic investment, and growth in Indonesia
title_sort trade openness, exchange rate, gross domestic investment, and growth in indonesia
publishDate 2012
url http://irep.iium.edu.my/24473/1/Trade_Openness%2C_Exchange_Rate%2C_Gross-.pdf
http://irep.iium.edu.my/24473/
http://iafor.org/acss2012_offprints/ACSS2012_offprint_0108.pdf
_version_ 1643608759156604928
score 13.149126