The governance of the special autonomy fund in improving welfare in special region of Yogyakarta / Harsono Dwi, Yuanjaya Pandhu and Winarni Fransisca

Inequality in the welfare of the Indonesian people is an unresolved problem. This inequality is mainly reflected in the Gini index which is stagnant with an average of 0.39 in 2015-March 2020 (BPS, 2020). The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic has certainly increased inequality in welfare (Shidiq, 2020...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dwi, Harsono, Pandhu, Yuanjaya, Fransisca, Winarni
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/55120/1/55120.pdf
https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/55120/
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id my.uitm.ir.55120
record_format eprints
spelling my.uitm.ir.551202022-01-25T02:16:10Z https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/55120/ The governance of the special autonomy fund in improving welfare in special region of Yogyakarta / Harsono Dwi, Yuanjaya Pandhu and Winarni Fransisca Dwi, Harsono Pandhu, Yuanjaya Fransisca, Winarni HV Social pathology. Social and public welfare. Criminology JA Political science (General) Political geography. Geopolitics Inequality in the welfare of the Indonesian people is an unresolved problem. This inequality is mainly reflected in the Gini index which is stagnant with an average of 0.39 in 2015-March 2020 (BPS, 2020). The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic has certainly increased inequality in welfare (Shidiq, 2020). The contribution of inequality in welfare can be seen in the poverty rate which is still high in Indonesia. The poverty rate is still high, at 25.14 million people or 9.22 percent of the total population (BPS, 2019). The magnitude of the poverty rate in Indonesia is also the cause of inequality which is still high at 0.38 in 2019 (BPS, 2019). Poverty directly affects welfare which affects the fulfillment of basic needs in society (Sen, 1981), and further creates social vulnerability (Kakwani and Silber, 2008; Ellis, 1984). Moreover, the World Bank (2019) estimates that 20.19 percent of Indonesia's population is in the poverty line, vulnerable to falling back below the poverty line if inflation and economic stabilization are not maintained. The COVID-19 pandemic, which has infected more than 1 million people until early 2021, will certainly accelerate the return of vulnerable Indonesians to being below the poverty line. This research focuses on the Special Region of Yogyakarta (DIY). DIY has the highest welfare inequality problem in Indonesia. BPS (2020) reported that in DIY the Gini index surpassed the national level, namely at 4.36. The poverty rate in DIY also reflects the same thing, amounting to 11.53 percent or 326.13 of the population (BPS, 2020). This figure has not been added to the population who are at the poverty line of 321,056 people and the severity of poverty is at 0.43 or twice the national figure (BPS, 2020). The condition of welfare inequality in DIY, especially poverty, is of course quite contradictory considering that DIY is the area with the second-highest national Human Development Index (HDI) (figure 79.97), far exceeding the national average of 60.44 (BPS, 2020). 2021 Conference or Workshop Item PeerReviewed text en https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/55120/1/55120.pdf ID55120 Dwi, Harsono and Pandhu, Yuanjaya and Fransisca, Winarni (2021) The governance of the special autonomy fund in improving welfare in special region of Yogyakarta / Harsono Dwi, Yuanjaya Pandhu and Winarni Fransisca. In: UNSPECIFIED, 27 Oktober 2021.
institution Universiti Teknologi Mara
building Tun Abdul Razak Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Mara
content_source UiTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://ir.uitm.edu.my/
language English
topic HV Social pathology. Social and public welfare. Criminology
JA Political science (General)
Political geography. Geopolitics
spellingShingle HV Social pathology. Social and public welfare. Criminology
JA Political science (General)
Political geography. Geopolitics
Dwi, Harsono
Pandhu, Yuanjaya
Fransisca, Winarni
The governance of the special autonomy fund in improving welfare in special region of Yogyakarta / Harsono Dwi, Yuanjaya Pandhu and Winarni Fransisca
description Inequality in the welfare of the Indonesian people is an unresolved problem. This inequality is mainly reflected in the Gini index which is stagnant with an average of 0.39 in 2015-March 2020 (BPS, 2020). The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic has certainly increased inequality in welfare (Shidiq, 2020). The contribution of inequality in welfare can be seen in the poverty rate which is still high in Indonesia. The poverty rate is still high, at 25.14 million people or 9.22 percent of the total population (BPS, 2019). The magnitude of the poverty rate in Indonesia is also the cause of inequality which is still high at 0.38 in 2019 (BPS, 2019). Poverty directly affects welfare which affects the fulfillment of basic needs in society (Sen, 1981), and further creates social vulnerability (Kakwani and Silber, 2008; Ellis, 1984). Moreover, the World Bank (2019) estimates that 20.19 percent of Indonesia's population is in the poverty line, vulnerable to falling back below the poverty line if inflation and economic stabilization are not maintained. The COVID-19 pandemic, which has infected more than 1 million people until early 2021, will certainly accelerate the return of vulnerable Indonesians to being below the poverty line. This research focuses on the Special Region of Yogyakarta (DIY). DIY has the highest welfare inequality problem in Indonesia. BPS (2020) reported that in DIY the Gini index surpassed the national level, namely at 4.36. The poverty rate in DIY also reflects the same thing, amounting to 11.53 percent or 326.13 of the population (BPS, 2020). This figure has not been added to the population who are at the poverty line of 321,056 people and the severity of poverty is at 0.43 or twice the national figure (BPS, 2020). The condition of welfare inequality in DIY, especially poverty, is of course quite contradictory considering that DIY is the area with the second-highest national Human Development Index (HDI) (figure 79.97), far exceeding the national average of 60.44 (BPS, 2020).
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Dwi, Harsono
Pandhu, Yuanjaya
Fransisca, Winarni
author_facet Dwi, Harsono
Pandhu, Yuanjaya
Fransisca, Winarni
author_sort Dwi, Harsono
title The governance of the special autonomy fund in improving welfare in special region of Yogyakarta / Harsono Dwi, Yuanjaya Pandhu and Winarni Fransisca
title_short The governance of the special autonomy fund in improving welfare in special region of Yogyakarta / Harsono Dwi, Yuanjaya Pandhu and Winarni Fransisca
title_full The governance of the special autonomy fund in improving welfare in special region of Yogyakarta / Harsono Dwi, Yuanjaya Pandhu and Winarni Fransisca
title_fullStr The governance of the special autonomy fund in improving welfare in special region of Yogyakarta / Harsono Dwi, Yuanjaya Pandhu and Winarni Fransisca
title_full_unstemmed The governance of the special autonomy fund in improving welfare in special region of Yogyakarta / Harsono Dwi, Yuanjaya Pandhu and Winarni Fransisca
title_sort governance of the special autonomy fund in improving welfare in special region of yogyakarta / harsono dwi, yuanjaya pandhu and winarni fransisca
publishDate 2021
url https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/55120/1/55120.pdf
https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/55120/
_version_ 1724077535835193344
score 13.18916