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dc.contributor.authorSubadi, Tjipto
dc.contributor.authorPurnomo, Didit
dc.contributor.authorArifin, Zainal
dc.date.accessioned2017-10-05T05:51:30Z
dc.date.available2017-10-05T05:51:30Z
dc.date.issued2010-11-25
dc.identifier.citationArief, Sritua. 1998. Pembangunanisme dan Ekonomi Indonesia: Pemberdayan Rakydalam Arus Globalisasi. Zaman Wacana Mulia. Blonigen, Bruce A, Christopher J Ellis dan Dietrich Fausten (2004). Industrial Groupinand Foreign Direct Investment. Journal of International Economics 65, pp 75-91. Setyawan, Anton Agus dan Fatkhurrohman. 2004. Investasi, Ekspor Dan Masalah DIndustrialisasi di Indonesia. Jurnal Ekonomi Pembangunan, Vol.5 No.Desember 2004. Tambunan, Tulus. 2001. Industrialisasi di Negara Sedang Berkembang: Kasus Indonesia. Ghalia Indonesia. Thompson, Athur A., dan A.J. Strickland III, 2003, Strategic Management: Concepts anCases, New York: McGraw-Hill, Irwin. Zhu, Susan Chun dan Daniel Trefler (2004). Trade and Inequality in Developing Countries: A General Equilibrium Analysis, Journal of International Economi65, pp 21-48.in_ID
dc.identifier.isbn978-983-3198-57-3
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11617/9297
dc.description.abstractIn globalization era, a process of long-term economic development can causes a change in a country’s economic structure. Indonesia, for example, has transformed from economy dominated by an agricultural sector to economic modern dominated by an industrial sector with dynamic increasing returns to scale as a main drive for economic growth. A manufacturing industrial sector as a characteristic of the Indonesian modern economy is not optimal. A manufacturing industry sector phenomenon in developed countries, included in Indonesia, is relatively underdeveloped. This results from such factors as low-skilled human resources and low technology. Such a condition is greatly influenced by low-structural aspect such as dependence on high import, limited export and market, regional concentration, middle-sized technology industry, and low technology industry development; and low-organizational aspect such as underdeveloped-small-sized industry that consequently produces relatively small added-value, low capacity in technology transfer and development, and low human resource. The Indonesian manufacturing industrial performance makes export development and quality and competitive export low. As a solution to the problem, it is necessary to develop such components as labor force efficiency, labor force’s education, organizational performance, financial-organizational performance, government policy evaluation, and accessibility to international trade. These will significantly affect an increase in economic growth and competitive export as a result of empowering a manufacturing industrial performance. Accordingly, for planning the future development, it needs to find an alternative industrialization strategy for developing a manufacturing industrial sector in this country. This strategy must increase an economic added-value, economic efficiency, and fall any dependence on import.in_ID
dc.language.isoenin_ID
dc.publisherFakulti Ekonomi dan Pengurusan 43600 UKM Bangi, Selangor D.E., Malaysiain_ID
dc.subjectManufacturing industryin_ID
dc.subjectlabor forcein_ID
dc.subjectcompetitive exportin_ID
dc.titleAN IMPACT OF ECONOMIC GLOBALIZATION ON THE INDONESIAN INDUSTRIALIZATION PERFORMANCEin_ID
dc.typeArticlein_ID


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