Externality analysis of oil palm plantation business in Pasangkayu Regency
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.35335/ijosea.v13i3.376Keywords:
Community education, Descriptive research, Externalities, Income generation, Oil Palm Plantation BusinessAbstract
This study aims to determine the positive impact and negative impact on the palm oil plantation business for the community around the palm oil mill company in Bulu Mario Village, Sarudu District. The form of this research is descriptive. The data collection technique used is field research consisting of interviews, questionnaires, and documentation. While the data analysis used is primary data and secondary data collected using descriptive analysis of research that seeks to describe or describe the object under study based on facts in the field. By using key informants and informants as data sources, the data presented uses primary and secondary data through interviews, books, and the internet, then the data analysis technique used in this study is an interactive model qualitative data analysis from Miles Huberman and Saldana. The results showed that the positive impact of this business was felt by the people of Sarudu District. Improving community welfare, increasing income and also the level of education is progressing and developing.
Downloads
References
Abdullah, Naziruddin, Alias Mat Derus, and Husam-Aldin Nizar Al-Malkawi. 2015. “The Effectiveness of Zakat in Alleviating Poverty and Inequalities: A Measurement Using a Newly Developed Technique.” Humanomics 31(3):314–29.
Anas, K., H. Naping, D. Salman, and N. Tenriwaru. 2023. “Impact of Palm Plantations In West Sulawesi Province: A Preliminary Study.” P. 12047 in IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science. Vol. 1134. IOP Publishing.
Andrianto, Agus, Heru Komarudin, and Pablo Pacheco. 2019. “Expansion of Oil Palm Plantations in Indonesia’s Frontier: Problems of Externalities and the Future of Local and Indigenous Communities.” Land 8(4):56.
Arrow, Kenneth. 1970. “Political and Economic Evaluation of Social Effects and Externalities.” Pp. 1–30 in The analysis of public output. NBER.
Basuki, Mahmud, and Andy Budiarto. 2021. “Regional Potential for The Development of The Superior Industrial Sector in Musi Banyuasin Regency.” P. 12084 in IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science. Vol. 830. IOP Publishing.
Belcher, Brian, and Koen Kusters. 2004. “Non-Timber Forest Product Commercialisation: Development and Conservation Lessons.” Forest Products, Livelihoods and Conservation: Case Studies of Non-Timber Forest Product Systems 1:1–22.
Budidarsono, Suseno, Ari Susanti, and Annelies Zoomers. 2013. “Oil Palm Plantations in Indonesia: The Implications for Migration, Settlement/Resettlement and Local Economic Development.” Biofuels-Economy, Environment and Sustainability 173–93.
Caracelli, Valerie J., and Jennifer C. Greene. 1993. “Data Analysis Strategies for Mixed-Method Evaluation Designs.” Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis 15(2):195–207.
Casson, Anne. 2000. “The Hesitant Boom: Indonesia’s Oil Palm Sub-Sector in an Era of Economic Crisis and Political Change.”
Corporations, Transnational. 2009. “Agricultural Production and Development.” World Investment Report.
Dahlman, Carl J. 1979. “The Problem of Externality.” The Journal of Law and Economics 22(1):141–62.
Douthwaite, Richard. 1993. The Growth Illusion: How Economic Growth Has Enriched the Few, Impoverished the Many, and Endangered the Planet. ERIC.
Erickson, G. Scott. 2017. “Descriptive Research Design.” Pp. 51–77 in New Methods of Market Research and Analysis. Edward Elgar Publishing.
Fauzi, Akhmad, Edy Mulyadi, Kustini Kustini, Bowo Santoso, and Nuruni Ika Kusuma Wardani. 2019. “Analysis Of Regional Economic Potentials In Development Of Superior Commodities: A Study Of Bondowoso District.” Humanities & Social Sciences Reviews 7(1):164–70.
Friedman, Benjamin M. 2017. “The Moral Consequences of Economic Growth.” Pp. 29–42 in Markets, morals, and religion. Routledge.
Grimes, David A., and Kenneth F. Schulz. 2002. “Descriptive Studies: What They Can and Cannot Do.” The Lancet 359(9301):145–49.
Guest, Greg, Emily E. Namey, and Marilyn L. Mitchell. 2013. Collecting Qualitative Data: A Field Manual for Applied Research. Sage.
Hall, Ruth, Ian Scoones, and Dzodzi Tsikata. 2017. “Plantations, Outgrowers and Commercial Farming in Africa: Agricultural Commercialisation and Implications for Agrarian Change.” The Journal of Peasant Studies 44(3):515–37.
Homes, Living Smart. 2009. “Descriptive Research.”
Hussin, Fauzi, and Soo Yoke Yik. 2012. “The Contribution of Economic Sectors to Economic Growth: The Cases of China and India.” Research in Applied Economics 4(4):38–53.
Jomo, Kwame Sundaram, and Michael Rock. 1998. Economic Diversification and Primary Commodity Processing in the Second-Tier South-East Asian Newly Industrializing Countries. UNCTAD Geneva.
Kaplinsky, Raphael, Mike Morris, and Dave Kaplan. 2011. “A Conceptual Overview to Understand Commodities, Linkages and Industrial Development in Africa.”
Kawulich, Barbara B. 2005. “Participant Observation as a Data Collection Method.” in Forum qualitative sozialforschung/forum: Qualitative social research. Vol. 6.
Kuznets, Simon. 1973. “Modern Economic Growth: Findings and Reflections.” The American Economic Review 63(3):247–58.
Labov, William. 1981. “Field Methods of the Project on Linguistic Change and Variation.”
Lee, Neil, and Stephen Clarke. 2017. “Who Gains from High-Tech Growth? High-Technology Multipliers, Employment and Wages in Britain.” High-Technology Multipliers, Employment and Wages in Britain (July 19, 2017). SWPS 14.
De Leeuw, Edith D. 2012. “Choosing the Method of Data Collection.” Pp. 113–35 in International handbook of survey methodology. Routledge.
Liebowitz, Stan J., and Stephen E. Margolis. 1995. “Are Network Externalities a New Source of Market Failure?” Rsch. in L. & Econ. 17:1.
Lin, Justin Yifu. 2011. “New Structural Economics: A Framework for Rethinking Development.” The World Bank Research Observer 26(2):193–221.
Mariyono, Joko. 2019. “Stepping up from Subsistence to Commercial Intensive Farming to Enhance Welfare of Farmer Households in Indonesia.” Asia & the Pacific Policy Studies 6(2):246–65.
Meade, James Edward. 1973. The Theory of Economic Externalities: The Control of Environmental Pollution and Similar Social Costs. Vol. 2. Brill Archive.
Netessine, Serguei, and Fuqiang Zhang. 2005. “Positive vs. Negative Externalities in Inventory Management: Implications for Supply Chain Design.” Manufacturing & Service Operations Management 7(1):58–73.
Othman, Jamal. 2003. “Linking Agricultural Trade, Land Demand, and Environmental Externalities: Case of Oil Palm in Southeast Asia.” ASEAN Economic Bulletin 20(3):244–55.
Othman, Jamal. 2007. “POLICY FAILURES AND ENVIRONMENTAL EXTERNALITIES: CASE OF OIL PALM IN MALAYSIA AND INDONESIA®.” Growth, Development and Poverty Alleviation in the Asia-Pacific 191.
Ovretveit, John. 1993. EBOOK: Co-Ordinating Community Care. McGraw-Hill Education (UK).
Perrier, Xavier, and Albert Flori. 2003. “Methods of Data Analysis.” Pp. 47–80 in Genetic diversity of cultivated tropical plants. CRC Press.
Radetzki, Marian, and Linda Wårell. 2020. A Handbook of Primary Commodities in the Global Economy. Cambridge University Press.
Rahmawati, Emma, Mohammad Bisri, Rosihan Asmara, Asep Awaludin Prihanto, Nurul Aldha Mauliddina Siregar, Sunaji Zamroni, Anton Sanjaya, and Syauqi Ahmada. 2023. “Drafting and Implementation of Village Spatial Plan (RTRDes): A Case Study in Indonesia.” International Journal of Sustainable Development & Planning 18(9).
Reardon, Thomas, Eric Crawford, and Valerie Kelly. 1994. “Links between Nonfarm Income and Farm Investment in African Households: Adding the Capital Market Perspective.” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 76(5):1172–76.
Rokhim, Rofikoh, Arty D. Januari, and Siti Shara. 2021. “Conflict Management of Smallholders Palm Oil Plantation: Sustainable Business Perspective.” P. 12126 in IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science. Vol. 716. IOP Publishing.
Rondhi, Mohammad, Pravitasari Anjar Pratiwi, Vivi Trisna Handini, Aryo Fajar Sunartomo, and Subhan Arif Budiman. 2018. “Agricultural Land Conversion, Land Economic Value, and Sustainable Agriculture: A Case Study in East Java, Indonesia.” Land 7(4):148.
Rosida, Tris Kamila. n.d. “Explaining Labor Absorption; An Overview of Demographics, Industrialization and Education and Health Infrastructure Ecces Economics Social and Development Studies.”
Susanti, Ari. 2016. Oil Palm Expansion in Indonesia: Serving People, Planet and Profit? Eburon Academic Publishers.
Susilastuti, Darwati. 2018. “Agricultural Production and Its Implications on Economic Growth and Poverty Reduction.”
Syarifuddin, Syarifuddin, and Ratna Ayu Damayanti. 2015. “Good Governance and Fiscal Capacity in Regional Expansion: A Holistic Analysis of Qualitative Perspective.” Journal of Economics, Business, & Accountancy Ventura 18(1):15–28.
Vatn, Arild, and Daniel W. Bromley. 1997. “Externalities—a Market Model Failure.” Environmental and Resource Economics 9:135–51.
Veretekhina, Svetlana V, Olga V Shinkareva, Jurij P. Kozhaev, Natalie V Telepchenkova, Elena A. Kuznetsova, and Natalia A. Zaitseva. 2017. “Evaluation Methodology of the Multiplier Effect for the Region as the Result of the Cluster Formation.” Eurasian Journal of Analytical Chemistry 12(1):1–22.
Wainaina, Priscilla, Peter Minang, and Judith Nzyoka. 2021. “Negative Environmental Externalities within Cocoa, Coffee and Oil Palm Value Chains in Africa.” Tree Commodities And Resilient Green Economies in Africa. Nairobi, Kenya: World Agroforestry (ICRAF). Https://Apps. Worldagroforestry. Org/Downloads/Publications/PDFS/BC22005. Pdf.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2023 Khaeruddin Thaha, Andi Herman Jaya, Sri Mulya Palimmi

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.

International Journal on Social Science, Economics and Art is licensed under a