4. Uncertainty, Investment, and Financing: The Strategic Role of National Development Banks

Author(s):  
Tatang Sudrajat

<p><em>The character of the nation is very important for the sustainability of the Indonesian nation's struggle to fill independence by carrying out national development. Value education, including Pancasila Education in tertiary institutions plays a strategic role in preparing nationals with character. Public policy in the field of higher education is a concrete manifestation of the state's function in educating the nation's life. This study aims to describe the role of higher education institutions in implementing the MKWU Pancasila Education policy for the development of national character. </em><em>With the normative juridical method and literature study, it is known that the state / government has established a policy of inculcating the values of Pancasila by issuing several public policies in the field of higher education. Universities as policy institutions as well as university leaders and lecturers of MKWU Pancasila Education as policy actors play a major role in building student character as an integral part of the Indonesian nation. Students as policy targets can act as role models for successful implementation. The policy environment contributes to its survival and success. Higher education is faced with several challenges and problems in implementing the policy of planting Pancasila values. There is a policy substance that needs to be refined</em>.</p>


The topic of national development banks was largely neglected in the academic literature for a long period, and was limited to a debate between admirers and detractors of these institutions. Since the 2007/9 financial crisis, interest in and support for these institutions have broadly increased, in developing, emerging, and developed countries alike. The key issues are understanding how such development banks work, what their main aims are, what instruments, incentives, and governance work better in general and in particular contexts, and what are their links with the private financial and corporate sector, as well as with broader government policies. This book aims to provide an in-depth study of several key cases of national development banks (in Brazil, Chile, China, Colombia, Mexico, Germany, and Peru) as well as horizontal issues such as their role in innovation and structural change, infrastructure financing, financial inclusion, environmental sustainability, the countercyclical role of development financing, and the regulatory rules that are best for these institutions. From both a research and a policymaking perspective, this book concludes that development banks can make a significant contribution to development. It analyses their roles, the link with broader economic policies, their governance, and the main instruments they use to perform their functions. The book has important policy implications for countries that have development banks, so they can improve them, but also for countries which do not yet have them, and can learn from best practice should they wish to establish them.


2020 ◽  
Vol 89 (3) ◽  
pp. 5-5

Andreas Pfingsten and Dorothea Schäfer Editorial: Development Banks – not only important in times of Covid-19 | 5 Petra Dünhaupt and Hansjörg Herr Trade, Global Value Chains and Development – What Role for National Development Banks? | 9 Joachim Nagel Rolle von Entwicklungsbanken in der internationalen Finanzierung | 35 Debora Revoltella and Patricia Wruuck Investing for a Greener, Competitive and Socially Inclusive Europe | 51 Marco Frigerio and Daniela Vandone A firm-level analysis of development banks in Europe | 61 Dirk Linowski, Andrew D. Johansson und Haifeng Zendeh Zartoshti Zur Rolle der chinesischen Entwicklungsbanken beim Bau der Neuen Seidenstraße | 79 Andrew Lee and Christiane Weiland Impact Investing Through Crowdlending: Examining the Role of Intermediation and the Potential for Development Banks | 99


2018 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 1
Author(s):  
Jusuf Irianto

This paper is intended to describe the role of tourism, policy, and branding of tourism in Indonesia. The tourism sector has a strategic role in national development by contributing significantly in overcoming various economic and social problems. To encourage sustainable tourism sector development requires appropriate policy formulation and implemented consistently. In addition to policy, developing the tourism sector requires an effort to build a positive image (positive image building) and create branding on the location of destinations and tourism potential.


2018 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 91
Author(s):  
Heppi Syofya ◽  
Silvia Rahayu

The strategic role of the agricultural sector in the national development includes: providing food for the Indonesian population, foreign exchange earners through exports, supplying industrial raw materials, increasing employment and business opportunities, increasing regional income, alleviating poverty and driving the movement of other economic sectors. In fact, until now the agricultural sector still faces many problems. Government policies that are not in favor of the agricultural sector are obstacles to the development of the agricultural sector. The government is more concerned with the industrial sector because the industry sector has been claimed to provide high income compared to the agricultural sector. Investors are also more interested in investing in the industrial sector than in the agricultural sector. The purpose of this study is to see the magnitude of the relationship between agricultural sub-sectors, both in the future and backward, in the Indonesian economy, seeing the magnitude of the influence of the agricultural sector on the increase in total output, community income, and absorption of Indonesian labor, and see what agricultural sub-sectors can be classified as a leading commodity, potential and lagging commodity in Indonesia based on the ranking of the forward and backward linkages, the agricultural sub-sector that can be classified as a sector that triggers economic growth, the income generating sector and the labor absorption sector based on the number multiplier


1990 ◽  
Vol 35 (7) ◽  
pp. 729-730
Author(s):  
No authorship indicated
Keyword(s):  

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