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Download by: [Universitas Maritim Raja Ali Haji] Date: 18 January 2016, At: 19:19

Bulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies

ISSN: 0007-4918 (Print) 1472-7234 (Online) Journal homepage: http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/cbie20

Abstracts of doctoral theses on the Indonesian

economy

To cite this article: (2011) Abstracts of doctoral theses on the Indonesian economy, Bulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies, 47:3, 415-418, DOI: 10.1080/00074918.2011.619054

To link to this article: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00074918.2011.619054

Published online: 16 Nov 2011.

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Bulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies, Vol. 47, No. 3, 2011: 415–18

ISSN 0007-4918 print/ISSN 1472-7234 online/11/030415-4 DOI: 10.1080/00074918.2011.619054

ABSTRACTS OF DOCTORAL THESES

ON THE INDONESIAN ECONOMY

Minimum Wages and Labour Market Outcomes in Decentralized Indonesia: A Case Study from Java

Raden Muhamad Purnagunawan (mpurnagunawan@gmail.com)

Accepted 2011, Australian National University, Canberra

Using data at the district and individual level, this thesis analyses the impact of minimum wages on three factors: employment and hours worked; commut

-ing and returns to commut-ing; and the gender earn-ings gap. The ind-ings are discussed in the context of economic and labour market changes in Indonesia

between 2001 and 2007.

In 2001, Indonesia underwent a decentralisation reform that led by the

mid-2000s to variations in minimum wages at the district level and a rapid increase in minimum wages. This has created an opportunity for researchers to re-assess the impact of minimum wages across regions.

The study found evidence of a compression of the wage distribution close to the minimum wage level in both the formal and the informal sector. How-ever, minimum wages did not strongly affect total employment in either sector. The regression analysis found only that the employment effect was channelled through a decrease in working hours for workers in the formal sector in urban

areas. This suggests that irms and employers in the formal sector in urban areas

are more likely to adjust working hours than to dismiss workers in response to minimum wage increases. Another possible effect of changes in minimum wages was found to be a spillover of employment across districts. This probably played a role in dampening the disemployment effect of the increase in minimum wages.

The analysis of commuting between districts by male workers revealed that

minimum wages have a signiicant pull and push effect in attracting and deter -ring the movement of commuters between districts. The effect was found to be

signiicantly larger for workers in the informal sector than in the formal sector.

This may be due to a strong derived demand for workers in the informal sector or to a ‘lighthouse effect’, whereby a higher minimum wage tends to boost expected incomes in the informal sector. Nevertheless, further analysis using individual-level data revealed that the returns to commuting of informal workers were still lower than the wage premium earned by formal sector workers. Workers in the informal sector generally travel longer distances and have a lower education level than formal sector workers.

The earnings differential between male and female workers was expected to narrow as a result of the implementation of minimum wage regulation. However,

there is no signiicant evidence of a convergence effect related to minimum wages

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416 Abstracts of doctoral theses on the Indonesian economy

during the period of analysis. The lack of a signiicant effect of minimum wages in

the formal sector is probably due to the fact that formal sector wages are likely to be based on observable productivity-related characteristics such as human capi-tal, job type and location. This is relected in the relatively large contribution of

differences in endowments to the gender earnings gap.

The general conclusion of this study is that the effects of minimum wages are not as large as expected. Mobility of labour across districts and low levels of com-pliance with minimum wage requirements in general may have dampened the disemployment effect of minimum wages.

© 2011Raden Muhamad Purnagunawan

Economic Growth in Indonesia: The Driving Forces of the Level and the Growth Rate of Real Per Capita Income:

An Econometric Time Series Approach

Parjiono (parjiono.parjiono@my.jcu.edu.au)

Accepted 2010, James Cook University, Townsville, Queensland

A three-step process was used to discover the determinants of real per capita

income in Indonesia for the period 1960–2006, namely: (i) investigating whether

the long-run growth characteristic is exogenous or endogenous; (ii) investigating productivity related to growth; and (iii) discovering the driving forces of the level and the growth rate of real per capita income.

The empirical results suggest that:

• During the period 1960–2006, Indonesia’s long-run growth characteristic was endogenous and thus it could be inluenced by appropriate government policy. • During the same period, Indonesia’s technology caught up with the frontier technology of the developed economies of Japan and the US. This process contributed to the acceleration of productivity and to Indonesia’s achieving an annual growth rate of about 6%. However, this growth rate is insuficient

given that the empirical tests show no evidence of income levels catching up with those of developed countries.

• During the period 1970–2006, Indonesia’s real per capita GDP can be linked to capital; labour; exports; the external debt to GDP ratio; the stock of FDI; and

population. These results suggest that, in the long run, increases in capital,

employment and exports lead to an increase in real per capita GDP, while increases in the external public debt to GDP ratio, the stock of FDI and the population lead to a decrease in real per capita GDP.

Some policy implications that can be drawn from these empirical results are: • Related to the investigation of whether the long-run growth characteristic

is exogenous or endogenous, the government could formulate an active

development strategy, because the long-run growth of real per capita GDP can be inluenced by appropriate government policy. The government could also promote investment to boost real per capita GDP growth.

• Related to the investigation of productivity related to growth, the government could further develop adoption capacity factors to support the adoption of

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Abstracts of doctoral theses on the Indonesian economy 417

technology to accelerate productivity related to growth. This process could include (i) reducing tariffs on the import of equipment and production machinery; (ii) emphasising human capital development; and (iii) increasing economic performance.

• Related to discovering the forces driving the level and the growth rate of real per capita income, the government could develop policies that directly promote

an increase in the level and the growth rate of real per capita GDP. These

could include generating capital accumulation; creating new jobs to increase employment; increasing export volumes; being more selective towards foreign direct investment so that it does not crowd out domestic investment; reducing

the external public debt to GDP ratio; and reducing the growth rate of the

population.

This thesis offers additional insights into both the impact of government policy

on long-run economic growth and the factors that could be modiied to increase the growth rate of real per capita GDP in order to improve the welfare of the peo

-ple of Indonesia.

© 2011Parjiono

Indonesian Drug Policy and Patent Regulation after the TRIPS Agreement: Better Access to Essential Medicines?

Tomi Suryo Utomo (utomo_ts@yahoo.com) Accepted 2006, University of Washington, Seattle WA

Pharmaceutical patent protection constitutes a serious public health issue for

the Indonesian government. It must balance its policy of protecting pharmaceu

-tical patents according to international standards (the TRIPS, or trade-related

aspects of intellectual property rights, agreement) with its domestic

develop-mental policy goal of providing cheaper medicines. Unless the government pro

-vides suficient protection for pharmaceutical patents, it faces sanctions from

the World Trade Organization for violating the principles of international trade.

On the other hand, Indonesia’s need to reduce the cost of medicines is pressing

for four reasons. First, the government budget for medications is limited. Second, the rate of generic drug sales is low. Third, the burden of chronic diseases and

emerging problems such as HIV/AIDS, is increasing to alarming levels. Fourth,

the price of drugs has increased as a result of pharmaceutical patent protection.

Present problems are due to the Indonesian government’s failure in the past to maximise the use of a number of safeguards included within the TRIPS agree -ment. This is attributable both to government inaction and to the unclear and

lexible nature of those safeguards.

This research examines the impact of patent protection for pharmaceuticals on

access to medicines in Indonesia. It focuses on three issues. (1) How do patents affect drug prices? (2) Does patent law affect the introduction of generic drugs? (3) What strategies are recommended so that Indonesia can improve access to medicines?

A literature review was done to gain background information about the TRIPS

agreement and how other countries have tried to improve access to essential

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418 Abstracts of doctoral theses on the Indonesian economy

medicines. In Indonesia, information was derived from surveys and interviews with government agencies, pharmaceutical manufacturing oficials and govern -ment regulatory institutions. Drug checklists were used to record information about patented and non-patented study drugs.

There are several main indings. First, in Indonesian pharmacies the price of

patented drugs is 70–90% higher than that of non-branded generics and 10–90% higher than that of branded generics. Second, pharmaceutical patent protection

under TRIPS may delay the introduction of generic drugs, an important treat -ment alternative in industrialised countries. For example, original manufacturers may decline requests for clinical and pre-clinical trial data, a requirement before generic drug companies can start production, or may extend the initial period of patent protection by alleging that there is a new use for the nearly expired

prod-uct. Third, current Indonesian drug regulations do not make use of the TRIPS

safeguards.

Finally, this research acknowledges the importance of factors other than patent law (such as public health policy; drug pricing; distribution systems; and sur-veillance of prescribing patterns) that affect access to medicines. Although these factors are outside the scope of this research, they illustrate the need to involve a multi-sectoral group of policy makers and stakeholders to improve access to

medicines in Indonesia.

The study’s overall recommendation is that the Indonesian government should take advantage of TRIPS safeguards such as parallel imports; compulsory licences;

Bolar provisions on the use of an invention before its patent expires; and ‘gov-ernment use’ licensing. These tactics have helped improve drug access in other

countries such as India and South Africa. To support the use of safeguards, this thesis offers speciic recommendations intended to remove ambiguities in current regulations and to ill gaps in Indonesia’s patent legislation.

© 2011Tomi Suryo Utomo

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