@article{Hasibuan_Hasibuan_2021, title={MAPPING THE SPATIAL EFFECTS OF POVERTY IN ALL DISTRICTS IN INDONESIA}, volume={1}, url={http://jurnal.ut.ac.id/index.php/reksabumi/article/view/2058}, DOI={10.33830/Reksabumi.v1i1.2058.2022}, abstractNote={<p><em>Poverty is one of the obstacles to the difficulty of the country development. Poverty causes a</em><br /><em>decrease of human resources quality, inability to access education, health, good nutrition which</em><br /><em>results in productivity degradation. The purpose of this study are to analyze the pattern of spatial</em><br /><em>poverty all regencies in Indonesia using the Moran’s Index and looks at the local spatial distribution</em><br /><em>of poverty using the Local Indicator of Spatial Autocorrelation (LISA) approach. This study uses the</em><br /><em>data period in 2019. The results of this study show that pockets of poverty in Indonesia are mostly</em><br /><em>located in the provinces of Papua, West Papua and East Nusa Tenggara. The regencies with the</em><br /><em>lowest poverty are found in the regencies of Bali and South Kalimantan Provinces. Moran’s Test</em><br /><em>showed a positive autocorrelation of 0.474259 which indicates a general spatial autocorrelation</em><br /><em>across all regency in Indonesia with a clusted pattern. The LISA test showed poverty level of the</em><br /><em>population was clustered into four groups, namely: 50 regencies that were in the high poverty</em><br /><em>regencies surrounded by high poverty (high-high), 69 regencies in low poverty criteria surrounded</em><br /><em>by low poverty regencies (low-low), 12 regencies in the low poverty, surrounded by high poverty</em><br /><em>(low-high) and 5 high poverty regencies surrounded by low poverty (high-low). Thus, this study</em><br /><em>proves that poverty reduction must be based on the uniqueness and characteristics of each region.</em></p>}, number={1}, journal={REKSABUMI}, author={Hasibuan, Sarah and Hasibuan, Mutia Harum}, year={2021}, month={Dec.}, pages={17–31} }