FEASIBILITY OF SOYBEAN FARMING IN INDONESIA: A SYSTEMATIC LITERATURE REVIEW

Soybeans are an essential commodity in the Indonesian economy; therefore, the government encourages soybean cultivation at the farmer level. This article aims to analyze variations in the feasibility level of soybean farming in Indonesia, the distribution of R/C values, and its forming parameters b...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tinjung Mary Prihtanti
Format: Article
Language:Indonesian
Published: Universitas Kristen Satya Wacana 2023-12-01
Series:Agric
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ejournal.uksw.edu/agric/article/view/10636
_version_ 1797366037455306752
author Tinjung Mary Prihtanti
author_facet Tinjung Mary Prihtanti
author_sort Tinjung Mary Prihtanti
collection DOAJ
description Soybeans are an essential commodity in the Indonesian economy; therefore, the government encourages soybean cultivation at the farmer level. This article aims to analyze variations in the feasibility level of soybean farming in Indonesia, the distribution of R/C values, and its forming parameters based on the results of a research literature review. This paper also attempts to look at the factors that influence R/C achievement and provide input for similar studies in the future. Literature was taken from the Google Scholar database, which published research on the feasibility of soybean farming in Indonesia, published in journals or proceedings, both in Indonesian and English, and published in 2013-2023. A total of 122 articles were screened, around 51 (113 case studies) for further explanation, consisting of 39 journal articles and 12 proceedings articles. The analysis technique uses CV (coefficient of variation) and simple tabulation. All articles concluded that soybean farming was worth cultivating (R/C > 1), but three articles received an R/C value < 1, or soybean farming was not worth cultivating. The highest R/C value is 3.96, and the lowest is 0.50. In contrast, the CV value of R/C shows the lowest value (of 0.33) compared to the CV values of TR, TC, productivity, and selling price of harvest, meaning the distribution The R/C value of soybean farming over the last ten years tends to be homogeneous (does not vary). High productivity does not indicate high R/C achievement, nor do certain superior varieties always show high R/C. Farming feasibility research needs to explain more fully the parameters that form R/C values, use standard writing standards in writing the units for each parameter, and explain varieties, cultivation techniques, and the conditions of farmers in soybean farming.
first_indexed 2024-03-08T16:57:28Z
format Article
id doaj.art-079dbd977fdf4377bbb1e2d029085a26
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 0854-9028
2549-9343
language Indonesian
last_indexed 2024-03-08T16:57:28Z
publishDate 2023-12-01
publisher Universitas Kristen Satya Wacana
record_format Article
series Agric
spelling doaj.art-079dbd977fdf4377bbb1e2d029085a262024-01-04T17:27:35ZindUniversitas Kristen Satya WacanaAgric0854-90282549-93432023-12-0135210.24246/agric.2023.v35.i2.p329-344FEASIBILITY OF SOYBEAN FARMING IN INDONESIA: A SYSTEMATIC LITERATURE REVIEWTinjung Mary Prihtanti0Faculty of Agriculture and Business, Universitas Kristen Satya Wacana Soybeans are an essential commodity in the Indonesian economy; therefore, the government encourages soybean cultivation at the farmer level. This article aims to analyze variations in the feasibility level of soybean farming in Indonesia, the distribution of R/C values, and its forming parameters based on the results of a research literature review. This paper also attempts to look at the factors that influence R/C achievement and provide input for similar studies in the future. Literature was taken from the Google Scholar database, which published research on the feasibility of soybean farming in Indonesia, published in journals or proceedings, both in Indonesian and English, and published in 2013-2023. A total of 122 articles were screened, around 51 (113 case studies) for further explanation, consisting of 39 journal articles and 12 proceedings articles. The analysis technique uses CV (coefficient of variation) and simple tabulation. All articles concluded that soybean farming was worth cultivating (R/C > 1), but three articles received an R/C value < 1, or soybean farming was not worth cultivating. The highest R/C value is 3.96, and the lowest is 0.50. In contrast, the CV value of R/C shows the lowest value (of 0.33) compared to the CV values of TR, TC, productivity, and selling price of harvest, meaning the distribution The R/C value of soybean farming over the last ten years tends to be homogeneous (does not vary). High productivity does not indicate high R/C achievement, nor do certain superior varieties always show high R/C. Farming feasibility research needs to explain more fully the parameters that form R/C values, use standard writing standards in writing the units for each parameter, and explain varieties, cultivation techniques, and the conditions of farmers in soybean farming. https://ejournal.uksw.edu/agric/article/view/10636soybean farmingeconomic feasibilityR/C ratioIndonesialiterature review
spellingShingle Tinjung Mary Prihtanti
FEASIBILITY OF SOYBEAN FARMING IN INDONESIA: A SYSTEMATIC LITERATURE REVIEW
Agric
soybean farming
economic feasibility
R/C ratio
Indonesia
literature review
title FEASIBILITY OF SOYBEAN FARMING IN INDONESIA: A SYSTEMATIC LITERATURE REVIEW
title_full FEASIBILITY OF SOYBEAN FARMING IN INDONESIA: A SYSTEMATIC LITERATURE REVIEW
title_fullStr FEASIBILITY OF SOYBEAN FARMING IN INDONESIA: A SYSTEMATIC LITERATURE REVIEW
title_full_unstemmed FEASIBILITY OF SOYBEAN FARMING IN INDONESIA: A SYSTEMATIC LITERATURE REVIEW
title_short FEASIBILITY OF SOYBEAN FARMING IN INDONESIA: A SYSTEMATIC LITERATURE REVIEW
title_sort feasibility of soybean farming in indonesia a systematic literature review
topic soybean farming
economic feasibility
R/C ratio
Indonesia
literature review
url https://ejournal.uksw.edu/agric/article/view/10636
work_keys_str_mv AT tinjungmaryprihtanti feasibilityofsoybeanfarminginindonesiaasystematicliteraturereview