
The effect of stakeholder's commitment and government regulations on dry port firm performance
Author(s) -
Engkos Achmad Kuncoro,
Dicky Hida Syahchari,
Hardijanto Saroso,
Darjat Sudrajat,
Henny K W Jordaan
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
accounting
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.175
H-Index - 5
eISSN - 2369-7407
pISSN - 2369-7393
DOI - 10.5267/j.ac.2021.5.014
Subject(s) - port (circuit theory) , business , government (linguistics) , stakeholder , supply chain , service (business) , stakeholder engagement , industrial organization , marketing , economics , management , public relations , engineering , political science , philosophy , linguistics , electrical engineering
The dry port (or land port) is an inland area or an intermodal port directly connected to a seaport. Cikarang Dry Port, as one of the best performing dry ports among other dry ports in Indonesia, only contributes 18% of the loading and unloading volume at Tanjung Priok port. This study examines the effect of supply chain collaboration and service stakeholder engagement on Dry Port Company's performance. The data collected from a questionnaire. The 55 responses from employees of Cikarang dry port and a logistics company in Jakarta. The hypothesis was tested by multiple regression. This study confirms that government regulation and Stakeholder Commitment positively impact the performance of port companies. The study inspires managers to recognize the positive results of government regulation practice among stakeholder engagement organizations to improve port performance in port supply chains.