Visualization of Bibliometric Research Political Budget Cycles in 2014–2022
Maria Maranatha Gultom (),
Fajar Gustiawaty Dewi () and
Fitra Dharma ()
Additional contact information
Maria Maranatha Gultom: Lampung University, Department of Accounting
Fajar Gustiawaty Dewi: Lampung University, Department of Accounting
Fitra Dharma: Lampung University, Department of Accounting
A chapter in Proceedings of the International Conference of Economics, Business, and Entrepreneur (ICEBE 2022), 2023, pp 250-256 from Springer
Abstract:
Abstract The budget in the political year always attracts attention, it is a way to attract attention so that the incumbent gets the vote of the electorate. The lack of widespread public interest in local government and the consistently disappointing turnout at local elections belies the intensity, excitement, and passion with which local politics is conducted. This article discusses citation developments, publication trends, author collaborations, trend term titles, trend term author keywords, trend term abstracts, and statistics on the topic of the Political Budget Cycle from 2014–2022. This study summarizes research articles from Google Scholar. Then an in- depth bibliometric analysis was carried out through Vos Viewers to analyze and visualize the database obtained. The results of the citation analysis showed that the number of citations per year from 2014–2022 was 12.635 citations, Analyze results showed that research on the Political budget cycle from 2014–2022 decreased. The most research results were in 2014which resulted in 39 articles (20%), and the story of scientific publications with the lowest political budget cycle topics occurred in 2022 which resulted in 3 articles (3%). In 2014–2022 the words or variables used in research are political budget cycle, political cycle, budget cycle, and evidence, while the terms that are still rarely used in the study are political business cycle, budget process, budget deficit, political economy, and transparency.
Keywords: election; budget; political; political budget cycle; government; budget deficit; bibliometrics (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2023
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:spr:advbcp:978-2-38476-064-0_27
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DOI: 10.2991/978-2-38476-064-0_27
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