International Journal of Transformations in Business Management

(By Aryavart International University, India)

International Peer Reviewed (Refereed), Open Access Research Journal

E-ISSN : 2231-6868 | P-ISSN : 2454-468X

SJIF 2020: 6.336 |SJIF 2021 : 6.109 | ICV 2020=66.47

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Abstract

Vol: 12, Issue: 2 2022

Page: 262-286

Economic Analysis of The Period's Slowing Economic Growth Rates in the Light of The Pandemic Burden (2021-2019),

Dr Shaima Mohammed Najeeb Jameel, Dr Ayad Basheer Alchalaby, Dr Dildar Haidar Ahmed

Received Date: 2022-04-04

Accepted Date: 2022-05-28

Published Date: 2022-05-30

http://doi.org/10.37648/ijtbm.v12i02.013

Recently, a severe disease is known as COVID-19 has originated in a developed country with the world’s second-highest national income, and has spread globally at the end of the year (2019–2021). The share of countries with very high and very high incomes from the spread of this pandemic was large, and possibly from the most important countries are Italy, Spain, the United States of America, Germany, and so on. Despite significant scientific breakthroughs in medicine and pharmacology, modern engineering technology in the medical field, and advanced medical laboratories, these countries were initially helpless in the face of the spread of this disease, which resulted in a slowdown in economic growth rates for all countries worldwide at the time its prevalence decreased. The global gross domestic product ranges between (87-84) trillion dollars. As a result, the research aims to bring about several objectives, including developing a theoretical and applied method of health economic analysis of pandemics for the World Health Organization to contribute to a group of countries’ health protection and maintaining the actual supply of work due to pandemic deaths. That, in turn, contributes to lower productivity and capital accumulation. It is more challenging to keep healthy population groups quickly because healthy labor forces tend to be more productive, incredibly healthy, and educated populations and healthy labor forces tend to control their fertility.

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