Health-Economic Determinants of COVID-19 Pandemic and Countries’ Efficiency

Author:

Ahangar Reza Gharoie1,Prybutok Victor R.2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Accountancy, Business Analytics, Economics, and Finance, College of Business, Lewis University, Romeoville, Illinois, USA

2. Department of Information Technology and Decision Sciences, Toulouse Graduate School, G. Brint Ryan College of Business, University of North Texas, Denton, USA

Abstract

This study examines the relationship between vaccination and inflation in battling the COVID-19 pandemic across nations. Data from 85 countries worldwide were collected from the Trading Economics (New York City, USA) website during the COVID-19 pandemic. First, a new theoretical model was proposed based on the economic and healthcare literature; then, a binary variable, inflation/vaccination% was developed according to the proposed theoretical model. The relationship between inflation/vaccination% and macroeconomic factors was examined using logistic regression. After that, the countries were ranked by minimising the inflation/vaccination% rate that measures a country’s efficiency in fighting the COVID-19 pandemic, thereby permitting governments to compare the performance of different countries. The findings show that a country with a higher gross domestic product growth rate and competitiveness index during the COVID-19 pandemic has a lower inflation/vaccination% ratio. The results of this study provide strong evidence that countries should mitigate a pandemic’s economic impact by managing vaccination programmes to control global inflation.

Publisher

European Medical Group

Subject

General Medicine

Reference55 articles.

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3. World Health Organization (WHO). Novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) situation reports. Available at: https://covid19.who.int/. Last accessed: 26 July 2023.

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