P-08 Longitudinal Study: the interventional effects of Policy Treatments on Government Revenues among Various Countries

Presenter Status

BA Religion & Psychology, MSA School of Business Administration, Andrews University

Second Presenter Status

Ph.D., MBA, School of Business Administration, Andrews University

Preferred Session

Poster Session

Location

Buller Hall Hallways

Start Date

21-10-2022 2:00 PM

End Date

21-10-2022 3:00 PM

Presentation Abstract

Longitudinal Study: the interventional effects of Policy Treatments on the Government Revenues among Various Countries

Abel Siamubi, MSA School of Business Administration, Andrews University
Jerry L. Chi, PhD, MBA, School of Business Administration, Andrews University

The present pandemic poses the biggest threat to the international economy after the great recession in 2008-2009. The effects of COVID-19 on the global economy are increasing. The effects of both the recession and the COVID-19 pandemic are reflected in economic indicators which include macroeconomic performance (GDP, consumption, investment and international trade) and stability (central government budgets, prices, the money supply) (The World Bank).

The purpose of this study is to examine whether the policy treatments on government revenues among various countries reduced the effects of COVID-19 on the global economy. A repeated measure ANOVA was conducted to analyze the secondary data from the IMF. An analysis was conducted on 28 countries over a period of 17 years which are categorized as pre-pandemics, recession, and during-covid.

The results show that Policy treatments various governments implemented have a significant effect, F (2,15) = 34.886, p = <0.001, Partial Eta Squared = 0.823 such that during COVID (M=6.108E+11, SD=2.675E+10) had a significantly higher mean than during the recession (M=3.957E+11, SD=2.317E+10) indicating that the policy treatments on government revenues among various countries reduced the effects of COVID-19 on the global economy.

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Oct 21st, 2:00 PM Oct 21st, 3:00 PM

P-08 Longitudinal Study: the interventional effects of Policy Treatments on Government Revenues among Various Countries

Buller Hall Hallways

Longitudinal Study: the interventional effects of Policy Treatments on the Government Revenues among Various Countries

Abel Siamubi, MSA School of Business Administration, Andrews University
Jerry L. Chi, PhD, MBA, School of Business Administration, Andrews University

The present pandemic poses the biggest threat to the international economy after the great recession in 2008-2009. The effects of COVID-19 on the global economy are increasing. The effects of both the recession and the COVID-19 pandemic are reflected in economic indicators which include macroeconomic performance (GDP, consumption, investment and international trade) and stability (central government budgets, prices, the money supply) (The World Bank).

The purpose of this study is to examine whether the policy treatments on government revenues among various countries reduced the effects of COVID-19 on the global economy. A repeated measure ANOVA was conducted to analyze the secondary data from the IMF. An analysis was conducted on 28 countries over a period of 17 years which are categorized as pre-pandemics, recession, and during-covid.

The results show that Policy treatments various governments implemented have a significant effect, F (2,15) = 34.886, p = <0.001, Partial Eta Squared = 0.823 such that during COVID (M=6.108E+11, SD=2.675E+10) had a significantly higher mean than during the recession (M=3.957E+11, SD=2.317E+10) indicating that the policy treatments on government revenues among various countries reduced the effects of COVID-19 on the global economy.