Commentary
Innovative, independent, peer-reviewed. Explore the latest economic research and policy proposals from SANEM’s global development experts.
Economic Impacts of AMR
SANEM set out to estimate the future economic burden of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) by 2050. We looked at the impact of AMR on four sectors of the economy: health system, the labour market, tourism, and domestic hospitality. We also estimated the return on investment of several interventions to prevent AMR.
Subscribe today to receive SANEM’s latest newsletters and topic updates.
All Commentary
Filter
18 posts found
Content Type
Time Frame
- Blog Post
Is Bangladesh poised for leaping towards a middle-income country?
- Dr Selim Raihan
- Mar 1, 2016
Bangladesh has recently been upgraded from low-income country (LIC) to lower-middle-income country (LMIC) as per the World Bank’s classification. There is an aspiration for graduating from the LDC status to that of a middle-income country by 2021 as per the United Nations [....]
- Blog Post
Why do countries differ in total factor productivity?
- Dr Selim Raihan
- May 2, 2016
The theoretical and empirical literature on sources of economic growth emphasized on factor accumulation and factor productivity as two major sources of growth. Though factor accumulation can explain a significant part of economic growth, it can’t explain the sustained long [....]
- Blog Post
How pervasive is regional disparity in primary education in Bangladesh?
- Dr Selim Raihan, Mansur Ahmed
- Jul 4, 2016
Sound knowledge on educational performances of different regions across the country can be helpful in the decision-making process for better resource allocation and policy formulation. A multidimensional composite measure of educational development [....]
- Blog Post
Does institution matter for human capital development?
- Dr Selim Raihan
- Jul 5, 2016
A fundamental proposition of new growth theories is that human capital is a key driver of economic growth. Development of human capital for the people of a country encompasses not only the diffusion and assimilation of available knowledge but also the generation of new knowledge [....]
- Blog Post
Does employment status matter for the wellbeing of rural households in Bangladesh?
- Dr Selim Raihan
- Sep 2, 2016
In rural Bangladesh, a great challenge is to tackle the low pay, poor-quality jobs that are unrecognized and unprotected by law, widespread underemployment, the absence of rights at work, inadequate social protection, and the lack of representative voice [....]