Organic Business Modeling and the Organism-Ecosystem Unit Duality: An Analysis of the Consumption to Value Ratios of Economy Subsectors

Organic Business Modeling and the Organism-Ecosystem Unit Duality: An Analysis of the Consumption to Value Ratios of Economy Subsectors

Paul Jordan Washburn
Copyright: © 2019 |Pages: 23
DOI: 10.4018/IJPCH.20190701.oa1
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Abstract

The health of a corporation relies most heavily upon healthy human beings' value-based productivity for optimal growth and evolution. A duality between personhoods and their respective systems' weighted impacts are in question, as the U.S. Healthcare industries weighted impact affects all other U.S.-GDP subsectors. The author performed an analysis of 21 main U.S.-GDP subsectors based on unclassified 1960-2014 U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis reports. The author derived a [Consumption:Value] ratio-based equation, demonstrating results in [0.0,2.0] and U.S. dollar scales. The U.S.-GDP-Healthcare subsector increased its average annual consumption by $122,232,000,000 and was part of the U.S.-GDP's 71.4% demonstrating a reduced value ratio between 1960-1969 and 2005-2014. The author describe a weighted duality of personhoods classification, a potential ripple effect violation, and presents a new description of a pathologic, malignant organic business model due to a negatively balanced [Consumption:Value] alteration. These findings highlight reduced marginal utility and value of the U.S.-Healthcare subsector.
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Background

According to the World Health Organization and the World Bank, chronic diseases are the leading cause of death and burden of disease on Earth while being prevalent irrespective of sex and increasing within all age groups (World, 2005). Access to a healthy lifestyle and individual support from the government to continue to lead healthy lifestyles are basic, crucial steps for any country to propagate and maintain a healthy national population (World, 2005). This recommendation is not just theoretical, it is realizable, as most disease-causing variables are known and preventable (World, 2005).

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