Back in 2018, Bloom, Cadarette and Sevilla (2018) warned of the need 
to prepare for possible future pandemics and epidemics in their study. In 
their view, pandemics and epidemics  will lead to  increased  costs for the 
healthcare  system  by  increasing  the  costs  associated  with  treating  the 
infected  persons  and  fighting  outbreaks. In  addition,  a  pandemic, according 
to Bloom, Cadarette and Sevilla (2018), will contribute to social distancing, 
disruption of economic ties, a  decrease  in production volumes,  losses  in 
tourism,  and  a  decrease  in  investment  activity,  all  of  which  ultimately 
happened in 2020 because of COVID-19. 
Lewis  (2001),  wrote  about  the  economy  during  an  epidemic;  in  his 
opinion, a pandemic can lead to high healthcare costs, a decrease in national 
economic  potential  and  political  instability.  Bloom  and  Canning  (2004) 
argued that epidemics can have significant economic consequences – both 
in  the  short  and  long  term,  their  management  and  control  will  require 
significant investments in national and international health systems. The 
need for preparing for global pandemics is explained by the fact that they 
may  incur  significant  human  and  economic  costs.  This  study  makes  a 
contradictory conclusion that, on the one hand, the growth of well-being 
in countries leads to higher healthcare costs and thereby to preparing for 
possible epidemics, and on the other hand, globalization leads to increased 
risks of the spread of a future epidemic around the world, rather than only 
in any localized territories. 
In the  same  way, Arbeláez-Campillo and  Villasmil (2020), also  argue 
that  the  ravages  caused  by  the  COVID-19  pandemic  in  the  first  half  of 
2020, erode in such a way the foundations of the prevailing world order, 
structured  since  the  aftermath  of  the  Second  War  world,  which  already 
articulates  the  conditions  of  possibility  for  the  emergence  of  a  new  or 
renewed international order with uncertain characteristics. 
Tam et al. (2016), wrote on migration issues and their impact on the 
economy  as  a  result  of  future  pandemics.  Yach,  Stuckler,  and  Brownell 
(2006), conducted a study on the impact of the global obesity and diabetes 
epidemic on a state’s economy. 
The  current  COVID-19  pandemic,  despite  the  fact  that  it  is only now 
in full swing, already has a number of negative consequences for health, 
society and the economy: 
1.  In  healthcare.  The  range  of  clinical  cases  of  COVID-19  infection 
ranges  from  mild  or  nonspecific  signs  and  symptoms  of  acute 
respiratory failure, such as fever, cough, fatigue, shortness of breath, 
to severe pneumonia with respiratory failure and septic shock, which 
are very similar to other coronavirus diseases. More severe forms 
of COVID-19 affect older people. COVID-19 is becoming one of the 
main causes of hospitalization and mortality, in particular among