The Ancient Egyptian Econometric Model: Multidimensional Osmosis Therapy in Africa

Authors

  • Kcodgoh L Edgeweblime Department of Economics at University of Lome, American Institute of Africa, University of Poitiers (France) Author
  • Lélenhaki Kaweridjao Department of Economics at University of Lome Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.47363/JESMR/2025(6)272

Keywords:

Faith in God, Optimal Policies, African Apostasy, Dispersal of Africans, Gathering of Africans, Analogical Modelling, Numerical Modelling

Abstract

How can potential impact of the optimal policies of externalities trade to uncouple growth and volatility in order to restore Ancient Egypt economic model be explored by the means of numerical econometrics test? An in-depth study of the economic model of Ancient Egypt through a thirty-three-year experiment using therapeutic osmosis reveals a serious rout from the modern era onwards, with balkanization and a vast apostasy of science into domains of approximate knowledge in a world that had hitherto been characterized by adoration and strict obedience to the laws, principles, ordinances and covenants that formed the foundation of all human action. The optimal policies ensured the equilibrium and automatic regulation of the economy and of all life in society. It is clear that this restoration of African identity would not only benefit Africa but could save the whole world from inevitable extinction. Using numerical evidence, through priesthood authority theory experiments, we find that the human organism's multidimensional exchange mechanism, consisting of more or less integral compensation processes for negative and positive externalities, is responsible for the volatility of human growth, the main determinant of life expectancy, analogous to the relationship between the processes of economic growth volatility and sustainable growth.

Author Biographies

  • Kcodgoh L Edgeweblime, Department of Economics at University of Lome, American Institute of Africa, University of Poitiers (France)

    Department of Economics at University of Lome, American Institute of Africa, University of Poitiers (France) 

  • Lélenhaki Kaweridjao, Department of Economics at University of Lome

    Department of Economics at University of Lome

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Published

2025-02-05