Taha Bayomy Mohamed, a researcher in economic, administrative, and financial sciences, and founder of "Genetic Economy" — a peer-reviewed science published by the Arab Organization for Administrative Development, affiliated with the League of Arab States.
From academic study to field experience, culminating in the founding of an independent economic science.
The researcher worked across multiple fields, including industry, finance, import and export, and bank auditing, with his professional responsibilities progressively rising to their highest levels.
As a result of this accumulated experience, the researcher became a designer of integrated systems — accounting systems, internal audit and control systems, and cost systems — all aimed at preserving company resources and preventing waste.
The researcher spent thirty years establishing a new innovative science called "Genetic Economy," which was peer-reviewed by the Arab Organization for Administrative Development, affiliated with the League of Arab States, with the participation of eight reviewers from various Arab countries, and the research was published in a dedicated volume.
Genic Economics is distinguished from socialist economics (Karl Marx) and capitalist economics (Adam Smith and others), as it achieves a range of benefits, most notably:
Applications of Genetic Economy go beyond the theoretical framework into a working tool usable by companies, states, and investors.
The tool provides an analytical framework that precisely identifies struggling companies and leading companies within the economy, balancing social justice with market efficiency, with the aim of protecting state and company resources from waste and maximizing returns from them.
It relies on integrated analytical systems — accounting, oversight, and costing — applied to company and stock market data, to read true performance indicators and then classify economic entities according to feasibility and risk criteria.
When identifying a struggling company before its losses worsen, when building a comprehensive economic database for a state, when determining the timing of fiscal and monetary policy tools, or when evaluating leading investment opportunities on the stock market.
Applying the tool to listed companies to identify the "leading" ones capable of generating surplus returns for the state, versus isolating the "struggling" ones and directing support to them before liquidation — representing the fundamental declared difference between Genic Economics and its capitalist and socialist counterparts.
The research was officially published by the Arab Organization for Administrative Development at the League of Arab States under an international classification number (978-977-473-224-9) after review by eight reviewers from various Arab countries, with the reviewers recommending that the United Nations adopt this science. In addition, two documented books were published with independent ISBNs, and the researcher holds membership in the Egyptian Scholars Council registered in Geneva.
Karl Marx — collective distribution of resources, often overlooking incentives for individual efficiency.
Taha Bayomy Mohamed — balances social justice with identifying the true efficiency of each economic entity.
Adam Smith and others — free market efficiency, though sometimes subject to unjustified price increases.
The researcher is a member of the Egyptian Scholars Council, a body registered in Geneva, which has a cooperation protocol with both the American Council and the European Council.
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