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Analysis ranks the countries that handled COVID-19 best

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Democracies have slightly outperformed authoritarian countries in suppressing the coronavirus, according to an analysis that found smaller populations and competent bureaucracies were the major factors in managing the global pandemic.

The COVID Performance Index compiled by the Lowy Institute ranked 98 countries’ handling of the COVID-19 outbreak, finding New Zealand performed the best while Australia sits in eighth place.

1611781588127.png

Australia came in eighth place of the best performing countries in suppressing the coronavirus.CREDIT:JAMES BRICKWOOD


New Zealand was closely followed by Vietnam, Thailand and Cyprus, while the United States was the fifth-worst performing country.

There has been growing concern from western commentators that the failure of some democracies to suppress the virus will result in more countries losing faith in the model of liberal democratic government and turn to authoritarianism.

But the Lowy study reveals that on average, authoritarian countries had no prolonged advantage in suppressing the virus and democracies found “marginally more success than other forms of government in their handling of the pandemic”.

While democracies performed worse at the beginning of the pandemic and there were some notable exceptions including the United States and Britain, they pulled ahead of authoritarian and hybrid states as the outbreak worsened, which suggests democracies were better at learning from their mistakes in acting too slowly, according to Hervé Lemahieu, one of the authors of the study.

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Democracies have performed slightly better over the course of the pandemic.CREDIT:LOWY INSTITUTE


Many “hybrid” regimes, such as Ukraine and Bolivia, were the least prepared to handle the virus.

Overall, levels of economic development and differences in political systems between countries had less of an impact on outcomes than other indicators. Smaller populations, cohesive societies and capable institutions were much bigger factors.

Countries with populations of fewer than 10 million people consistently outperformed large nations throughout 2020, although this lead narrowed slightly towards the end of the 2020.

The study suggests American political scientist Francis Fukuyama was right last year when he said that regime type was not the determining factor in how effectively states responded to the crisis, “but whether citizens trust their leaders, and whether those leaders preside over a competent and effective state”.

Mr Lemahieu said the research disproved the claim authoritarian regimes had an advantage in handling the global pandemic.
“We’ve had this sweeping narrative take hold about the inherent superiority of societies and different political systems, and for the most part we’re saying that is bollocks,” he said.

Mr Lemahieu said smaller countries were able to “ring fence” their populations, while their larger counterparts had issues in being able to close external and internal borders.

“Also, countries with smaller populations may well have stronger social contracts between governments and citizenry and greater levels of trust in governments,” he said.


Handling the COVID-19 pandemic
A study found smaller populations and competent bureaucracies were the major factors in managing the global pandemic well.
TOP 10 COUNTRIESBOTTOM 10 COUNTRIES
1New Zealand89Chile
2Vietnam90Ukraine
3Taiwan91Oman
4Thailand92Panama
5Cyprus93Bolivia
6Rwanda94United States
7Iceland95Iran
8Australia96Colombia
9Latvia97Mexico
10Sri Lanka98Brazil
Source: Lowy Institute COVID Performance Index


Although Australia has a population significantly larger than 10 million, Mr Lemahieu said it benefited from being an island nation while the “devolution” of responsibilities to the states effectively turned it into “seven or eight countries”.

“We have the geography and demographic distribution to allow for that devolution of responsibilities at the state level,” he said.

“States have quarantined from each other and erected borders which are almost as closed as international borders. Other countries can’t really pull that off.”

The study measured a number of key indicators including confirmed cases, deaths, cases per million people, deaths per million people and cases a proportion of tests. China was not included because all of its testing rates are not publicly available.

 
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Democracies have slightly outperformed authoritarian countries in suppressing the coronavirus, according to an analysis that found smaller populations and competent bureaucracies were the major factors in managing the global pandemic.

The COVID Performance Index compiled by the Lowy Institute ranked 98 countries’ handling of the COVID-19 outbreak, finding New Zealand performed the best while Australia sits in eighth place.

View attachment 711065
Australia came in eighth place of the best performing countries in suppressing the coronavirus.CREDIT:JAMES BRICKWOOD


New Zealand was closely followed by Vietnam, Thailand and Cyprus, while the United States was the fifth-worst performing country.

There has been growing concern from western commentators that the failure of some democracies to suppress the virus will result in more countries losing faith in the model of liberal democratic government and turn to authoritarianism.

But the Lowy study reveals that on average, authoritarian countries had no prolonged advantage in suppressing the virus and democracies found “marginally more success than other forms of government in their handling of the pandemic”.

While democracies performed worse at the beginning of the pandemic and there were some notable exceptions including the United States and Britain, they pulled ahead of authoritarian and hybrid states as the outbreak worsened, which suggests democracies were better at learning from their mistakes in acting too slowly, according to Hervé Lemahieu, one of the authors of the study.

View attachment 711066
Democracies have performed slightly better over the course of the pandemic.CREDIT:LOWY INSTITUTE


Many “hybrid” regimes, such as Ukraine and Bolivia, were the least prepared to handle the virus.

Overall, levels of economic development and differences in political systems between countries had less of an impact on outcomes than other indicators. Smaller populations, cohesive societies and capable institutions were much bigger factors.

Countries with populations of fewer than 10 million people consistently outperformed large nations throughout 2020, although this lead narrowed slightly towards the end of the 2020.

The study suggests American political scientist Francis Fukuyama was right last year when he said that regime type was not the determining factor in how effectively states responded to the crisis, “but whether citizens trust their leaders, and whether those leaders preside over a competent and effective state”.

Mr Lemahieu said the research disproved the claim authoritarian regimes had an advantage in handling the global pandemic.
“We’ve had this sweeping narrative take hold about the inherent superiority of societies and different political systems, and for the most part we’re saying that is bollocks,” he said.

Mr Lemahieu said smaller countries were able to “ring fence” their populations, while their larger counterparts had issues in being able to close external and internal borders.

“Also, countries with smaller populations may well have stronger social contracts between governments and citizenry and greater levels of trust in governments,” he said.


Handling the COVID-19 pandemic
A study found smaller populations and competent bureaucracies were the major factors in managing the global pandemic well.
TOP 10 COUNTRIESBOTTOM 10 COUNTRIES
1New Zealand89Chile
2Vietnam90Ukraine
3Taiwan91Oman
4Thailand92Panama
5Cyprus93Bolivia
6Rwanda94United States
7Iceland95Iran
8Australia96Colombia
9Latvia97Mexico
10Sri Lanka98Brazil
Source: Lowy Institute COVID Performance Index


Although Australia has a population significantly larger than 10 million, Mr Lemahieu said it benefited from being an island nation while the “devolution” of responsibilities to the states effectively turned it into “seven or eight countries”.

“We have the geography and demographic distribution to allow for that devolution of responsibilities at the state level,” he said.

“States have quarantined from each other and erected borders which are almost as closed as international borders. Other countries can’t really pull that off.”

The study measured a number of key indicators including confirmed cases, deaths, cases per million people, deaths per million people and cases a proportion of tests. China was not included because all of its testing rates are not publicly available.

Lmao Pakistan at 69? Pakistan did a lot better than that bro..
 
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TOP 10 COUNTRIESBOTTOM 10 COUNTRIES
1New Zealand89Chile
2Vietnam90Ukraine
3Taiwan91Oman
4Thailand92Panama
5Cyprus93Bolivia
6Rwanda94United States
7Iceland95Iran
8Australia96Colombia
9Latvia97Mexico
10Sri Lanka98Brazil
The top 10 are either island or in tropic.
 
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Lmao Pakistan at 69? Pakistan did a lot better than that bro..
For any ranking Pak starts with an arbitrarily placed value of -100 and India/BD +100!!! Then Pak has to fight her way out!!!! What else do you expect from the Kufr?!?! You make nukes while 99.9% of the so called Muslims have voluntarily put themselves as slaves under the Kufr....
 
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Mr Lemahieu said smaller countries were able to “ring fence” their populations, while their larger counterparts had issues in being able to close external and internal borders.
So the study concludes that small populations means fewer COVID-19 cases. I wonder how many PhD were needed to produce this report :rofl:
 
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Democracies have slightly outperformed authoritarian countries in suppressing the coronavirus, according to an analysis that found smaller populations and competent bureaucracies were the major factors in managing the global pandemic.

The COVID Performance Index compiled by the Lowy Institute ranked 98 countries’ handling of the COVID-19 outbreak, finding New Zealand performed the best while Australia sits in eighth place.

View attachment 711065
Australia came in eighth place of the best performing countries in suppressing the coronavirus.CREDIT:JAMES BRICKWOOD


New Zealand was closely followed by Vietnam, Thailand and Cyprus, while the United States was the fifth-worst performing country.

There has been growing concern from western commentators that the failure of some democracies to suppress the virus will result in more countries losing faith in the model of liberal democratic government and turn to authoritarianism.

But the Lowy study reveals that on average, authoritarian countries had no prolonged advantage in suppressing the virus and democracies found “marginally more success than other forms of government in their handling of the pandemic”.

While democracies performed worse at the beginning of the pandemic and there were some notable exceptions including the United States and Britain, they pulled ahead of authoritarian and hybrid states as the outbreak worsened, which suggests democracies were better at learning from their mistakes in acting too slowly, according to Hervé Lemahieu, one of the authors of the study.

View attachment 711066
Democracies have performed slightly better over the course of the pandemic.CREDIT:LOWY INSTITUTE


Many “hybrid” regimes, such as Ukraine and Bolivia, were the least prepared to handle the virus.

Overall, levels of economic development and differences in political systems between countries had less of an impact on outcomes than other indicators. Smaller populations, cohesive societies and capable institutions were much bigger factors.

Countries with populations of fewer than 10 million people consistently outperformed large nations throughout 2020, although this lead narrowed slightly towards the end of the 2020.

The study suggests American political scientist Francis Fukuyama was right last year when he said that regime type was not the determining factor in how effectively states responded to the crisis, “but whether citizens trust their leaders, and whether those leaders preside over a competent and effective state”.

Mr Lemahieu said the research disproved the claim authoritarian regimes had an advantage in handling the global pandemic.
“We’ve had this sweeping narrative take hold about the inherent superiority of societies and different political systems, and for the most part we’re saying that is bollocks,” he said.

Mr Lemahieu said smaller countries were able to “ring fence” their populations, while their larger counterparts had issues in being able to close external and internal borders.

“Also, countries with smaller populations may well have stronger social contracts between governments and citizenry and greater levels of trust in governments,” he said.


Handling the COVID-19 pandemic
A study found smaller populations and competent bureaucracies were the major factors in managing the global pandemic well.
TOP 10 COUNTRIESBOTTOM 10 COUNTRIES
1New Zealand89Chile
2Vietnam90Ukraine
3Taiwan91Oman
4Thailand92Panama
5Cyprus93Bolivia
6Rwanda94United States
7Iceland95Iran
8Australia96Colombia
9Latvia97Mexico
10Sri Lanka98Brazil
Source: Lowy Institute COVID Performance Index


Although Australia has a population significantly larger than 10 million, Mr Lemahieu said it benefited from being an island nation while the “devolution” of responsibilities to the states effectively turned it into “seven or eight countries”.

“We have the geography and demographic distribution to allow for that devolution of responsibilities at the state level,” he said.

“States have quarantined from each other and erected borders which are almost as closed as international borders. Other countries can’t really pull that off.”

The study measured a number of key indicators including confirmed cases, deaths, cases per million people, deaths per million people and cases a proportion of tests. China was not included because all of its testing rates are not publicly available.

Self bragging western article with no real meaning in real life. Look at this example before the pandemic. Who rank first?




large_s94kW92snqMHviOhw6x1TTv1fkAz2MA1M09i6L079g0.jpg



Any tom dick harry can even come up with fake ranking telling the world, China has a economy of only USD500billion in 2020 to try fool the rest of the world. But it will not rewrite the fact, democracy like US and India failed badly while China is credit with top points for handling the pandemic.
 
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Well its a polite way of saying "If you would have handled it better none of the above countries would have gotten the infection in the first place"
Really? Still beating the dead horse?



If China react so fast to stop covid-19 in China in early 2020, you think the covid-19 will not spread around the globe since its in italy in september 2019 and already in US by the time China first encounter it the same time?

Both Italy and US never tells you covid-19 is already in their countries and millions of flight still continue to fly out from there...
The WHO shall give China a medal for telling the rest of the world a new coronavirus is spreading rather than keep quiet like others.

Covid-19 do not origin from China. Its from other countries brought in attack China.

Indian need to blame themselves for incompetent in handling covid-19 rather than using cheapshot to attack China. No wonder India failed, becos all u can do is to blame other instead of looking at your own failure.
 
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Well its a polite way of saying "If you would have handled it better none of the above countries would have gotten the infection in the first place"
So how's US handle H1N1 in 2008?
And how India handle cholera which originated in India? I suggest Indians cover the dirty Ganga river to help the world annihilate cholera vibrio.
 
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Well its a polite way of saying "If you would have handled it better none of the above countries would have gotten the infection in the first place"
The virus is doing a fantastic job wiping out our enemies. We really need to pat ourselves on the back for this one.
 
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