jirskyr
Well-known member
@hammertime said in [Coronavirus Outbreak](/post/1135870) said:@Tiger5150 said in [Coronavirus Outbreak](/post/1135848) said:@hammertime said in [Coronavirus Outbreak](/post/1135828) said:Clear. Smart. Quick measures - https://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=12318673
How are our NZ neighbours getting it right and us so wrong?
Except they haven’t. Those restrictions they just brought in are the same as we had here before last Sunday but NZ are actually in worse position than us. At 34 cases per 1M they are where we were last week. Yesterday their growth rate was 1.3 which is closer to Italy’s growth rate at the same stage and way above Australian rate.
What have they done better?
Fair comment mate. I haven't done that level of analysis. I just know that NZ was first to action the borders and we should have had that schools policy last week with kids from essential services only (I don't believe that is NSW policy yet?).
They do benefit from a single level of govt and I think that's a big factor. The division of power in Australia makes it complicated with states coming up with different approaches and creating confusion. Same thing happened with the fires.
If what you say is true regarding their growth rate, then I'll retract my comments.
Other NZ advantages right now:
- approx 3.8M visitors per year NZ vs 8.5M visitors to Australia
- approx 13.5M domestic passengers per annum, Australia averages 5M per month
- population 5M, Australia 25M
- there are half a million more people in Sydney than all of New Zealand, in an area 4% the total land area of NZ
- small border
- highly isolated country
All that travel has been turned off now, but you can't prevent citizens from returning home, and international arrivals still account for a massive % of Australian cases (also probably for NZ, but they just have less people coming in overall and fewer returning citizens).
I think it's a mistake to congratulate or overly criticise any moderate-effect country at this time, because we just don't know the outcomes from individual measures and how the specific population/culture will adapt. For example, everyone was talking up Singapore as a prime example of "curve flattening" last week, but they themselves are seeing a large % upswing in cases - 33 days to reach first 100 cases, 13 days for the second 100, 4 days for the next 100, 3 days each for the next 100s, up to current 507.