Aha! Found it:

Why Germany's Coronavirus Death Rate Is Far Lower Than In Other Countries
https://www.npr.org/2020/03/25/820595489/why-germanys-coronavirus-death-rate-is-far-lower-than-in-other-countries

So, I suppose the (hypothetical) causal flow goes something like: federated 
system allows for first-past-the-post test development, lots of early testing 
leads to more accurate estimates of infected, leads to finer grained response 
(including earlier realization about asymptomatic transmission).

But this sounds a bit like rationalization to me. The causation centers on lots 
of testing, however that testing arises. A centralized system that ramps up 
testing quickly would have the same result. In the case of the US, our 
federation did NOT result in a ramp up of early testing (well, it did here ... 
UW did the lion's share of early testing here in WA, but not over the entire 
federation of states). So our federal system will see the *bad* of being a 
federation, but not the good ... at least until after the poor and frail die 
and those of us who survive can rationalize about how our diversity makes us so 
healthy.


On 4/8/20 6:31 AM, uǝlƃ ☣ wrote:
> However, a story from the radio or somesuch the other day seems to contradict 
> me. (I was exercising and couldn't pay close enough attention.) I heard 
> someone *assert* that Germany is fairing, practically, so well against the 
> virus *because* it's federated. I can't find a link to that or similar 
> stories. So, I can't tell if they're just post-hoc rationalizing or have some 
> data to show it's the federated decoupling that's causative.


-- 
☣ uǝlƃ

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