[Since around April 24, i.e. a month after imposition of national lockdown, 
both the rates of reported infection and death are rising at roughly the same 
exponential rates - over a period of around two months and a half.
Just no flattening of the curves.
That's pretty extraordinary.
(Ref.: The logarithmic curves at 
<https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/country/india/>.)


<<If instead of counting COVID infections, which have a large margin of error, 
we look at COVID-deaths, and if we correct for population size (as indeed we 
should), all countries in Africa and Asia, including India and China, come out 
much better. But within this region, India’s performance is notably bad. In 
terms of COVID deaths per million population, that is, the Crude Mortality 
Rate, India is doing worse than China, Indonesia, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bangladesh, 
Malaysia and many other nations, including most of Africa.>>

(Excerpted from below.)]

https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/coronavirus-lockdown-india-covid-19-cases-deaths-6494930/?fbclid=IwAR1Bo5nd90urz6SfF4KhzckJksC9s4n1gq0PNeziU0ehl9x2tuTgqvaI7ms

The way in which it was executed, India’s lockdown itself became source of 
virus’s spread
By having people huddle together, infecting one another, and then having the 
same people travel hundreds of miles, the pandemic has been made much worse 
than it need have been.

Written by Kaushik Basu | 

Updated: July 8, 2020 9:42:14 am

There is an open question about how much economic loss a nation should take in 
order to slowdown the pandemic. (Illustration by C R Sasikumar)
India’s COVID-19 numbers are surging. In terms of the total number of 
infections, the country has rapidly risen through the ranks to now occupy the 
third place in the world, behind the US and Brazil, having overtaken Russia 
over the weekend.

If instead of counting COVID infections, which have a large margin of error, we 
look at COVID-deaths, and if we correct for population size (as indeed we 
should), all countries in Africa and Asia, including India and China, come out 
much better. But within this region, India’s performance is notably bad. In 
terms of COVID deaths per million population, that is, the Crude Mortality 
Rate, India is doing worse than China, Indonesia, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bangladesh, 
Malaysia and many other nations, including most of Africa.

How did this happen when India was one of the first emerging economies to 
announce the lockdown? The total lockdown did make many observers worry about 
the economy. It was felt that, since COVID mortality seems to be much lower in 
Africa and Asia (maybe because of our younger population or some innate 
immunity), we should not mimic and try to outdo rich European and North 
American nations in terms of the severity of the lockdown. There clearly had to 
be a lockdown, but it should have been carefully targeted and curated for our 
region.

Opinion | In locking down and opening up, state needs to choose its words 
carefully

There is an open question about how much economic loss a nation should take in 
order to slow down the pandemic. In some early writings, I had raised these 
matters and at the same time appreciated the early action of our government. 
What happened subsequently turned out to be a double shock. India’s economy is 
spiralling down and the pandemic is spiralling up. The accompanying graph sums 
up the story. I am very disappointed about what is happening. The lockdown, 
announced on March 24, far from controlling the spread of the pandemic, seems 
to have made it worse. Two weeks after the start of the lockdown, the infection 
rate picked up and it has been on an alarming upward climb since then.


Why did this happen? India’s lockdown has been described widely as the most 
stringent in the world. At the time of the announcement, with a four-hour 
notice, there was a natural expectation that the government had plans of how to 
handle the sudden stoppage of work and movement of people, and the break in 
supply chains. But there was no evidence of any of these ancillary actions. I 
do not have enough information to know what plans there were, but the total 
absence of any supporting action, to ramp up testing, expand the medical sector 
and to help the millions of stranded poor workers, was baffling. It was almost 
as though some people in government — bureaucrats and even some politicians who 
are part of this government — had decided to sabotage the Prime Minister’s 
lockdown by sitting back and doing nothing. We know that in the case of South 
Africa, which also went for a severe lockdown, immediately after the 
announcement, there was a massive step up in building hospital facilities and 
testing centres. One did not see that happen in India. In most countries, after 
the lockdown announcement, minimal transportation was kept open, letting people 
go home. In India, for weeks there was no sign of any effort to handle the 
problem of migrant workers, huddled and hungry, far away from home.

Opinion | Society needs to regain moral compass

I am assuming that for such a major announcement with a four-hour notice, there 
must have been a team of senior bureaucrats who knew and planned this policy in 
advance. And I know how talented India’s bureaucracy is. Surely, they should 
have acted to execute the plan. The stories that appeared in the news all over 
the world, of tens of millions of poor Indians trying to walk hundreds of miles 
to get home, were tragic. In addition, it damaged India’s global image; India 
got far worse international press than it may have received any time since 
independence. The Economist magazine (June 13) estimated that India issued 
“well over 4,000 different rules” during the first two months of the lockdown, 
many of those rules being corrections of many of those rules.

Quite how this policy disaster happened will take time to uncover. But one 
thing has now become clear. The way in which the lockdown was executed, the 
lockdown itself became the source of the virus’s spread. By having people 
huddle together, infecting one another, and then having the same people travel 
hundreds of miles, the pandemic has been made much worse than it need have been.

This double shock is showing up on all data. India’s growth, which had already 
been on a steady downward trajectory for two years before the pandemic, has now 
dropped even lower. The IMF has predicted India will end up with a growth rate 
of -4.5 per cent in 2020, which will be the lowest growth India has seen since 
1979. There was an expectation that capital would move out of China because of 
the pandemic, and India would be a beneficiary. But that has not happened. The 
big beneficiary seems to be Vietnam and a few other nations, and, ironically, 
China seems to be holding back a lot of its foreign investment. The 
unemployment rate in India in May climbed to an astonishing 23.5 per cent, 
compared to Brazil’s 12.6 per cent, the US’s 13.3 per cent and China’s 6 per 
cent. China’s official data on unemployment needs to be taken with caution, I 
hasten to add. But that does not detract from India’s disproportionate poor 
economic performance and the fact that this price was paid for no purpose.

-- 
Peace Is Doable


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