Covid-19 and the World - a podcast by BBC Radio 4

from 2021-04-01T19:59

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No crisis has had the global reach and impact of Covid-19. There have been more than 120 million recorded cases of the Coronavirus and 2.7 million people have died and curbs on people’s freedoms have become a familiar part of daily life in many parts of the world.Just over a year since the world started to get to grips with the first global pandemic in more than a century, what can we say about how different countries have dealt it?

Which countries have been worst-affected and why? Which public health systems have held up best? Why did test and trace work in some countries but not in others?Around the world governments have propped up their economies accruing eye-watering amounts of debt, but was it money well spent?

Where and why has the vaccine roll out been most successful? And what could be the lasting legacy of the pandemic?Contributors:

Dr.Thomas Hale, Oxford UniversityProf. Martin McKee, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

Nazmeera Moola, Ninety One, a South African asset management companyDr Monica DeBolle, Peterson Institute for International Economics

Jerome Kim, Director General of the International Vaccine InitiativeRasmus Bech Hansen, founder and CEO of Airfinity

Dr. Jennifer Cole, Royal Holloway, University of LondonKishore Mahbubani, Asia Research Institute at National University of Singapore

Producers: Tim Mansel, Paul Moss, Kirsteen KnightSound Engineer: James Beard
Editor: Jasper Corbett

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