TheEconomistApril9th 2022
Graphic detail Covid-19 in Asia
81
A tale of
two surges
D
uringthefirsttwoyearsoftheco
vid19 pandemic, rich Asian countries
had lower case rates than almost anywhere
else. But like a dam holding back a flood,
the longer a region’s defences hold up, the
worse the resulting disaster once they fail.
The Omicron variant has swept remark
ably fast through places with little past ex
posure to covid. As a share of population,
South Korea has logged more cases in 2022
than America has during the entire pan
demic. Hong Kong’s surge has been even
more abrupt. Until this February, it barely
had any positive tests. Its cumulative case
load per person now matches Finland’s.
In Europe Omicron has caused greater
increases in cases than in hospitalisations
or deaths. Two factors have combined to
yield such mild disease: strong immunity
levels and Omicron’s low severity when
compared with Delta. Untilrecently,it was
unclear which mattered more. But the
Asian data show that immunity is crucial,
and that Omicron is still deadly for unvac
cinated people who have not yet had covid.
Hong Kong and South Korea provide a
natural experiment. Both were mostly co
vidfree before 2022, and had little infec
tioninduced immunity. But South Korea
has had a strong vaccine rollout, whereas
Hong Kong has had one of the rich world’s
worst. Its messaging was decidedly mixed,
giving equal weight to arguments for and
against vaccination, and telling people
with chronic diseases to consult doctors
before getting jabs. Its nurses worried
about personal liability for mishaps.
Hong Kong also made heavy use of Si
novac, a Chinese vaccine that is less effec
tive than Western shots. According to Ming
Pao, a newspaper, of Hong Kongers who
died in the recent wave, 71% were unvacci
nated and another 25% had received Sino
vac. Just 4% got Western vaccines.
Unfortunately, Hong Kong’s elderly
were unusually hesitant. In South Korea
takeup of booster shots, which are needed
to protect against Omicron, is greatest
among the old. In Hong Kong, in contrast,
thosemostlikelytogetboostedaremid
dleaged. Just 37% of its septuagenarians
and 14% of those 80 or older, the most vul
nerable groups, are boosted—similar to the
shares among people aged 2039 and teen
agers, respectively. When Omicron first
struck, these rates were even lower.
This discrepancy has had a big impact.
During the Omicron wave, Hong Kong’s of
ficial covid mortality rate has been five
times higher than South Korea’s. These fig
ures can be biased by differences in testing
rates and judgments on causes of death.
But fair comparisons can be made with ex
cess mortality—the gap between the num
ber of deaths from all causes and the num
ber expected under normal conditions.
Although recent totalmortality num
bers have not been published, our best es
timate suggests that since February 1st 2.4
times as many people have died because of
the pandemic in Hong Kong as in South Ko
rea. At the peak of Hong Kong’s surge in
early March, its daily excessdeath rate was
between those registered in London (1.8
per 100,000 people) and New York (5.1)
when covid first struck—a period withno
vaccines, little testing and an incorrectun
derstanding of how the virus spreads.n
Raging outbreaks show that Omicron is
deadly in unvaccinated people
0
1
2
3
4
5
Johnson&Johnson 1
AstraZeneca Moderna
Pfizer-BioNTech 58 21 19
Pfizer-BioNTech2 Sinovac 38
Hong
Kong HongKong
Japan
New
Zealand
South
Korea
SouthKoreapassedtheUnitedStatesin
cumulativediagnosedcaserateonMarch28th
South Korea
50%confidence interval
Britain
NewYork
London
UnitedStates
Vietnam
HongKong
SouthKorea* SouthKorea
0
10k
5k
20k
15k
25k
30k
2020 21 22 2020 21 22
HongKong
Finland
→ Parts of Asia have amassed a full pandemic’s worth of cases in weeks. Death rates have depended on vaccination levels
Cumulativeconfirmedcovid-19casesper100,000people
Shareofvaccinesadministeredbymanufacturer,January19th2022,% Shareofpopulationvaccinatedbyagegroup, April th 2022, %
Estimated daily excess deaths per 100,000 people
*Doesnotaddupto100%duetorounding Sources:OurWorldinData;PublicHealthEngland; CDC;
KoreaDiseaseControlandPreventionAgency;HongKongDepartmentofHealth;The Economist
1
0 30 40 50 60 70 80+ 1
0 30 40 50 60 70 80+
Doses 1 2 3 Doses 2 1 3
100
75
50
25
0