Covid-19 has had huge social and economic consequences. The severity of the Covid pandemic, as captured by deaths per million inhabitants, has varied sharply between countries. What factors may explain these differences in mortality? Do they imply that some countries managed the pandemic better than others?
Structural determinants of mortality
To assess the determinants of mortality, a data set comprising 135 countries is studied. Variables are divided into three areas:
1. Susceptibility to the virus:
Reflected by the median age of the population. Mortality is likely to be higher in countries with an older population.
2. Risk of contagion:
Captured by population density and a measure of the extent to which a country may be disproportionally at risk from contagion. The rationale is that higher population density may be associated with more contagion and therefore higher mortality.
3. Policy and Governance:
Domestic policy choices and the ability of governments to manage a crisis may also have played a role in the pandemic. These factors may be encompassed in variables that capture income inequality, a series of governance metrics, the stringency of lockdowns and level of GDP.
Our analysis of the number of deaths per million inhabitants over the period April 2020 to August 2021 against the median age of the population and shows that there is a positive relationship between these variables (correlation = 0.64). However, there is substantial variation between countries and other factors will have been important too.