Ovid in a time of COVID: 19 timely quotes from the Roman poet – with dedications as appropriate.

1.    Dedicated to people in ‘lockdown’ – wherever they are.

        Dolor hic tibi proderit oli.

Be patient and tough; some day this pain will be useful to you.

2. Dedicated to antiviral drug and vaccine researchers:

        Mille sint mali mille salutis erunt.

There are a thousand forms of evil; there will be a thousand remedies.

3. For those in public health agencies:

        Qui non est hodie cras minus aptus erit.

He who is not prepared today will be less so tomorrow.

4. For Dan Andrews:

        Requiescendum; dat ager uberrimam segetem requievit.

Take rest; a field that has rested gives a bountiful crop.

5. For Treasurers and managers of science agencies:

        Principiis obsta; sero medicina paratur
        Cum mala per longas convaluere moras.

Resist beginnings; the remedy comes too late when the disease has gained strength by long delays.

6. For everyone:

        Qui nolet fieri desidiosus, amet!

Let the Man who does not wish to be idle fall in Love!

7. For researchers of the effectiveness of lockdown:

        Nil adsuetudine maius.

Nothing is stronger than habit.

Nothing is more powerful than custom.

8. -and another:

        Quod male fers, adsuesce, feres bene.

Habit makes all things bearable.

  • 9. For children:

        Casus ubique valet; semper tibi pendeat hamus
        Quo minime credas gurgite, piscis erit.

Chance is always powerful. Let your hook always be cast; in the pool where you least expect it, there will be fish.

10. For Albo:

        Medio tutissimus ibis.

You will be safest in the middle.

You will go most safely by the middle way.

11. For social media enthusiasts:

        Causa latet, vis est notissima

The cause is hidden; the effect is visible to all.

12. For Joe Biden:

        Fas est et ab hoste doceri.

It is right to learn even from an enemy.

We can learn even from our enemies.

13. For Barnaby:

        Quod licet ingratum est. Quod non licet acrius urit.

We take no pleasure in permitted joys.
But what’s forbidden is more keenly sought.

14. For cultural warriors:

        Nam genus et proavos et quae non fecimus ipsi,
        Vix ea nostra voco.

For those things which were done either by our fathers, or ancestors, and in which we ourselves had no share, we can scarcely call our own.

15. For Scomo and Paul Fletcher:

        Et ignotas animum dimittit in artes.

 And he turned his mind to unknown arts.

16. For BLM:

        Gutta cavat lapidem

Dripping water hollows out stone, not through force but through persistence.

17. For people of hope and good will:

        Omnia mutantur, nihil interit

Everything changes, nothing perishes.

18. For Dan Tehan, Minister for Education:

        Adde quod ingenuas didicisse fideliter artes
        emollit mores nec sinit esse feros.

Note too that a faithful study of the liberal arts humanizes character and permits it not to be cruel.

19. For realists everywhere:

        Laudent ceteri olim; ego sum laetus ego eram natus est in illis.

Let others praise ancient times; I am glad I was born in these.

[Source of quotes: https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Ovid]

Part 2: Dr Strangelove to coronavirus

Note: This is Part 2 of ‘Politics and economics explained’, an assignment happily entered into for my immediate family and made freely available here to others. The narrative is made more accessible to non-economists as a result of its unreliability and through the addition of references to a number of films which relate to the piece’s subject areas. Part 1 was ‘1940-1960’ and is available on this same blogg.

The scariest thing about living during the Cold War was the possibility of a nuclear war between the Soviet Union and the US. Back then it seemed possible that one or other of those countries might somehow get an unhinged leader who could order a nuclear attack on the other superpower. [Dr. Strangelove. 1964]

By 1960 people seemed to have forgotten the value of having a government lead on commercial activity, and suddenly the only thing that mattered was the profitability of commercial enterprises.  When Dr Beeching took over as Chairman of the British Transport Commission in 1964, British Rail was losing £140 million a year. So he closed 4,500 miles of railway line and 2,128 stations. This was one third of the track network and 55 per cent of stations, or the equivalent of six extra seasons of Michael Portillo’s Great British Railway Journeys (on BBC2). These closures led to the loss of 67,000 British Rail jobs – a sort of dress-rehearsal for what was in store for much of the UK’s heavy industry.

Soon after Beeching’s closures people thought they could see light at the end of the tunnel. Unfortunately it turned out to be a train coming in the opposite direction. This was the thundering, unstoppable neoliberalism, a new fashion for western governments that was to dominate politics and economics for half a century and wasn’t really challenged until there was an unexpected viral pandemic.

Neoliberalism was invented by Milton Friedman in Chicago one day in 1967 – and we’re still trying to get over it today. Friedman said that not only was it a bad idea to have governments do stuff, but that government intervention actually does  harm. When the economy is slowing down and unemployment rising, the government should sit on its hands and let the central bank manage growth by increasing the amount of money in circulation.  This will reduce interest rates and increase spending. (This is ‘monetarism’.)

People were persuaded. After 20 years of controlled economic expansion in which government investment (especially by the US) played a leading role, governments everywhere – Conservative, Liberal, Labour –  signed up to ‘monetarism’ and turned their backs on Keynes. [Capitalism: A Love Story. 2009]

Monetarism is a central tenet of neoliberalism which has a particular view of the relationship that a government should have with its people. It holds that free-market capitalism is all the go. It sees competition as the best characteristic of human relations. We are all consumers, not citizens. All of our choices and behaviours and attitudes are best exercised by buying and selling, a process that rewards merit and punishes inefficiency. ‘The market’ delivers benefits that can’t be achieved by planning and ensures that everyone gets what they deserve. Inequality is a sign that things are working well. [Suits. 2011-19]

The successes of neoliberalism include the financial meltdown of 2007‑8, the Panama Papers, the slow collapse of public health and education, resurgent child poverty, the epidemic of loneliness, the collapse of ecosystems, and the rise of Donald Trump. [The Laundromat. 2019] [Sorry We Missed You. 2020]

One of the best practitioners of neoliberalism was Margaret, Baroness Thatcher, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1979 to 1990. She loved markets and put structural change in the UK economy on steroids by closing all the coalmines and steelworks. She also had a wapping victory over print unions and helped  Rupert Murdoch buy news organisations and salacious newspapers.  [Hack Attack. date tbc] [My Beautiful Laundrette. 1985.]

PM Thatcher famously said there is no such thing as society:

I think we’ve been through a period where too many people have been given to understand that if they have a problem, it’s the government’s job to cope with it: ‘I have a problem, I’ll get a grant.’ ‘I’m homeless, the government must house me.’ They’re casting their problem on society. And, you know, there is no such thing as society. [High Hopes. 1988.]

Between 1984 and 2014 over a quarter of a million coal miners in the UK lost their jobs. In 2014 there were still 5.5 million people in ‘coal mining regions’ who needed financial support. The steel industry was similarly affected. The UK steel industry employed 323,000 people in 1971, but 32,000 in 2019. The fracturing of local communities had serious adverse effects on a whole range of communal activity, including sporting clubs and local orchestras, but these were offset for some people by increased employment opportunities in male strip shows. [Brassed Off. 1996] [The Full Monty. 1997]

From 1997 to 2003 there is stable and fun government in the US. The leader of the Western world and his staff grapple in entertaining fashion with tough issues like modernisation of the US polity, religious fundamentalism, terrorism and the politics of the Middle East. [The West Wing. 1999-2006]

However in response to terrorist attacks on the US, in 2003 President Bartlett’s successor led the United States into war in Iraq. The aims were to punish the Iraqi President for the use of chemical or biological weapons of mass destruction, to install a pro-US government there and to dissuade it and other countries in the Middle East from shielding terrorist organisations. The US was joined in the operation by Australia and the UK. The Iraq War lasted seven years, saw 4,488 U.S. troops killed and cost the US over a trillion dollars. In comparison, World War 2 cost the US $4.1 trillion (inflation-adjusted) and the Vietnam War $738 billion. [Good Morning, Vietnam. 1987] [Platoon. 1986]

In the UK, 1997-2010 is a period of faux socialism during which social-democratic and neoliberal policies and approaches are pretty much indistinguishable. Then, in 2010, David Cameron (a Conservative) becomes the youngest Prime Minister since Lord Liverpool in 1812. As Prime Minister he has two good moments. The first was when he became uncharacteristically firm in negotiations with the US President when he (the President) was caught coming on to his girlfriend. [Love Actually. 2003] The second was when he inexplicably decided to hold a referendum (June 2016) into the UK’s membership of the European Union. [Brexit: The Uncivil War. 2019]

Despite ample evidence from The West Wing, the Panama Papers and a global financial crisis, neoliberalism is still unchallenged as the preferred paradigm for governments throughout The Developed World. It succeeds in reinventing itself time and again through ephemeral schemes like subprime mortgages and less ephemeral ones like the sudden stupendous wealth of Russian oligarchs. All of this means that, in 2016, even someone like a 59-year-old carpenter who has had a heart attack has to fight bureaucratic forces in order to get unemployment benefit. [I, Daniel Blake. 2016] [The Era of Neoliberalism. 2019]

It’s as if the world’s economic order is waiting for some unstoppable natural phenomenon to jolt it into the realisation that it needs to Make Kindness Great Again.

Explaining the COVID-19 modelling

Modelling the transmission of infectious disease

Mathematical models of disease transmission can be used to estimate the potential impact of public health responses to infectious diseases. Recently (7 April) some details of the particular model that is being used as the basis for the decisions of Australian governments on the COVID-19 crisis have been published.

How do such models work? How can we be sure they are accurate? What do they tell us?

The headline findings from the modelling are the ones that have been delivered to us consistently in governments’ media conferences and other information activities: 

An uncontrolled COVID-19 epidemic would result in a situation dramatically exceeding the capacity of the Australian health system over a prolonged period, notwithstanding the increases in that capacity that are possible. 
A combination of case-targeted isolation measures with general
social measures will substantially reduce transmission and result in a more prolonged epidemic with lower peak incidence, fewer overall infections and fewer deaths.

As we all know, we have to stay home.

How it works

These general prescriptions from the modelling are clear and largely unchallenged. But as time passes it will be good  if there is closer scrutiny of this and other modelling. This will result in better understanding of both the general applicability of such modelling and the specific work being done on the Australian government’s preferred model.

The key variables on which mathematical models of infection are based are the latent period (i.e. the interval following exposure before an individual becomes infectious and transmits the disease), the infectious period (i.e. the period during which an infected person can transmit a pathogen to a susceptible host), and transmissibility. Transmissibility is described by the reproduction number – the number of secondary cases generated by a single infected case introduced into a susceptible population.

If the transmissibility number is less than 1, infection is receding. If it’s greater than 1, infection is spreading.

For models of this kind it is useful to know the extent to which outputs (in effect, the model’s  predictions) change in response to a given amount of variation in its inputs, and the particular input to which altered outputs can be attributed. The inputs include both the assumptions made about the structure of the entity being modelled and the data fed in.

This is the business of uncertainty and sensitivity analysis. In effect they provide information about the robustness of the model – the probability of the model and its predictions being accurate reflections of reality. The greater the model’s uncertainty or sensitivity, the more its outputs change with a given amount of variation of its inputs – and the less useful it will be.

Such analyses can help check the accuracy of a model’s structure or specification by assessing the individual contribution of a variable and the need to include it or not.

They can also help interpret the results of a model by identifying thresholds for certain variables that trigger outcomes of interest.

The value of  any such modelling is limited if the model’s structure is imperfect (that is, if it makes false assumptions about the relationships between elements of the model) or if incomplete or inaccurate data are fed into it. The modelling can be run again and again with greater confidence about its accuracy as, each time, more is known about the characteristics of thepathogen and more local (Australian) data are added in.

Critically, accurate estimation of the transmissibility of a disease requires reliable data on its incidence in the total population. As we have been told time and time again, this requires “testing, testing and testing”.

In addition to the latent period, the infectious period and transmissibility, more specific variables can be included in the model, such as the structure of the population and its mobility patterns, demographic variables, risk factors and age profiles. But with every new variable included the risk of false assumptions or imperfect data is likely to increase.

The preferred Australian model for use with COVID-19

There are a number of mathematical models doing their stuff around the world on the spread of infectious diseases and the impact of various public health responses. The one that has been, and remains, the basis for the decisions of Australian governments on the COVID-19 crisis is managed by the Peter Doherty Institute for Infection and Immunity, a joint collaboration of  the University of Melbourne and the Royal Melbourne Hospital.

The Doherty team released to the public a paper on 7 April 2020 about their modelling work on COVID-19.

The paper is quite open about potential weaknesses of the model that stem from unavoidable uncertainties about the assumptions made and imperfect or incomplete data relating specifically to the progress of the disease in Australia. Since it is a new pathogen there are uncertainties about the true disease ‘pyramid’ for COVID-19, and a lack of information about determinants of severe (as distinct from mild) disease. In the modelling done so far, age has been used as a best proxy for the probability of symptoms becoming severe.

There are other uncertainties. The model being used has been converted from one used for influenza and there are great differences between that pathogen and COVID-19. The assumptions about reducing transmission of influenza through a combination of distancing measures come not from Australian data but from Hong Kong. The relative contributions of different measures, such as the cancellation of mass gatherings, distance working, closure of schools or cessation of non-essential services, are not yet clear.

More will be learned about these particular strategies from real time data now being collected by various Australian agencies. In turn this will enable the more precise estimation of transmissibility for COVID-19 in Australia. This will be used to update forecast trajectories of the epidemic. These will no doubt be among the key pieces of information used by governments to manage the ongoing responses to the pandemic.

Some critical unknowns

Perhaps the most serious and alarming reminder in the published paper is that low and middle-income countries will find it even harder – potentially quite impossible – to deal with the COVID-19 crisis. Their health systems are already weaker, with limited access to high level care.

Given the massive impact on world trade and damage  to the budgets of all countries, including those that are affluent that have been donors of international aid, the impact of the COVID-19 emergency on the people and governments of poorer countries may become quite unmanageable.   

Much will depend on the role played by international aid and trade in the new order.

One of the most critical omissions from Australia’s modelling to date is that it has not as yet accounted for the loss of health care workers due to illness, carer responsibilities or burnout. Nor has it accounted for shortages of critical medical supplies, because the true extent of these shortages and their likely future impacts on service provision are apparently still unknown. 

These are two aspects of the issue to which governments and others must continue to give urgent attention. Apart from anything else it reminds us of the very special place of health care workers and the risks they face. Let’s continue to applaud, thank and support them.

Uncertainty and sensitivity analyses may perhaps already have been used by the team in Melbourne to investigate any number of aspects of the modelling. For example the published paper reports that in the simulation of a case-targeted public health intervention it was assumed that 80% of the identified contacts adhered to quarantine measures. It would be useful to know how many additional ICU beds would be required if the compliance rate was 78% or 82%, for example.

With the publication of the Institute’s paper a start has been made down the track of ensuring that the public becomes more familiar with, and more trusting of, the basis of many of the decisions affecting them. It will help to equip the Australian people for the kinds of generous and determined responses that will be needed for global recovery.

“Hi-Yo Silver!”

It seems odd that there has been no clear and unequivocal advice about whether or not it would help if we all wore face masks. This piece considers the many different aspects of the question which, between them, explain its complexity and why there has not yet been a single clear recommendation. Instead the matter has been left to individuals to decide.

This organic approach to an issue in which every one of us is potentially involved has at least two advantages. It lets the authorities off the hook of accountability for any sort of uniform advice. And it cedes responsibility to the people, which is widely considered a desirable principle. But if and when there is a clear technical (health or clinical) case for a particular protocol relating to masks, it will be an important challenge for the authorities to spread the word and obtain widespread community compliance.     

“Who was that masked man?”

School closures

Two weeks ago the question of whether or not schools should be closed seemed to be the most critical on which there was no clear advice. The experts had discussed the matter. We were told that schools would remain open but it would be good if parents who were able to do so would keep their kids at home.

The solidarity of the National Cabinet seemed to be fractured. Different jurisdictions provided different advice, based not just on medical views but on logistical matters such as when school terms were ending. Very soon it became apparent that the matter was apparently too complex for uniform national action to be agreed and it fell to parents to bear responsibility for the decision.

This cannot be seen necessarily as a criticism or failure of ‘the powers that be’. It may well be that the mixed mode that emerged about schools was in fact optimal given all the relevant circumstances and considerations.

The characteristics of that decision on schools which made it so complex seem now to relate to the question of whether or not to recommend or potentially even to mandate the wearing of masks. Is it to be Tonto or the Lone Ranger?[1]

Aspects of the question

Where the wearing of masks is concerned, the aspects to be considered include the following.

1. Does the wearing of masks reduce rates of transmission? This might appear to be the simplest and most important question but, even without scientific knowledge, one can understand its complexity. It obviously depends on the number, type and location of mask deployed. Does the effectiveness of masks depend on the proportion of the population who wear them? Why does the evidence from other countries seem to be conflicting? One thing that is clear is that masks are effective only when used in combination with other measures, most particularly frequent hand-washing with soap and water. The efficacy of masks is impacted by their supply; in short supply, the risks multiply of having them used in an unhygienic fashion.  

2. Does the wearing of masks have desirable or undesirable effect on the extent to which the population, or particular groups within the population, are compliant with critical measures like self-isolating and social-distancing? Some have argued that people wearing masks, or seeing others wear them, instils over-confidence and a lack of the required discipline on other fronts. The widespread use of masks could conceivably increase the public’s pessimism and propensity for ‘catastrophisation’. This could have adverse effects for mental well-being.

3. There is clearly a hierarchy of need relating to the wearing of masks and other personal protective equipment. Clinicians and others ‘on the frontline’ must be given first dibs, both for their own safety and for the effectiveness of the health and related systems. Any increase in the encouragement of others in the population to wear masks would therefore have to be moderated by accurate knowledge about the supply of masks.

4. “A mask is not a mask.” All sorts of products exist, including surgical masks and cloth or fabric face coverings. Surgical masks and respirators are essential for practitioners dealing with COVID-19 patients and those suspected of having it. Even if a uniform decision was possible on other fronts, there would be questions about what types of mask is useful in particular circumstances. We have seen and heard much about ingenuity of individual people and retooled companies making masks, but the  efficacy of various models and their uses has to be considered.

5. Consideration needs to be given to the cultural aspects of wearing masks. In Australia we look to countries to our north to see community/political entities (Singapore and the like) which are more accustomed both to wearing masks and to being told what to do on such matters. To the rugged individualists we are supposed to be, being told to wear masks may be a bridge too far, jeopardising a national consensus.

6. Some will argue that the question of mandating the wearing of masks is a legitimate battleground on the ‘personal freedom v. government control’ front.

7. There may be implications relating to the effect of a uniform approach on particular subgroups of the population. If wearing masks has cost indications not covered by governments, mandating their wearing would contribute to further inequality between rich and poor, employed and unemployed. The same might be said for urban-rural differences and equity. If there are national shortages of masks and other personal protective equipment they are certain to be greater and to have more impact in rural and remote areas than in the major cities.

8. Wearing a mask needs to be done properly. Any mandatory use of masks would need to be accompanied by detailed practical advice about what to do before putting it on, when to change it, how take it off and how to discard it. The WHO and many other organisations provide essential information about such matters which should be consulted by potential users. There is a recent article on the issue at https://insidestory.org.au/so-you-want-to-wear-a-mask-in-public/

It might be that, in their wisdom, governments and their advisers have tacitly agreed that it would be best if the decision about wearing masks remained organic – something to be owned and narrated by the community itself, evolving at the pace determined by people themselves. This would have some of the characteristics of the responses to the COVID-19 situation advocated by those who trust in citizen engagement and community development. I belong to that group but also crave information and advice from technicians about matters that can be subject to technical certainty.

And the Lone Ranger? Every week after he and his trusty friend Tonto had saved the world in 30 minutes, they would ride off into the distance, silhouetted against the skyline. Someone turns to the sheriff to ask who that masked man was. The sheriff responds that it was the Lone Ranger, who is then heard yelling “Hi-Yo Silver, away!” as he and Tonto ride away. We could do with him back again.

Information and disclaimer: this article has been written in the belief that policies relating to the wearing of masks are complex and illustrative of the great difficulties posed for decision makers by the current COVID-19 situation. It is not my intention to make or promote judgements about the clinical, social or economic aspects of the matter and it is certainly not my intention to provide advice to individuals. There is a mass of information online about the wearing of masks in the current situation and people making a personal decision should consider that information.

Some circumstances make the wearing of a mask essential. They include the situation in which a patient is suspected of having infection or when someone is coughing or sneezing such that a physical barrier between them and another is of obvious value. But based on the majority views in Australia at present it seems that in other circumstances most people will not benefit from wearing a surgical mask.

General practitioners should be able to access surgical masks through their local Primary Health Network.

For the latest advice, information and resources, go to www.health.gov.au

The National Coronavirus Health Information Line on 1800 020 080 operates 24 hours a day, seven days a week. If you require translating or interpreting services, call 131 450. 


[1] Those of you old enough to get this joke are hopefully self-isolating at home and getting your grandchildren to drop groceries at the door.

COVID-19: Models and emotions

What is the right thing to do? And how is it best to encourage us all to do it?

An emotive appeal may well have greater impact than a weight of statistics and numbers. I was inspired by something Amy Remeikis, journalist with the Guardian Australia, said on ABC TV’s The Drum last week:

“I just hope that when people are walking around and they’re seeing what they’re calling apocalyptic scenes and everyone’s seeing how negative it is; I look at an empty space and I see that as an act of love or of giving, because it’s people trying to save the lives of people they may never meet and that includes my father. – – I know there are people all over the country who are terrified for their relatives and that’s why l really do hope so many people are taking this as seriously as it needs to be taken.”

The Prime Minister and others have consistently attributed decisions they have made about the virus to the health advice from the Federal and State/Territory Chief Medical Officers. “Don’t blame or credit us governments; we are simply following independent, world’s best scientific advice.”

In turn, the Chief Medical Officers have referred to (or deferred to?) the modelling of COVID-19 transmission and infection done both here and in other countries.

We have been promised an open-book approach to the modelling being relied upon, but have yet to get it. This is perhaps because complete openness would lead to more distraction from the central task. Those who are already frantic providing health advice to the National Cabinet can do without debate about their preferred judgements, including because they differ from those of some other experts.

These ‘others’ include a team from Australia’s leading research universities, asked for advice by Professor Brendan Murphy, Commonwealth CMO. Their view was not unanimous but the majority of them called two weeks ago for “a rapid, sweeping and costly lockdown to pave the way for a national recovery once the crisis abates”.

Even with open access to the health modelling still more would be needed in order to understand – and evaluate – the decisions made in response to the pandemic. Presumably the economic impacts of various potential decisions have also been modelled, with the inputs being potential decisions about restrictions on businesses and movement, and the outputs such things as business turnover, the number of jobs lost and investor confidence.

The third part of the equation, and the most outrageously difficult, has been to make judgements about the relative value of different outcomes from the health and economy models. Put simply, it has in effect been a question of how much economic cost is justified to save a life.

When we have a chance to scrutinise the health and economic modelling that has been relied upon there will still be disagreement about whether or not the decisions made have been optimal. One thing we can be sure will be agreed is that all such modelling consistently displays great sensitivity – meaning that small changes in the assumptions and inputs at the front end have resulted in huge variations in outputs. Sensitivity must be even greater where the phenomenon being modelled is subject to exponential growth.

The Prime Minister has spoken often of the importance of preserving “life as we know it” – a euphemism for protecting the economy. For some people it has been impossible to shake the belief that his and his government’s embarrassment about their premature ‘back in black’ celebrations made them attribute, for some time, more weight to the economic crisis than to the virus.    

In the earliest discussions with my eldest son – rational and risk-averse – I had taken the (disgraceful?) line that if there is a new virus in the world we might as well get used to it and develop immunity as well as we can. On the last weekend before the 500 threshold was declared I was in Bathurst with about a thousand others at the NSW over-65s hockey championships. Just in the nick of time.

Soon after that I was a convert to what I think of as The Norman Swan Line: the government should go hard and early, to maximise the probability of halting the spread. As Dr Swan has been saying for several weeks, the only potential down-side of this approach is that if spread is prevented and nothing happens, the nay-sayers would be able to say that the government had over-reached. That would be a great outcome!

I have been doing my bit for the Swan line. A sort of epiphany was at the Parkinson’s singing group on the Monday of the week after the hockey tournament. As soon as I sat down with the small group of us in the church hall I realised what we were doing. Given our small number and our recent history of travel, the probability of our meeting increasing the rate of transmission of the virus was close to zero. But my decision to attend had contributed to a meeting – and gatherings of 10 or 500 are occasioned by the individual decisions of 10 or 500 individuals. The desired outcome cannot be achieved without my compliance.

We each need to commit to that act of love or giving in order to save the lives of people we will never meet.

Thus disposed, the staged or gradualist approach adopted by the National Cabinet “as a result of the medical advice”, never seemed to me to make sense. If we know that a total lockdown will work, and that we will probably need that eventually, why wait?

Which brings us back to the modelling of health and economic impacts. In the case of school closures, the modelling would require assumptions about different transmission rates with various proportions of school children at school, based on even more basic assumptions about the behaviour of school children, parents and the virus itself. The decision to keep schools open while encouraging parents to keep their kids at home seemed to indicate a lack of confidence in the modelling and the Federal Government’s unwillingness to be held accountable for a decision on the matter. The hard decision rested with the States and Territories.

The Federation seems to have come to the view that the States and Territories are responsible for action consequent on the belief that overcoming the health crisis is a pre-requisite to beating the economic crisis, while the national government acts through its taxing and spending powers to engage in preparations for economic bounce-back.

The generosity of the national government on economic matters has been astonishing, although it is people not governments who will inherit the debt. And it is fervently to be hoped that the cart and the horse are lined up in the right order.

Resilience and the Quiet Australian

Resilience and the Quiet Australian

Image credit: Flickr/katinka01

This piece was published in Croakey on 10 February 2020. It was edited for Croakey by Amy Coopes.

One of the reasons Prime Minister Scott Morrison has given for not bolstering emissions reduction targets is his belief that building resilience for the future is a better way to go.

Speaking to reporters at Parliament House on January 14, this is what he had to say:

I’ve set out what I think we need to do in terms of the future and that has been very much ensuring that we continue to meet and beat the emissions reduction targets that we’ve set. I’ve said, though, I think more significantly that resilience and adaptation need an even greater focus.

The practical thing that actually can most keep you safe during the next fire or the next flood or the next cyclone are the things that most benefit people here and now… The emissions reduction activity of any one country anywhere in the world is not going to specifically stop or start one fire event but what the climate resilience and adaptation work can do within a country can very much directly ensure that Australians are better protected against what this reality is in the future.

We must build our resilience for the future, and that must be done on the science and the practical realities of the things we can do right here to make a difference.”

His address to the National Press Club on January 29 featured 16 references to ‘resilience’. They included an assertion about the economy’s resilience, resilience to natural disasters, to a changing climate, and to unspecified other threats. He spoke of national resilience, practical action on climate resilience and adaptation, and asserted that mitigation and adaptation both contribute to resilience.

Farmers, he said, are on the frontline of resilience.

“The $5 billion Future Drought Fund will support practical, resilience-building measures, including small-scale water infrastructure and improved information on local climate variability, sustainable stock management, soil and water regeneration and the like. Our Drought Resilience Funding Plan — the framework to guide funding decisions for projects and activities — is expected to be tabled in Parliament by March of this year,” he said.

The Reef 2050 Plan and investments in “the technology of resilience, science of resilience through agencies such as the Bureau of Meteorology, the CSIRO and the Bushfire & Natural Hazards CRC” were among other measures touted by the Prime Minister in his address.

Looking ahead, he said he had tasked the CSIRO with bringing forward recommendations, supported by an expert advisory panel chaired by Australia’s chief scientist, on “further practical resilience measures, including buildings, public infrastructure, industries such as agriculture, and protecting our natural assets.”

Added Morrison:

I will be discussing resilience measures with the states and territories at COAG in March, and I know they’re looking forward to that discussion, including to ensure the Commonwealth Government’s investment through the National Bushfire Recovery Agency will be in assets that are built to last, built to resist, built to survive longer, hotter, drier summers. Building Back Better for the future.”

But what exactly is this ‘resilience’ of which much is expected? Do we all share a common view of what it is, what it does, and how more of it can be created?

Resilience defined

resilience /rɪˈzɪlɪəns/

noun: resilience; noun: resiliency; plural noun: resiliencies 

  1. the power or ability to return to the original form, position, etc., after being bent, compressed, or stretched; elasticity.
  2. ability to recover readily from illness, depression, adversity, or the like; buoyancy.

The first thing to note is that ‘resilience’ is a positive thing – an asset. In this particular definition, resilience is a power or an ability.

When applied to a physical entity, resilience refers to its capacity to return to original shape, following the application of external pressure. In such a case, resilience is attributable to the properties of the substances of which the entity is made.

The extension of this notion to human communities is easy and pleasing. The individuals in the community are the constituent parts, akin to the molecules that provide a substance with its physical properties. The property of a particular community with respect to resilience is determined by the individuals in it, the relationship between them and their aggregated response to an external force.

There is a large and rich literature on community and personal resilience, traversing disciplines such as psychology, sociology, engineering, geography and management.

One systematic literature review of definitions of community resilience related to disasters published in 2017 found no evidence of a common, agreed definition. It did, however, identify nine common core elements of community resilience. They are:

  • local knowledge
  • community networks and relationships
  • communication
  • health
  • governance and leadership
  • resources
  • economic investment
  • preparedness
  • mental outlook

The study notes that due to climate change and demographic movements into large cities, disasters are occurring more frequently and in many cases with higher intensity than in previous years. This has prompted a stronger focus on how best to help communities to help themselves, with a concomitant focus on understanding what factors contribute to making a community resilient to disasters.

The authors write:

The concept of ‘community resilience’ is almost invariably viewed as positive, being associated with increasing local capacity, social support and resources, and decreasing risks, miscommunication and trauma.

Yet consensus as to what community resilience is, how it should be defined, and what its core characteristics are does not appear to have been reached, with mixed definitions appearing in the scientific literature, policies and practice. This confusion is troubling.

The way we define community resilience affects how we attempt to measure and enhance it.”

So community resilience is something that cannot be identified at a single point in time, but over time — in particular over the period after a community has been exposed to pressure.

How did the community respond? Did it return to its original shape, form and pattern of behaviour?

Resilience located

People who live in communities that can rebound are the lucky ones.The lives of many others are characterised by pressure and deprivation, but without the resources (the skills, financial means, information, personal health etc) and equitable access to the supports required to bounce back.

There are a number of educational resources relating to the fostering of resilience. One has it that the seven Cs of resilience are competence, confidence, connection, character, contribution, coping, and control. Another asserts that resilience is made up of five pillars: self awareness, mindfulness, self care, positive relationships and purpose.

The 5 Pillars of Resilience. Image credit: The Wellness Project

I am familiar with the term and its application from my time working for the National Rural Health Alliance as a rural advocate. One of the purposes of that work was to try to ensure that rural issues were ‘on the agenda’.

This season’s bushfires have thrown the public spotlight on rural and remote areas like almost never before, also highlighting the community spirit which commonly exists in them. We have been reminded daily of the devotion of individuals who serve rural communities so expertly and selflessly: in rural fire services, the SES, Shire Councils, charitable organisations, the State and Federal public service, and many other bodies.

Though not exclusively a rural phenomenon, this sense of community — a key ingredient for resilience — seems to flourish more easily or more frequently in rural areas, so much so that community spirit is often said to be one of the features distinguishing rural from city living.

‘Community’ flourishes where human networks are small and open, making for rapid communications and visible personal circumstances. Local communications were perhaps always more efficient and comprehensive in rural areas due to partyline phone services and an effective bush telegraph, roles now largely adopted by social media.

The visibility of personal circumstances is not always a positive thing. It is a major contributor to stigma, which inhibits help-seeking in rural areas among some population groups in some circumstances.

The prosaic signs of community spirit and connectedness include a willingness by people to roll up their sleeves and get involved in work towards a shared local purpose; a can-do attitude witnessed in spades over recent months, with some local communities already rebuilding in earnest.

Occasionally, though, we should perhaps pause and consider the possibility that replication of patterns and structures that existed before the firestorms may not represent resilience. Such a return to the status quo may run counter to the adoption of new, more desirable, regulations relating to such things as where houses are built, how they are constructed, and what fire precautions are required. Not just building back, but Building Back Better, as framed by the government.

When the fires are out and the rebuilding is underway, it is to be hoped that the public and its governments maintain an appropriate focus on the communities of rural and remote Australia. It is vital that they do so because the conditions that exist — not just in times of crisis but in good times as well — are in some respects quite different from those in the major cities, requiring policies and programs that fit.

Thank you cards for NSW firefighters in the foyer of the Rural Fire Service HQ, Sydney. Image credit: Sascha Rundle

Resilience enhanced?

Rural communities do not need or want to always be seen through a deficit lens. Despite the real and ongoing challenges they face, people from rural and remote areas frequently score higher on self-perceived notions of ‘happiness’. It is not clear what the main reasons for this are, but they are likely to include the benefits of a stronger sense of community.

However there is a risk involved in this. Greater community connectedness must not be seen as an alternative to or replacement for services provided by governments and paid for from the public purse.

Resilience is not a reason to let governments off the hook as service providers whose challenge is providing equivalent access to such things as health, education, broadband or aged and disability services to people in all parts of the nation.

It’s not as if resilience and public services are a zero-sum game. And rural people want to be thought about and properly considered in good times as well as bad.

Given the local, spontaneous, community-driven nature of resilience, the active involvement of the government in enhancing it may be ambitious or even counter-intuitive. If it is to proceed as the Prime Minister has indicated, there needs to be an agreed definition of what it is, and agreed measures to quantify its existence. It should be possible to design research which will meet the need for both agreed definitions and empirical research on its existence and effectiveness in various locations.

When defining resilience some of the urban (and rural) myths must be exposed. Rural males have sometimes been thought of as ‘resilient’ because of their unwillingness to see a doctor or to care for their own health in other ways. This is to confuse resilience with pride, risk aversion and fear.

Health services in rural areas — although stretched by large distances, higher costs and workforce shortages — must be prepared to meet the challenges posed by environmental disasters such as floods and fires, animal-borne infections, and epidemics. The responses of health agencies during the bushfires will be a matter for consideration once the emergencies have passed. And, unfortunately, those same health services may soon be tested in relation to a new epidemic.

It may be short of resources, but in a cultural sense Australia’s rural health sector is well-equipped for disaster management. It has a strong values base, centering universality, equity and compassion.

Resilience is a second-best approach

The systematic review quoted earlier drew a very practical conclusion:

“In spite of the differences in conception and application, there are well understood elements that are widely proposed as important for a resilient community. A focus on these individual elements may be more productive than attempting to define and study community resilience as a distinct concept.”

And what of the choice between disaster prevention and enhanced resilience?

Of course it’s not either/or, but given a choice between disaster prevention and resilience, any rational being would choose the former. The best bet is to be without adversity and unhappiness in the first place.

Occasionally since the May 2019 election people have wondered, rhetorically, just how quiet the Prime Minister wants Australians to be.

It is to be hoped that the Quiet Australians — whoever and wherever they are — appreciate the basic after-the-event connotation of resilience, and do not allow it to displace or reduce Australia’s efforts to minimise carbon emissions.

It’s more important and more rational to prevent the need for a community to rebound than to enhance its ability to do so.

Climate change ‘resilience’ must not be allowed to morph into climate change ‘silence’.

We are all feeling under the weather

The bushfire emergency has transformed understanding of the facts relating to climate change and its impact on weather events. What was hypothetical has become personal.

Flinders Chase National Park after bushfires swept through Kangaroo Island, South Australia. Photograph: David Mariuz/AAP

People living in rural and remote areas of Australia have always felt the brunt of extreme weather events such as bushfires, cyclones and floods. Therefore increases in the frequency and intensity of adverse weather events have, until now, constituted rural issues. It has been difficult to have them treated as ongoing top national priorities.

But suddenly understanding about them has become national because of the spatial and temporal extent of the emergency. Also, some of the impacts, such as smoke haze, have been experienced directly by people in the cities for an extended period.

At 3.00pm on 8 February 1983 about 1,000 tonnes of Mallee topsoil were dumped on Melbourne. It was reported that “city workers huddled in doorways, covering their mouths from the choking dust, and traffic came to a standstill”. The worst of the dust storm was over by 4:00pm, when the wind speed dropped.

Melbourne, 3.30pm Tues.8 Feb. 1983

For a few days the significance of drought and the conditions that caused it were no doubt a topic of conversation in Melbourne. Tragically the exact weather pattern that had caused the dust storm in the city that day was repeated one week later, when the Ash Wednesday fires caused enormous destruction. In Victoria and South Australia 75 people died, including 17 fire-fighters.  

"Australia’s weather and climate continues to change in response to a warming global climate. Australia has warmed by just over 1°C since 1910, with most warming since 1950. This warming has seen an increase in the frequency of extreme heat events and increased the severity of drought conditions during periods of below-average rainfall. Eight of Australia’s top ten warmest years on record have occurred since 2005." [1]
"- - very high monthly maximum temperatures that occurred around 2 per cent of the time in the past (1951–1980) now occur around 12 per cent of the time (2003–2017). Very warm monthly minimum, or night-time, temperatures that occurred around 2 per cent of the time in the past (1951–1980) now also occur around 12 per cent of the time (2003–2017). This upward shift in the distributions of temperature has occurred across all seasons, with the largest change in spring." 

One of the underlying causes of the current bushfire emergency has been the long-term and extensive drought. Once the immediate recovery of people, their communities and their businesses is in full train, it will be essential to return to consideration of policies relating to the management of water and drought, and the management of land and agriculture.

These are very complex policy areas as illustrated, for example, by the unavoidable conflicts in water policy between state and territory jurisdictions, between economic, domestic (household) and environmental purposes, and between individual end-users.

Because of long-term basin-wide rainfall shortages, the Murray-Darling Basin Plan, the result of a huge amount of expertise, negotiation, good will and compromise, signed into law in 2012, now stands accused and unloved like a convicted thief in an open court.

"The year-to-year changes in Australia’s climate are mostly associated with natural climate variability such as El Niño and La Niña in the tropical Pacific Ocean and phases of the Indian Ocean Dipole in the Indian Ocean. This natural variability now occurs on top of the warming trend, which can modify the impact of these natural drivers on the Australian climate."

National uncertainty about how best to manage waters, land and weather has been compounded by global warming. The adverse effects have been worse for people in rural areas, who face some immediate challenges and disadvantages not experienced equally by people in the cities.

A description of the population characteristics of those who are most vulnerable to the adverse effects of severe weather events fits like a glove for rural people. They are those who are isolated, are of poorer socio-economic status, have pre-existing health conditions, have less access to infrastructure for transport, heating and cooling, fresh water and food; and have limited access to timely and appropriate health services.

About two-thirds of Australia’s Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people live outside Australia’s major cities. As a population group they have significantly poorer health outcomes,  which makes them especially vulnerable to the adverse effects of weather events.

A Fact Sheet from the National Rural Health Alliance says in part:

"Hospitalisation rates for asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (lung diseases that prevent proper breathing) are already substantially higher in remote areas, and this is likely to be exacerbated by warmer temperatures, coupled with elevated levels of airborne pollens and pollutants, such as bushfire smoke. Homes in rural and remote areas are older and often lack the thermal efficiencies of newer homes (e.g. reflective roofing and insulation). Aged care facilities in rural areas are also generally older, smaller and hotter than those in urban facilities."

There is, however, good news and some of it could be set in place with less contested policies and programs than those that relate to drought and water management.

The business sector the world over is already responding to the price signals and new commercial opportunities that are emerging as part of activities to reduce global warming. The largest and most immediate commercial opportunities include further developments and growth in the renewable energy sector, and carbon sequestration – the long-term storage of carbon in plants, soils, geological formations, and the ocean. In his recently-published book, Superpower, Ross Garnaut asserts that carbon sequestration could capture up to 1 billion tonnes a year – nearly twice Australia’s annual emissions.

This and much else of the economic adaptation required to reduce per head emissions and global warming will necessarily be based in rural and remote areas. This means that, just as the adverse effects of climate change and weather events are felt most immediately and extensively in rural and remote areas, so are the economic opportunities.

Our political and business leaders, small and large, should make more of the positive differential for the economic development of non-metropolitan areas inherent in expanding and new ecologically-enhancing industry sectors.

Ross Garnaut has been the author of advice to governments on climate change for many years. He  has no doubt that renewables can meet 100% of Australia’s electricity requirements by the 2030s, with high degrees of reliability and at lower prices. He says that embracing low-carbon opportunities could lead to a clean electricity system more than three times the existing capacity that powers a transformed economy, including electric transport and new and expanded industries in minerals smelting.

The dramatic decline in the cost of renewable energy has brought forward by a decade the time when cheap wind and solar power could provide the country with an advantage in energy-intensive manufacturing. Along with the expected development of green hydrogen, it could help make Australia a natural home for expanded industries in aluminium, steel, silicon and ammonia.

The crucial thing for the people and business of rural areas is that these industrial opportunities will underpin growth and jobs in regional centres such as the Pilbara, the Upper Spencer Gulf in South Australia, Portland and the Latrobe Valley in Victoria, Newcastle in NSW, Townsville, Gladstone and Mackay in Queensland and parts of Tasmania. This would help transform the economy and future prospects of rural areas.

A renewable rural economic base
Note: The NRHA has published (6 January 2020) a list of resources for people in bushfire-affected communities. (Accessed at  https://www.ruralhealth.org.au/news/resources-people-bushfire-affected-communities).   It includes advice on preparing children for the psychological effects of bushfires, on personal recovery, the provision by pharmacists of medications, avoiding harm from smoke, mental health, some phone lines for assistance and some regional data sources.

[1] The figures quoted in this piece are from State of the Climate 2018, CSIRO BOM, Dec. 2018; accessed at  https://www.csiro.au/en/Showcase/state-of-the-climate

Boris’s Brexit blindness

Brexit (/'breksit, breqzit/;  a portmanteau of 'British' and 'exit') is the withdrawal of the United Kingdom (UK) from the European Union (EU). Following a referendum held on 23 June 2016 in which 51.9 percent of those voting supported leaving the EU, the Government invoked Article 50 of the Treaty on European Union, starting a two-year process which was due to conclude with the UK's exit on 29 March 2019—a deadline that has been extended to 31 October 2019. [From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia]

It’s none of my business. But I have a strong emotional attachment to something called the United Kingdom.

Why on earth would Boris Johnson commit to leaving the European Union on October 31 – “No ifs, no buts” – on the basis of a decision made by the people over three years ago?

Such a dogmatic approach to an outdated electoral outcome makes no sense.

Tying oneself to yesterday’s facts is neither admirable nor principled; it is ideological.

Keynes may or may not have said “When the facts change, I change my mind. What do you do, sir?”. Irrespective of the accuracy of this famous attribution, it’s a fine and robust idea. Matters of fact should be determined by the best information. And the best information must include the most recent.

Surely ‘the statute of limitations’ has been reached for a decision made over three years ago? For goodness sake: in Australia, three years is longer than the average term of an elected parliament! There’s no way we would have our Parliament peopled by candidates who were successful in the election before last.

Rory Stewart, who flared brightly and briefly in the Conservative party firmament in recent months, made a case for not having a second referendum. He pointed out that, should the decision be reversed, the Leave forces would take to the streets immediately and there would be no end to the schism.

But even if that were the case, at least the divisiveness would be based on up-to-date information! And there might be every chance that the case to remain in the EU would be better than 51.9%. The demographics have shifted in favour of the remain vote. There is now much greater clarity about what leaving means in terms of trade and jobs, and what the practical difficulties are.

And surely a significant proportion of those who voted leave would agree that they did not vote for the uncertainty and bedlam of the last three years?

There are only three options: to leave subject to the agreement reached with the EU; to leave with no agreement; or to call the whole thing off. Maybe those could be the choices in a second referendum.

Respecting the primacy of the people and their vote is the essence of democracy. But it is false logic and dysfunctional to be tied to historical decisions of the people which, in all probability, no longer hold.

And there is one way to be absolutely sure. Ask them again.

Post script: in an interview with James O'Brien, and asked whether he thinks Boris Johnson is "dangerous", Rory Stewart paused for 11 seconds before answering. There was an earlier and revealing discussion between the two on O'Brien's LBC radio show.

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