Updating data for BRIICS for Covid19 pandemic through Week 17 of 2021 (current week):
Sunday, May 9, 2021
9/5/21: COVID19: BRIICS
Saturday, May 8, 2021
8/5/21: COVID19: Most impacted countries
Covering data through this week (week 17) of 2021 for world's most impacted countries.
First: most impacted countries by the rate of infections and by mortality:
Monday, April 19, 2021
19/4/21: COVID19: BRIICS
BRIICS are now in a fully-developed Wave 4 of the pandemic, like much of the rest of the world. This is confirmed across both new case numbers and weekly deaths counts:
These are six largest emerging and middle income economies in the world, and their pandemic dynamics, in the end, hold the key to the global efforts on combating the spread of the disease. Not surprisingly, these countries account for three of the four main variants of the disease to-date. If anyone thinks that Europe and North America can effectively insulate themselves from what is happening in these countries, by any means other than attaining a sufficient and robust immunity through vaccinations, they really need to reflect hard on their rational thought capacity.
19/4/21: COVID19: Most impacted countries
Updated tables for world's most impacted countries and regions below. Starting with the countries with the highest recognized levels of infections:
- Andorra, Montenegro and Czechia are top three countries in the world in terms of infections rates
- Gibraltar, Czechia and San Marino are top three countries in the world in terms of mortality rates
- Of larger countries, with population > 100 million, the U.S. is the only country featured on both lists, while Mexico is on the list of countries with highest mortality.
- There are 57 countries on the list as of Thursday last week.
- Across three metrics used (infections rate, deaths per capita and mortality rate per case), Hungary is rated the worst, followed by Belgium and Bulgaria. Czechia and Slovakia share the 4th and 5th places.
- The U.S. is ranked 3rd highest in the number of infections, in the 8th place in terms of highest deaths per 1 million of population and in the 32nd place in terms of deaths per 1,000 infections. Overall, the U.S. is ranked 8th worst country in terms of pandemic performance across the three metrics.
Notably, majority of the most impacted countries are, currently, in the process of developing, or already experiencing, a new wave of the pandemic.
Friday, April 2, 2021
2/4/21: COVID19: BRIICS
As warned last month, BRIICS are now in a new wave of the pandemic, just like the rest of the world:
The new wave is worse than the previous one in terms of new weekly case counts and deaths. Brazil and India are leading the new cases pandemic, while Brazil leads in terms of deaths. Russia is relatively stable on deaths counts at highly elevated levels, while India death counts (highly suspicious in terms of low numbers throughout the entire 2021 so far) are now rising once again.
Table above shows summary of dynamics in current weekly cases and deaths relative to the prior 4 weeks average.
These numbers strongly indicate that risk of pandemic will continue to spill over across the world, with no country immune to the new wave developing, until reaching 'herd immunity' levels via immunizations, assuming no adverse mutations in the virus.
1/34/21: COVID19: Most impacted countries
Here is a set of summary tables for world's most impacted countries:
First, 17 countries with more than 7% of population tested positive:
- The U.S. that enters both of the lists as the only country with population > 15 million
- Mexico that enters the list for highest mortality countries (alongside the U.S.) - the only two countries on the list with population > 100 million
- Spain, UK and Italy are the three countries on the deadliest countries list with population between 45 million and 99 million.
Sunday, March 14, 2021
13/3/21: COVID19 Update: BRIICS
Previous posts covered updates for Covid19 pandemic stats:
- Worldwide data: https://trueeconomics.blogspot.com/2021/03/12321-covid19-update-worldwide-data.html,
- Europe and the EU27 countries: https://trueeconomics.blogspot.com/2021/03/13221-covid19-update-europe-and-eu27.html, and
- Most impacted countries: https://trueeconomics.blogspot.com/2021/03/13321-covid19-update-most-impacted.html
- This pandemic will not go away until we reach - globally - levels of vaccinations and infections that deliver global 'herd immunity', which would require 90%+ immunity cover; and
- As long as there are large pools of the virus in the world at large, there will be higher likelihood (note: we do not know probability) of virus mutations that can render acquired immunity irrelevant, and
- We are currently not doing anything near enough to deliver vaccines to the countries outside the Advanced economies world.
13/3/21: COVID19 Update: Most impacted countries
In previous posts, I covered updates for Covid19 pandemic figures for:
- Worldwide data: https://trueeconomics.blogspot.com/2021/03/12321-covid19-update-worldwide-data.html, and
- Europe and the EU27 countries: https://trueeconomics.blogspot.com/2021/03/13221-covid19-update-europe-and-eu27.html.
- Andora
- Montenegro
- Gibraltar
- Czechia
- San Marino
- Gibraltar
- San Marino
- Czechia
- Slovenia
- Belgium
- Belgium
- UK
- Italy
- Hungary (tied with Italy)
- Portugal
- Czechia
- Spain
- U.S.
- Bulgaria (tied with U.S.)
- Peru
Sunday, February 14, 2021
14/2/21: COVID19 Update: BRIICS
In previous posts, I covered the latest data for weekly Covid19 pandemic dynamics for:
- Global data and trends: https://trueeconomics.blogspot.com/2021/02/14221-covid19-update-worldwide-data.html;
- European & EU27 data and trends: https://trueeconomics.blogspot.com/2021/02/14221-covid19-update-europe-and-eu27.html; and
- Data and trends for the most impacted countries and regions: https://trueeconomics.blogspot.com/2021/02/14221-covid19-update-most-impacted.html.
14/2/21: COVID19 Update: Most impacted countries
Previous posts on the COVID19 update covered global numbers and trends (https://trueeconomics.blogspot.com/2021/02/14221-covid19-update-worldwide-data.html) and European & EU27 trends (https://trueeconomics.blogspot.com/2021/02/14221-covid19-update-europe-and-eu27.html).
Here are some comparatives across all countries with the highest rates of detected infections (> 5% of population):
Another way of looking at this is to take countries with more than 250,000 confirmed cases, as presented in the next set of tables:
The table above really drives home the depth of the crisis in Europe and the U.S. U.S. accounts so far fo 20 percent of global deaths, having just 4.3 percent of the global population. This gives the U.S. second worst ratio of its share of global deaths to its share of world population. Only the UK exceeds the U.S. in this horrific metric. The EU27 fall in the third place, below the U.S. with 21.4% of the world's deaths and 5.8% of the global population.
Saturday, January 2, 2021
2/1/21: Covid19 update: BRIICS
In previous posts, I covered Covid-19 updates for the last week of 2020 for:
- Worldwide trends: https://trueeconomics.blogspot.com/2021/01/2121-covid19-update-worldwide-numbers.html;
- Europe and the EU27: https://trueeconomics.blogspot.com/2021/01/2121-covid19-update-europe.html; and
- Countries with more than 250,000 cases: https://trueeconomics.blogspot.com/2021/01/2121-covid19-update-countries-with-250k.html.
- Currently, BRIICS account for 28.2% of all cases of Covid-19 in the world, and 25.3% of all deaths. This compares to these countries accounting for 45.3% of the world population.
- The pandemic has been relatively benign for this group of countries. If BRIICS were ranked as a stand-alone country within the group of 40 countries with more than 250,000 cases, BRIICS would have ranked 38th worst in terms of cases per 1 million of population, 37th worst in terms of deaths per capita, and 28th in terms of deaths per case.
- BRIICS data, however is highly heterogeneous by country:
- Brazil ranks 11th worst-hit country in the world in terms of infections rate, death rate per capita and mortality rate;
- Russia ranks 28th;
- India ranks 38th;
- Indonesia 31st;
- China is unranked (officially, the country has fever than 250,000 cases, although overall robustness of the Chinese data is highly questionable); and
- South Africa ranks 22nd worst.
- No BRIICS country enters the league of 22 countries most-impacted by the pandemic (defined as countries with infection rate of 4% of population and higher).
Now, to dynamics and trends.
BRIICS weekly case numbers are on the sustained rise, once again, since the trough achieved in week 45 which marked the end of the Wave 1 and the start of Wave 2 of the pandemic:
Rather similar dynamics are taking place in deaths counts:
2/1/21: Covid19 update: Countries with > 250K cases
In previous posts, I covered worldwide trends for Covid19 pandemic evolution (https://trueeconomics.blogspot.com/2021/01/2121-covid19-update-worldwide-numbers.html) and pandemic developments in Europe and the EU27 (https://trueeconomics.blogspot.com/2021/01/2121-covid19-update-europe.html). Here, let's take a look at the set of countries with more than 250,000 confirmed cases.
As of week 52 of 2020, there were 40 countries in this group, accounting for 90 percent of the world total number of cases, 92 percent of the global deaths and 64 percent of the world's population.
Tables below provide summary statistics for these countries:
Some noteworthy observations from the above:
- The U.S. is the worst performing major advanced economy when it comes to the pandemic trends: it ranks 2nd worst in the world in terms of its numbers of Covid19 cases per 1 million of population, 7th worst in the world in terms of its death rate per capita, but a reasonably-benign 25th in the world in mortality rate (deaths per positive test case). Using the three metrics mentioned, the U.S. ranks 6th worst performing country in the league of all countries with > 250,000 cases.
- The UK ranks even worse than the U.S. The country ranks 15th worst in the world in the rate of infections (Covid19 positive tests per capita), and 5th worst in deaths per capita and deaths per positive case. Across all three metrics, the UK ranks third worst in the world.
- Belgium ranks the worst major country in overall pandemic impact terms (cases per capita, deaths per capita and deaths per case), followed by Italy in the second place. The UK, as mentioned above ranks the third, Spain forth, Peru fifth, the US and Argentina tied in the sixth place, Hungary comes in 8th, Czechia 9th and France 10th. Thus, six out of the 10 worst hit countries in the world are EU27 members.
- In mortality terms (deaths per 1,000 cases), Mexico is the worst-performing country with 88.42 deaths per 1,000 positive cases; followed by Iran (45.56), Peru (37.19), Italy (35.12) and the UK (30.52). Overall, only 6 countries have mortality rates > 30 per 1,000 positive tests.
- There were 7 countries with more than 1,000 deaths per 1 million of population, and only 4 countries with infection rate of > 50,000 cases per 1 million of population.