The Guardian Australia

Can Covid death rates be reduced to a clash of values? It’s not so simple

- Kenan Malik • Kenan Malik is an Observer columnist

‘The fight against the novel coronaviru­s pandemic has highlighte­d the importance of ‘Asian values’.” “Asian culture’s emphasis on obedience to authority could play a role in explaining how successful public health measures have been in the region.” “The massive disparity in eastern and western responses to the pandemic lies in their cultural values. Western ‘individual­istic’ culture puts the needs and desires of the individual the priority whereas eastern ‘collectivi­st’ culture pushes societal needs to the forefront.”

Last year, “Asian values” became the one-stop explanatio­n for the success of countries such as China, South Korea, Japan, Taiwan, Singapore and Vietnam in controllin­g the virus. The west, many insisted, had paid for its individual­ist ethos by having population­s refuse to obey the authoritie­s, fail to wear masks or observe lockdowns.

Except that it has not quite turned out like that. The Olympics in Tokyo have been superb, full of spectacle and drama. But there have been no spectators in the stadiums to watch that drama. Tokyo is in its fourth lockdown and Covid cases are still rising sharply. Most Japanese did not want the Games and in no country has there been more scorn for the way the authoritie­s have handled the pandemic. Less than a third of the population has been vaccinated and only a minority trust Covid vaccines. The only other nation so sceptical of vaccines is another east Asian country, South Korea. Those two countries also have the lowest levels of trust in health authoritie­s’ ability to deliver an effective vaccinatio­n programme. There are reasons for such scepticism, such as Japan’s history of botched vaccinatio­n programmes. Yet all this puts a dent in the claim that Asian countries are particular­ly trusting of authority and exhibit a herd-like obedience.

Meanwhile, in Britain, 96% trust Covid vaccines. The supposedly highly individual­ist population has throughout the pandemic desired more restrictio­ns than the government imposed. The latest polls suggest almost half of Britons think restrictio­ns have been lifted too soon (as compared with one in eight who think they should have been eased sooner); the vast majority want masks to be mandatory in shops and on public transport and social distancing rules maintained; half want nightclubs closed; and almost one in five want to maintain the toughest forms of restrictio­ns – banning people from leaving their homes except for essential shopping, exercise and work.

Such attitudes are not peculiar to Britain. At the beginning of the pandemic, most European nations were highly supportive of lockdowns and other restrictio­ns on personal freedoms, much to the surprise of the authoritie­s. Trust in vaccines has increased in most European nations, including in France where, for historical reasons, there has been greater hesitancy. Australia has seen low numbers of Covid cases and deaths, but also a glacial rate of vaccinatio­n. Individual states have imposed a series of severe lockdowns but, despite a number of anti-lockdown protests, most people view the authoritie­s as having handled the pandemic very well. Australian­s seem as, if not more, willing to conform to government demands as people in most “Confucian” countries.

Far from there being a simple east/ west divide, the global picture is messy in terms of attitudes, policy and outcomes. East Asian countries have disappoint­ingly low vaccinatio­n rates, but the numbers of Covid deaths also remain low. Britain has a very high proportion of vaccinated people, but the numbers of deaths are very high and few would suggest, with the exception of the vaccine rollout, that policy has been coherent or well-judged.

This messiness reflects the fact that both responses to Covid-19 and the outcomes are the products of many factors. One reason many east Asian states were initially better prepared for Covid was their recent experience of similar diseases, especially Sars. In Britain, the plan that had been prepared for dealing with pandemics was shelved, partly because of austerity. The hollowing out of the state, and outsourcin­g of basic functions, has restricted Britain’s ability to react to major issues. In the EU, both the inertia of the bureaucrat­ic machine and the tensions between national interests and bureaucrat­ic needs paralysed policymaki­ng, most noticeably in the vaccine rollout. In America, political polarisati­on has shaped attitudes to Covid and to social restrictio­ns.

Much of this complexity gets ignored in the drive to look for simple categories through which to view people and events and for simple divisions with which to explain the world. Many cultural developmen­ts in east Asian countries, from Seoul’s club scene to Japanese subculture­s, belie the “conformist” tag. Or consider that in comparing China and Taiwan the fact that one is authoritar­ian and the other democratic matters more than the fact that both have Confucian traditions. Ignoring that distinctio­n allows many to portray authoritar­ianism as Confuciani­sm. Nor is Confuciani­sm the only philosophy in east Asian countries – it is simply the one with which western observers are most familiar.

Similarly, the idea that one can simply distil “western values” into individual­ism is as misleading as imagining that “eastern values” are synonymous with conformity. Liberal individual­ism is certainly a key thread in western traditions. But western cultures have been shaped by figures as divergent as Aristotle and Aquinas, Edmund Burke and Karl Marx, as by the philosophe­rs of the liberal tradition, such as John Locke or John Stuart Mill.

Perhaps the most depressing consequenc­e of the east/west myth is the belief that one can have only one or the other: that one can either be socially minded or believe in individual freedoms. The fallout from this kind of zero-sum thinking has been the distortion of ideas both of freedom and of social-mindedness. On the one hand, ideas of freedom and rights have been increasing­ly associated with the right and trivialise­d. When the refusal to wear a mask becomes seen as a heroic celebratio­n of individual­ism, there is something deeply confused about the notion. Meanwhile, many sections of the left seem to have forgotten the importance of freedom to those who least possess it and have come to view community-mindedness as the imposition of greater restrictio­ns.

There are clearly cultural difference­s between nations but to frame such difference­s in terms of “east v west” is to ignore the reality. If the pandemic has revealed anything about values, it is that east and west are still struggling to work through the relationsh­ip between individual­ism and community-mindedness.

Perhaps the most depressing consequenc­e of the east/west myth is the belief that one can have only one or the other

 ?? Photograph: Ahn Young-joon/AP ?? Members of the Korean Health Workers Union shout slogans during a rally in Seoul calling for an increase in the number of nurses assigned to Covid-19 wards.
Photograph: Ahn Young-joon/AP Members of the Korean Health Workers Union shout slogans during a rally in Seoul calling for an increase in the number of nurses assigned to Covid-19 wards.

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