The New Zealand Herald

Time for all to act on lessons of lockdown

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With each sign New Zealand is wrestling its Covid-19 outbreak into submission, the drumbeats for more focus to go on the economy become louder. Case numbers are low, people are recovering, clusters are disappeari­ng and few people are in hospital with the coronaviru­s.

It is about the best situation we could hope for — provided it remains on that positive trajectory during level 3 — before winter strikes.

The coronaviru­s needs to be under control within our borders for our economy to get up to speed. People’s livelihood­s and personal security depend on that happening with few hitches. Anxiety is rising. Critical voices are making themselves heard.

Our financial engine will not hit top gear until the pandemic eases overseas and a vaccine becomes available, possibly early next year.

But the old normal should not just slot back into place unquestion­ed as we welcome back familiar habits. It would be a mistake for the country to reach blindly for the shelter of a past that could not protect us from this sudden mess.

With more traffic on the roads and fewer kids on bikes riding the footpaths, late March and April already feels like a quiet, surreal interlude.

In the rush to return to “normality”, is there a chance some of the important lessons of the pandemic could get trampled underfoot?

The Government has been focused on the immediate emergency at hand. But now is the time, while we are still navigating disruption­s and adapting to new ways of doing things, to start giving thought to longer-term issues.

Major upheaval can result in innovation and provide the impetus to fix what needs fixing. The outbreak and our response now needs to be studied from all angles.

Different countries have had varying results in dealing with the pandemic, but common issues will need to be addressed by all.

Can countries better protect those who have borne the brunt of the pandemic worldwide: Medics, emergency responders, essential workers, the elderly in rest homes, people with poor health and ethnic minority groups?

How can countries improve in areas of securing medical supplies, use of technology and strategies to deal with a future pandemic in a less economical­ly damaging way?

In New Zealand, can we learn from the experience and approaches of some of our near neighbours? Can better health practices be incorporat­ed into everyday life, including in the way businesses operate? Can economic shock absorbers and new approaches be introduced to the way we work to allow people to more easily ride out financial eruptions?

People will have learned new things about themselves over the lockdown such as what they did not want to be without and what they surprising­ly did not miss. Rather like receiving a bad medical diagnosis out of the blue, the pandemic has cast a harsh light on the basic essentials of life.

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