1. Learning from experience: Are African governments prepared for another pandemic?
- Author:
- Tunde A. Alabi and Matthias Krönke
- Publication Date:
- 06-2024
- Content Type:
- Policy Brief
- Institution:
- Afrobarometer
- Abstract:
- According to the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) (2020), Africa’s first case of COVID-19 was recorded in Egypt in mid-February 2020. Six months later, the continent’s death toll exceeded 19,000, representing 3% of global COVID-19 mortality. As the virus spread across Africa, governments began to enforce national lockdowns and other restrictions to minimise the impact of the pandemic. In addition to being a global health emergency, COVID-19 had other wide-ranging consequences. Many parts of government bureaucracies, as well as the private sector, shut down except for “essential” workers (Wickham, 2022). Children were unable to go to school for months, increasing dropout rates with knock-on effects on their nutrition and mental health (UNICEF Africa, 2022; Kidman, Breton, Behrman, & Kohler, 2022). Moreover, African governments’ responses to the pandemic affected trends in poverty on the continent. For example, Afrobarometer analyses found that “more restrictive government responses were associated with larger increases in lived poverty” (Mattes & Patel, 2022, p. 1). Faced with economic uncertainty and mobility restrictions, Africans turned to their governments for support and a coordinated public health response to the pandemic. The latest Afrobarometer surveys in 39 countries document how citizens experienced the pandemic, their views on how their governments handled the pandemic, and whether they think their governments are prepared for future health emergencies. Responses indicate that about one in seven households experienced a case of COVID-19, while more than a quarter suffered the loss of a primary source of income. Despite the severe economic effects of the pandemic, fewer than a quarter of households received pandemic related assistance from the government. Most respondents say that the distribution of relief was unfair and that corruption claimed funds intended for the pandemic response. Even so, most Africans say their government managed the pandemic well. When it comes to giving up democratic rights during a pandemic, a majority of Africans accept the use of the military or police to enforce public health mandates, but censoring the media and postponing elections are more controversial steps. Africans are divided in their assessments of their governments’ readiness for a future pandemic, and a majority say additional investments in such preparations are needed.
- Topic:
- Education, Health, Social Services, Pandemic, and COVID-19
- Political Geography:
- Africa