How
the Japanese deal with the pandemic is illustrative of what’s wrong in America.
The US just set a new record: more than 40,000 new cases of
COVID-19 infections in one day. This is the end of June 2020 when many states
have been reopening their economies and people around the country have breathed
a big sigh of relief: The pandemic is over and we survived it! Except that it
is not over and many did not survive. So far there have been more than 125,000
deaths confirmed to have been caused by the virus in the US. This is a quarter
of all deaths globally (Americans stand for just over 4% of the world
population).
Meanwhile in Japan, there is growing concern that a second
wave of the pandemic is about to hit the country. This widespread fear among
the general population and politicians alike has been caused by the fact that
over the past three weeks or so there has been an increase in the number of new
cases detected daily, mostly in the capital city. It is important to note,
however, that these infection figures causing the panic are entirely in a
different range than those in America. On Saturday, June 27, Tokyo discovered 57
new infections. The day before that, the figure was 54 and the day before that
55. That is 55, not 55,000.
Now, your reaction may be that, well, Japan is a small
country. It is indeed much smaller that the United States, just 377,975 km2
(147,937 sq. miles), as compared with the 9,833,520 km2 (3,796,742 square
miles) of the USA. The US thus has many times the land area of Japan, but
Japan’s population of 126 million is well over a third of America’s 328
million. Japan’s population density is therefore many times higher than that of
the United States. Pandemics thrive in densely populated places. Tokyo is one
of the largest cities in the world—probably the largest if you count the
surrounding areas the form the contiguous metropolitan area. Just the area
falling under the administrative unit of Tokyo proper houses 14 million people,
one-third more than New York City.
Despite this enormous population concentration, Japan has so
far only had just over 18,000 corona cases, as compared with America’s almost
2.5 million. Japan also sits next to China, where the pandemic started at the
end of last year, and is a major destination for Chinese tourists: 9.6 million
Chinese visited Japan in 2019, some of them bringing the virus with them,
especially to the northern island of Hokkaido that experienced an early surge
in infections.
So what might explain these striking differences? Japan’s
Finance Minister Taro Aso, as reported by The
Japan Times, had a short and clear answer: Cultural standards. Aso
was criticized for his insensitivity, including by some of his fellow
politicians in Japan (this is not the first time that he is taking flak for
blunt comments that can be seen as culturally chauvinistic), but it would be
impossible to dismiss his observation offhand. Unlike in the USA where efforts
to (belatedly) control the spread of the virus through lockdowns and social
distancing have been met with armed protests, the Japanese never implemented
any draconian closings. Sure, there were many common sense changes—restaurants
would stop serving alcohol early in the evening encouraging people to return
home, train service was significantly reduced—but much of It was done
voluntarily.
There are different forces at play. One is that the Japanese
tend to be on the average a well-educated populace with a high science literacy.
This naturally comes with a respect for scientific authority. People would heed
the advice that epidemiologists and medical professionals would give them. This
is the first obvious contrast to the US where an anti-science bias has long and
deep roots, as documented by the historian Richard Hofstadter in his 1963
classic Anti-Intellectualism in American
Life. Many people simply reject scientifically proven facts. Even during
the COVID-19 crisis, there have been people claiming that the pandemic is just a
liberal ploy to destroy the American way of life.
Secondly, Japan is ethnically and socially a very homogenous
country with very low numbers of foreigners and relatively small differences
between the rich and the poor. This homogeneity has maintained centuries old
social structures and hierarchies. It is also a society with generally a high
level of trust: between people and between people and the government. Needless
to say, nothing could be further from truth when it comes to the American
society today where divisions run deep between different groups and where
distrust of the government has in recent years risen to feverish levels.
The Japanese homogeneity is of course not pure idyll. Its
downside is that people who are different are often frowned upon, even
ostracized. During the pandemic earlier in the spring, “virus vigilantes” would
harass those seen as breaking the social rules and putting other people at
risk. There were also reports
of discrimination against people who would be—rightly or falsely—suspected of
carrying the virus, including quite unreasonably health care workers.
Respect for rules and other people’s safety and comfort,
however, runs very deep in the Japanese culture. This would be part of the
“high cultural standards” that Taro Aso was referring to as helping ward off
the spread of the virus. Having lived in Japan for almost a decade and visiting
frequently since then, I can attest to the extreme politeness and considerateness
that people show to others. Wearing surgical masks has for decades been par for
the course during the flu and pollen allergy seasons, not to protect oneself
but out of consideration to others. Inconveniencing other people is highly
embarrassing. So when the pandemic started, everyone naturally started wearing
a mask. Cleanliness overall is at a remarkably high level in Japan, so again
few adjustments had to be made in terms of hygiene.
No formal travel limitations had to be put in place as people
censored themselves. My wife hails from Iwate, an area between the central
mountains and the Pacific Ocean in the northern part of the main island,
Honshu. Iwate has been the only prefecture in the country where no COVID cases
have been recorded throughout the pandemic (they may well be there, but no-one
has got sick enough to require hospitalization). This fact is thanks to health
checks of people entering the prefecture that were not mandated by the central
government and, notably, by self-regulation by travelers. Like my wife has
pointed out: Being the person who gets to be known as the one who brought the
virus to a hitherto uncontaminated place would bring unbearable shame to the
person and her/his family, so people would rather not risk acting as the
vector.
So, now there is a resurgence of the virus in Japan, which
has led to quick action by both the authorities and regular people. Scientists
have been able to trace the infection clusters that have emerged in the past
few weeks since Japan started getting back to normal after new cases almost
disappeared towards the end of May. These new clusters are almost all traceable
to entertainment areas in Tokyo—karaoke bars, clubs and gyms, “associated with
heavy breathing in close proximity,” as a new scientific paper
put it.
This same pattern is, of course, visible in the States.
Partying over the Memorial Day weekend resulted in a new spread of infections.
The pandemic has now moved south, to places like Florida, Arizona and Texas
that opened up their economies prematurely, crowding beaches and bars as the
weather warmed. On Friday, June 26, the governors of Texas and Florida were
again forced to close down bars as new COVID-19 cases shot through the roof.
Florida alone reported 8,942 new cases in one day alone.
The question now is, what will happen next. There may be a
second wave hitting Japan but it is bound to be a very small one that will
again be curbed in a few weeks, as people refrain from behaviors that put
themselves and others at risk. It is hard to see the pandemic contained as
easily in the US. The rudderless and reactive government response,
self-centered instant gratification-seeking behavior of individuals, hugely
divided society, and distrust of authority will guarantee that.
The renowned political scientist Francis Fukuyama recently
wrote in Foreign
Affairs that the factors that have determined successful response to
the pandemic across countries are state capacity, social trust, and leadership.
The United States has failed in all three. Others have observed that Americans
seem to have simply given up on the pandemic, focusing on different things
instead. Some are serious—like the Black Lives Matter and police brutality—but
many people just want to get their lives back, whether it’s getting on with work
and making money or simply enjoying the summer. Now it’s coming back to bite
us—and the world watches in stunned bafflement as the country that used to lead
the way in so many ways now only leads the way to a downward spiral. In the
meantime, the European Union (EU) mulls a travel ban for American visitors and
countries like Japan require a 14-day quarantine for anyone arriving there,
leaving people like us spinning our wheels at our homes and watching as every
new day brings more and more misery that could have been avoided.
Published in Medium.
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