Bloomberg has just released the Covid Resillience Ranking to determine which countries can't cope with COVID-19 well or vice versa. With various calculations, the names of countries that are ranked 1st to 53rd appear.
In first place, there is the United Arab Emirates, which is up two places compared to the previous one, with a score of 78.9. Following Saudi Arabia, which rose 18 places with a score of 77.8. Third, there is Finland who won a score of 70.1.
So where is Indonesia's position? Indonesia is in 44th position, up seven places although it is still at an unfavorable level. Indonesia's score is 58.7 with vaccine doses per 100 reaching 112, lockdown tightness 66, flight capacity -35.1%, and Vaccinated Travel Routes 273.5.
Meanwhile, for neighboring countries, Singapore is in 5th position with a total score of 70. Malaysia, is in 27th position, which is up 20 places from the previous one.
Meanwhile, the Philippines is our neighboring country which occupies the 53rd position. Down three places from before. The Philippines got a score of 48.3, behind Vietnam whose score touched 53.4.
The Covid Resillience Ranking is a monthly overview of where the virus is being handled most effectively with the least amount of social and economic upheaval. Based on 12 data indicators covering virus containment, quality of healthcare, vaccination coverage, overall deaths and progress toward restarting travel, Bloomberg captures how the world's 53 largest economies are responding to the COVID-19 threat.
Concerns surrounding Omicron have eased, moreover studies have seen that those who are vaccinated will be stronger against the Omicron variant virus. Some of the first countries to experience an omicron wave after the variant emerged, such as the Czech Republic and South Africa, rose in the rankings this month as case growth rates slowed without causing widespread deaths and disruptions.