France's clocks tick differently. France, "that centre of
resistance to the mechanisation and mechanisation of life", without which
Europe would be[1]
"poor and inwardly ripe for any colonisation".
For decades, France has boasted that its expensive public health
system provides its 67 million inhabitants with the best possible care from
birth to death. Louis Pasteur, who invented the world's first vaccine in the
1880s, is revered throughout the country. In the Corona Year 2020, however, the
reputation of French health policy has been severely damaged; Chancellor Angela
Merkel even warned of "French conditions" in view of the many
triages, deaths and transfers of seriously ill patients to Germany. Despite
high public spending, there is a lack of intensive care beds. The management of
masks, tests, tracing and isolation is chaotic.
In the early days of 2021, France's inability to organise a credible
COVID-19 vaccination programme has confirmed the deep flaws in both the health
and political systems. These threaten to prolong the pandemic, cause thousands
of unnecessary deaths and ruin the economy. Within the EU, the same handicaps
apply - the slowness of the European Medicines Agency (EMA) and the EU's EU
vaccine procurement delay in ordering the most advanced vaccines from BioNTech
and Moderna[2].
But the table points to the stark differences: Germany may have stumbled; France
is still hanging in there. Here, the binding bottleneck is not the lack of
vaccines: Of the 560,000 doses received in France by the end of the year, only
2000 had been injected by 4 January. France's clocks tick differently.
Covid
vaccinations in five major EU countries,
Ranking as of 4 January
2021
EU country |
Vaccinations doses |
%, population |
Germany |
265.986 |
0,32 |
Italy |
128.880 |
0,21 |
Spain |
82.834 |
0,18 |
Poland |
50.391 |
0,13 |
France |
2.000 |
0,00 |
Sources: Bloomberg; Covidtracker.fr
The French MIT economist Antoine Lévy, a true touche-à-tout (jack-of-all-trades)[3] , has named the essential facets of the failure of the French
coronoa policy in a much-noted newspaper article in Le Figaro[4].
He identifies five major errors:
·
The misjudged primacy of logistics, according to
Charles de Gaulle's motto "L'intendance suivra"[5] .
·
Failure to act for fear of prosecution,
explained by the trauma of the French
blood scandal. In the 1980s, HIV-contaminated blood products had been knowingly
administered until public stockpiles were emptied.
·
State investments without cost-benefit
analysis resulting in wrong priorities.
Hundreds of billions of euros have been spent by the public sector since March
2020 - without earmarking enough money for logistical infrastructure necessary for
herd immunisation.
·
State and administrative failure with
wordy excuses, disinformation and war metaphors: first China was to blame, then
Brussels, then capitalism - an omnipresent culture of excuses. But according to
Lévy, the sluggish development of testing capacities, the mistrust in private
laboratory facilities as well as underpaid and inadequate staff in France's
public hospitals are the responsibility of French politics.
·
Loss of reality of a government
infatuated with pedagogy and communication ("logorrhoea"), neglecting
action in the face of a threatening crisis. "The morbid obsession with
polite language, which must never displease, to the detriment of sober
confrontation with the choice that reality imposes in all its difficulties"
(my translation), this is where the author locates the greatest failure.
These complaints are
not new as far as France is concerned. The slowness of political
decision-making processes, the paralysing hierarchisation of an unequal society
and the disdain for operational implementation have been described and analysed
time and again. In addition to the book by the Basel historian Herbert Lüthy
cited at the beginning, the historian Marc Bloch (L'Étrange Défaite)[6],
who was tortured and murdered by the Nazis, and the French statesman Alain
Peyrefitte (Le Mal Français) are
witnesses. What can we learn from their works? This is what the second episode
will be about.
[1] Herbert Lüthy (1954), Frankreichs Uhren gehen
anders, Zurich: Europa Verlag. The quotations ibid.
[2] The Economist (2021), Europe
has fallen behind on covid-19 vaccination, 5th January.
[3] Sofia
Tong (2020), "Economist Antoine
Levy is all over the map", MIT
News, 21. August.
[4] Antoine Lévy (2021), "The
slowness of French vaccination is a symptom of our downgrading", Le Figaro, 1. Januar.
[5] Loosely translated: The administration will follow.
[6] My thanks to Jean Pisani-Ferry
for the hint.
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