Friday , April 19 2024
Home / Video / Coronavirus growth rates compared for Australia, Netherlands, Thailand, UK

Coronavirus growth rates compared for Australia, Netherlands, Thailand, UK

Summary:
This brief video shows the number of confirmed cases each day in these four countries, using a pre-release version of my new data analysis program Ravel. I hope to release an online accessible Dashboard of the Coronavirus using Ravel in the next two weeks. For more details, please see my Patreon page www.patreon.com/profstevekeen. I will make this pre-release version of Ravel free for anyone to download. If you would like to support its development, you can signup to my Patreon page, but this is not obligatory.

Topics:
Steve Keen considers the following as important:

This could be interesting, too:

New Economics Foundation writes Sharing the carbon pie with a frequent flyer levy

Peter Radford writes The eclipse part wo

Matias Vernengo writes The Argentina of Javier Milei

Joel Eissenberg writes On student loans

This brief video shows the number of confirmed cases each day in these four countries, using a pre-release version of my new data analysis program Ravel. I hope to release an online accessible Dashboard of the Coronavirus using Ravel in the next two weeks.



For more details, please see my Patreon page www.patreon.com/profstevekeen. I will make this pre-release version of Ravel free for anyone to download. If you would like to support its development, you can signup to my Patreon page, but this is not obligatory.
Steve Keen
Steve Keen (born 28 March 1953) is an Australian-born, British-based economist and author. He considers himself a post-Keynesian, criticising neoclassical economics as inconsistent, unscientific and empirically unsupported. The major influences on Keen's thinking about economics include John Maynard Keynes, Karl Marx, Hyman Minsky, Piero Sraffa, Augusto Graziani, Joseph Alois Schumpeter, Thorstein Veblen, and François Quesnay.

12 comments

  1. Terence O'Connor

    However Countries should be Testing to determine where the Infections are and rates of

  2. Is the crash you have modeled so eloquently not before us? Are you staying quiet not to be a target?

  3. It must be noted that these represent confirmed cases only, and modeling with an exponential infection rate would suggest the true number of deaths is already in the thousands in these countries masked by misclassification under causes such as viral pneumonia, which has coincidentally been an exponentially growing cause of death in countries like Thailand.
    #JustTheFlu #JustAFleshWound

  4. Testing in Australia is extremely limited. You only eligible for the test for one of three criteria: 1) you are extremely ill, needing hospitalisation, 2) you came from overseas, 3) you are a proven close contact of a positively infected person. If a work colleague is infected, and you don't sit next to them, you are NOT considered as close contact and won’t be tested. We need to adopt South Korean methodology, which includes testing anyone with symptoms. I'm watching the flu tracker stats, as an alternative methodology for community spread. It's run by Australian and New Zealand governments. One fills in survey each week, asking people if they have experienced fever, cough, plus other symptoms in the past week.

  5. BEHOLD! CORONA CHAN COMES! BLESSINGS FROM NURGLE!

  6. Steve Send Us Some Wisdom………

  7. …And then there is Sweden where they stopped testing…

  8. Communist maggot . . there I was trying to promote this waste of space . . Steve thinks Gulags are the way forward . . has he ever tried their pleasures ?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *