The Covid-19 pandemic did not spare the small states. Comparing national figures is not always an easy task, because of differing data bases and measurement methods. There is at least some certainty about the course of the pandemic: Iceland, for example, was hit early and (pretty) hard by a first wave in spring 2020, while Estonia had basically just one wave in autumn/winter 2020. Moreover, the second wave of the pandemic was significantly more intense than the first wave in San Marino, Liechtenstein, Andorra, Malta, Luxembourg, and Montenegro.
Generally, the testing capacity improved during the 2nd phase. Malta began systematic contact tracing right after the first cases were registered. San Marino initially had low testing capacity due to a lack of autonomous swab analysis. In May 2020, however, the hospital laboratory acquired the needed skills. In Iceland and Estonia, some testing support came from private companies.
The governance of Covid-19 has mainly relied on the existing governance structure. In San Marino, Andorra, Montenegro and Estonia a special commissioner, a Covid-19 office or a new coordination or advisory body were created. Wide cooperation between the government, experts and the civil society are reported from San Marino and Malta.
Table: Politics or expertise led process in European small states
Small State |
Politics led process |
Expertise led process |
Andorra |
|
X |
Cyprus |
X |
|
Estonia |
|
X |
Iceland |
|
X |
Liechtenstein |
X |
|
Luxembourg |
|
X |
Malta |
X |
|
Montenegro |
|
X |
San Marino |
X
|
|
The whole process of coping with the pandemic has become more political with time in Luxembourg, Montenegro (change of government), Malta, and Estonia – particularly after the 1st wave. At international level, cooperation was mostly limited to border management, procurement of vaccines and economic support (EU). Because of the smallness of the countries, particularly the very small ones often relied on resources and expertise of larger, neighbouring countries. Liechtenstein, for example, relied heavily on the scientific expertise of Switzerland. Indeed, the daily Covid-19 statistics of Liechtenstein were usually issued by the Swiss health authorities (BAG).
The key debates during the pandemic revolved around the following issues:
- Individual freedoms versus strict measures to tackle the virus (San Marino, Estonia)
- Exceptions for the church (Montenegro, Cyprus)
- Effectiveness, fairness and proportionality of measures for private companies and entrepreneurs (San Marino, Malta, Cyprus, Estonia
- Access to health care for the more vulnerable (e.g., asylum seekers, migrants, non-citizens).
Although considered by many as a potential threat to the government and, indeed, to democratic structures at the beginning of the pandemic, the Covid-19 crisis did not lead to a dramatic increase of political distrust. Quite to the contrary, trust in the government even increased in Liechtenstein, Andorra and Iceland. As a matter of fact, the governing parties actually gained in electoral strength in Liechtenstein.