Elizabeth Becker, writing for Foreign Policy believes some countries might not want to go back to pre-pandemic tourism levels. Š²ŠŃOvernight, much of the world went from over-tourism to no tourism. Since then, locals have seen how their lives have improved without those insane crowds: clear skies with vistas stretching for miles, a drastic reduction of litter and waste, clean shorelines and canals, and a return of wildlife.Š²ŠŃ, which she says could make travel to such places more expensive than we have become accustomed to.On the 16th of February, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that in the United States providers were administering about 1.72 million doses per day on average. EU countries, on the other hand, have taken a slower approach to the vaccine rollout. Supply chain issues and a slow response from the EU to sign for the vaccine has meant that in the first quarter of 2021 they may receive only 40% of the amount they requested last August. https://financer.com/ The World Health Organisation (WHO) first reported a cluster of infectious pneumonia cases, later found to be COVID-19, on the 31st of December 2019, in Wuhan City, Hubei Province, China. In the months that followed, the rest of the world caught up and began announcing large numbers of COVID-19 cases and deaths. But China, where the virus is predicted to have originated seemed to get the pandemic under control much more quickly than other countries as a result of a fast response, strict nationwide lockdown and screening measures.