I wonder if there might be particularly strong regional effects to this—maybe Goa had quite a large dog population, quite a lot of rabies, or quite dense dog/human populations (affecting rabies, bite, and transmission incidences).
I think there could be room for further research to identify whether there would be better-looking (sub-country) regions—though like Helene_K found, data would be difficult.
Hey Alexander—thanks for the write-up! I found it useful as a local, and it seems valuable to be sharing/coordinating on this globally.
One thing that occurred to me would be to zoom in on the sectors of the economy that are exposed to AI. I think that in Australia, it might be relatively more concentrated than elsewhere—specifically in education, which is one of our biggest exports (though it gets accounted for domestically I think).
That could mean:
If there are distinct challenges in education vs other knowledge work, some calculus may change (not sure what exactly)
There might be stakeholders/coalitions we haven’t tapped yet to support less narrowly economic concerns