I can go first.
Speaking of past experiences and crises that we've had to deal with—I'm thinking of SARS and MERS—Korea was able to institutionalize a very good system of governance when it comes to crisis management. Even before this pandemic, learning from those past lessons, we had a very centralized system around who is controlling this whole crisis, who is going to actually specialize in dealing with a lot of those issues on the ground, and how the central government and the local governments need to work together.
All those systems were already in place, so the Korean government did not take any time to plan or implement all those things; I think it was less than 24 hours. That's the sort of system that I think we were able to reinstitutionalize when we had this crisis really coming up on us, and then use that to deal with the crisis in a very proactive way, because we didn't have time to have any disaccord between the central and local governments. A lot of co-ordination was already in place and institutionalized.