A rough summer, partly due to our demographics.
Part of ours, and Europe's vulnerability is that we are demographically older. As that debate Bo posted brought up, the average CV19 death is age 80. Countries in the Third World, experiencing much lower CV19 deaths, are not only shorter on old folks, but other diseases and ailments (as well as lack of medical care and nutrition) kill off the genetically weak and physically deprived in all age groups. As a result, we see nations with more slums and less modern sanitation that have very small outbreak numbers, even nations with weak governments and public health systems that are marginal.
Rich nations care for the old and genetically challenged: that's banging the dinner gong for novel and opportunistic pathogens. Then add in that our wealth also means we (or a significant percentage of us) can afford to travel great distances, go overseas, most of it in cramped hermetically sealed tubes. This is why meaningful comparisons of mortality between countries require some similarities in living standards, mobility, and methods of data gathering by health workers. I wanted to stop and comment on this, because it will be something to bear in mind as the popular media continues to bombard us with statistics, often poorly contextualized.
When you compare any two nation's or regions or provinces, be sure and look at what percent of their populations are 80, or in that age range. Look at comparative diabetes rates. Look at per capita miles traveled per year. Look at average air quality index. Etc.
With all this in mind, nations like South Korea are doubly impressive in their numbers.