Looking at a parallel example, India has done well in its institutional design for tackling natural disasters other than pandemics. Through the Disaster Management Act 2005, the Union government set up multi-disciplinary Disaster Management authorities from the national to the state, district and local levels. These authorities were assigned clear functions and responsibilities. A separate fiscal window was carved out to deal with natural disasters. The purpose of such a design was to create a rapid response structure free of the bureaucratisation of complex government departments, secretariats and treasuries. The success of this approach has been seen in the way India has since handled natural disasters such as floods, cyclones and earthquakes. True, the Disaster Management system benefited from the experience of some states such as Odisha, Andhra Pradesh and Gujarat in handling cataclysmic natural disasters, but even so, we can be proud that we have a system that can handle natural disasters reasonably well.