SYDNEY: More than a million Australians rushed to download an app designed to help medical workers and state governments trace close contacts of COVID-19 patients, as Prime Minister Scott Morrison's approval rating soared on his pandemic response.

Australia has been one of the most successful countries in fighting the coronavirus pandemic, recording just 83 deaths and 6,700 cases, due to border closures, movement restrictions and a stay-at-home policy.



It has lowered its infection rate to currently around 1 per cent from 25 per cent in March.

Health Minister Greg Hunt said 1.13 million Australians downloaded the tracing app CovidSafe as of 6am on Monday (Apr 27), nearly 4.5 per cent of the country's population.



The first one million came within five hours of launching the app, he added.

When asked how many people need to download the app for it to be successful, Hunt said "there is no magic number".

"As many as possible is our real goal," he added.

"It is about assisting our disease experts to find people who might have been exposed and we are well ahead of our best hopes and expectations already."

The surge in downloads come as a Newspoll conducted for The Australian newspaper showed Morrison enjoyed the best approval rating for a leader since end-2008.

Morrison's approval rating has skyrocketed 27 points since the first week of March to 68 per cent, the poll showed.

The result was boosted as Morrison jettisoned much of his conservative government's ideology to pledge spending worth more than 10per cent of GDP, including an A$130 billion subsidy to employers to keep staff they might otherwise have let go.

Westpac chief economist Bill Evans estimates that without the subsidy unemployment would have soared to 17 per cent by the end of June, but would now only reach 9per cent.

Business groups in the country have begun lobbying for easing pandemic-related restrictions.

A modelling by the Business Council of Australia on Monday showed the A$2 trillion economy could take a A$400 billion (US$256 billion) hit if restrictions adopted to fight the spread of COVID-19 continued for six months.

Last week, the head of Australia's central bank said the country would suffer its biggest economic contraction since the 1930s in the first half of this year due to the containment measures.

He estimated national output would fall by around 10 per cent in the first half of 2020 with unemployment almost doubling to around 10 per cent by June.

The states of Queensland and Western Australia have said they would ease some restrictions this week, as both have had new cases in the low single digits in recent days.

Western Australia will allow indoor and outdoor gatherings of up to 10 people, while Queensland has allowed picnics, retail shopping and drives of up to 50km from home. Queensland has also opened its national parks.

The most populous states of Victoria and New South Wales, which have the country's coronavirus hotspots, are maintaining strict social and business restrictions.

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