A bolt action carbine can be as handy as a lever action, although the narrow profile of the latter is preferred by some. A bolt action is less prone to damage, whereas a tube fed magazine is put out of action if the tube is dented. Cartridges chambered in bolt action rifles are typically more powerful than cartridges of the same bore size that are chambered in traditional lever actions. Due to its stock design, a bolt action tends to manage recoil better. A bolt action is easier to maintain in the field. A bolt action is easier to shoot accurately.
Arguments in favor of bolt actions don't stand up as well against the modern lever actions like the Savage 99, the Winchester 88, the SAKO Finnwolf, and the Browning BLR, that all have internal hammers, box magazines, or in the case of some 99s, internal rotary magazines, all are chambered for modern cartridges, and all easily accept optics. The modern lever action though is still more complex than the bolt action, resulting is a higher manufacturing cost, which probably accounts for the fact that bolt actions dominate the landscape, while most of the modern lever actions, other than the BLR, have been discontinued. The market place has declared its preference for the bolt action.