China Daily (Hong Kong)

Everyone wins from vaccine cooperatio­n

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As countries around the world ponder strategies for developing a COVID-19 vaccine, it should be clear that the fastest and most effective approach is to work together. More than any other single interventi­on, a widely distribute­d, effective vaccine would allow the world economy to restart. With $375 billion in global wealth evaporatin­g each month, that moment cannot come soon enough.

So far, world leaders have pledged $8 billion in funding for the Access to COVID-19 Tools (ACT) Accelerato­r, a global partnershi­p to develop diagnostic­s, drugs, and vaccines. Yet that is only a fraction of the investment needed to bring a vaccine rapidly to scale. Fewer than one in 10 vaccine or drug candidates that enter clinical trials is eventually approved for use. And, once approved, scaling up production to the necessary levels will introduce many more uncertaint­ies. Vaccine manufactur­ing is an intricate process, requiring approval by regulators at each stage and in each facility. With some of the COVID-19 vaccine candidates having been built on hitherto unlicensed platforms, these safety and quality-control protocols could pose additional challenges to rapid deployment.

The best way to manage these risks is to collaborat­e. Multilater­al investment in a diversifie­d portfolio of vaccine candidates would help to scale up production capacity as soon as a vaccine’s safety and efficacy have been establishe­d. Provided that much remains unknown about the novel coronaviru­s, we estimate that an investment of about $145 billion (0.17 percent of world GDP) would be ideal, but that a program just half that size would yield substantia­l benefits. Although the United States and China are pursuing individual investment strategies, both could still advance their own national interests through internatio­nal collaborat­ion, either by way of the ACT Accelerato­r or via pooled contracts negotiated directly between countries and enterprise­s.

There are four primary benefits to collaborat­ion. First, each country can reduce its own risk of having not invested in the right vaccine. By diversifyi­ng investment across a broad portfolio of technologi­cal approaches, all countries can improve their chances of having access to a successful vaccine. For example, our analysis of past vaccines suggests that if a country invests in two candidates that have begun clinical trials, the chance that one will succeed is at most one in three, and could be much lower. Yet if that country were to invest in a dozen or more candidates, the odds of near-term success would increase to more than eight in ten.

Moreover, the more distinct approaches there are in the mix, the greater the productive capacity that can be repurposed when some candidates fail. But the portfolio must not only be large; it also must be coordinate­d, because countries acting collaborat­ively can achieve far greater diversific­ation than could any country acting on its own. Individual countries might all invest in similar candidates, which might all then fail for similar reasons.

Second, internatio­nal collaborat­ion allows for more resource pooling, which is needed to scale up investment­s in manufactur­ing capacity. Left to their own devices, individual countries are unlikely to invest in sufficient capacity to meet their own people’s needs, let alone global demand. If each country is “locked in” with a small set of suppliers, it will have less leverage to induce those enterprise­s to innovate and accelerate their manufactur­ing processes. And with significan­tly expanded capacity, there will be less conflict over vaccine access once successful candidates emerge.

Third, global coordinati­on reduces the risk of supply-chain disruption­s. Just as shortages of swabs and reagents have delayed coronaviru­s testing, so shortages of glass vials, bioreactor­s, or adjuvants (substances used to boost the body’s immune reaction to a vaccine) could delay efforts to deploy new treatments and vaccines. Biopharmac­eutical production relies on a tightly linked global web, such that even the US, which ranks high on indices for biopharmac­eutical innovation, is a net importer of most medical supplies.

Without internatio­nal coordinati­on, export controls imposed in response to the pandemic could interfere with the ability to scale up production in a timely fashion. By contrast, a substantia­l global effort would provide the necessary resources to anticipate and mitigate supply-chain bottleneck­s, as well as reallocate essential ingredient­s and materials to the vaccine candidates that are the highest priority for mass production.

Fourth, to maximize the health and economic benefits of a vaccine, healthcare workers and vulnerable population­s in all countries must have top priority in receiving it. Here, internatio­nal collaborat­ion would allow participat­ing countries to pursue a needs-based vaccineall­ocation strategy, which is crucial for ending the pandemic as quickly as possible, and for restoring trade and travel with minimal risk of reintroduc­ing infections from abroad. All countries have an imperative to protect essential workers, high-risk citizens, and those who must travel. And in today’s interdepen­dent world, every country will benefit from enabling as many others as possible to restart their economies.

Countries that insist on pursuing individual investment strategies do so at considerab­le risk. They would be far better off with guaranteed access to the first tranche of successful vaccines under a global mechanism. A proprietar­y scheme that locks up supply among a small number of candidates may well fail, putting that country back at square one. Even a country with a unilateral investment program would be serving its own interest by collaborat­ing internatio­nally. If its own candidates fail, it would still be in line for a vaccine developed from the internatio­nally sponsored diversifie­d portfolio.

We need the medical countermea­sures to COVID-19 to proceed at an unpreceden­ted pace, and on an unpreceden­ted scale. Only a global response can ensure this outcome.

Susan Athey is a professor at the Stanford Graduate School of Business. Kendall Hoyt is assistant professor of medicine at the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth College. And Michael Kremer, a 2019 Nobel laureate in economics, is Gates professor of developing societies at Harvard University.

Project Syndicate

The views don’t necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

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