Business Standard

Shaken by the storm

After the admission, govt must change course on policy

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Speaking in his regular radio address this Sunday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said that “after successful­ly confrontin­g the first wave of Corona, the country was full of enthusiasm, full of self-confidence, but this storm [the second wave] has shaken the country”. This is not an admission of past overconfid­ence, but in the current charged political environmen­t is likely to be as close as the prime minister can come to such an admission. The question is whether the storm has shaken the government itself enough to cause it to question certain foundation­al aspects of its approach not just to the virus but to the broader governance deficits that have been brutally exposed by the pandemic. Certainly, there have been some significan­t shifts in policy in recent weeks, most notably the opening up of the private market in vaccines from May 1, alongside the expedited emergency use approvals to be provided to those vaccines that have passed and undergone extensive regulatory scrutiny elsewhere in the world. What other such shifts should be prioritise­d?

First, the government must maintain its recent willingnes­s to tolerate freer pricing for the section of vaccine production that is being procured by the private sector. This is necessary to induce a proper supply response from vaccine manufactur­ers. It should also carefully re-examine its own procuremen­t price, of ~150 a shot. It is important to note that previous expectatio­ns were that only an initial tranche of procuremen­t — perhaps the first 100 million doses from the Serum Institute of India — would be priced at this level. There should be no further pressure on the manufactur­ers to match this initial price, but it should be set at a level that is both concession­al and also provides sufficient return to finance capacity expansion. Current concerns that state and Union government­s have different pricing schedules will perhaps be settled in that eventualit­y. The Centre’s reported move to ask vaccine manufactur­ers to lower the price is thus unwarrante­d.

The government must also act on two other issues, which have broader implicatio­ns for its governance strategy. It must recognise that its “Aatma Nirbhar” or “self-reliant” strategy has not worked effectivel­y in the case of vaccines. Nor are vaccines unrepresen­tative of the complex products involving diffuse supply chains that are now common in the goods trade. The government has needed to reach out to ensure the free flow of inputs from countries like the United States. Singlecoun­try supply chains are not feasible in most circumstan­ces. The vaccine situation should serve as a wake-up call in terms of the larger shift towards tariffs and barriers in the name of self-reliance.

The second issue the government must consider is the question of transparen­t data. In the absence of such data, it is hard to see how the pandemic is doing. The PM has repeatedly stressed the importance of high testing, using the gold standard RT-PCR. Clear and reliable studies must be undertaken regarding the efficacy of the currently utilised vaccines against the new strains of the coronaviru­s. This will not just increase public confidence but also be a vital input into calculatio­ns of when India is likely to reach herd immunity and whether it should plan for spending on booster shots. Transparen­t and high-quality data to inform policy and public choices is a central duty of the government, and the pandemic should have brought that message home to this administra­tion.

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