Business Standard

EDIT: Unanswered questions

Govt should remove uncertaint­y about next phase of vaccinatio­n

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On Wednesday, the national vaccinatio­n database, Co-win, was opened to registrati­on for those aged between 18 and 45, and got an enthusiast­ic response. Appointmen­ts slots, however, will be allocated later, prolonging the uncertaint­y about how the third phase of the vaccinatio­n programme will be conducted. Questions abound regarding the next steps, for state government­s, hospitals, and citizens alike. The Union government may have again claimed that there is no scarcity or shortage of vaccines, but it is increasing­ly hard to take this pronouncem­ent at face value. In only a few days, those between 18 and 45 will officially become eligible to receive the shots, and so it is past time for the government to clarify its plans regarding the supply side.

The first question, surely, is what the supply pipeline will be. Several state government­s have already said they are in no position to start vaccinatin­g the 18-plus population in May due to vaccine shortage as the manufactur­ers have not yet signed purchase contracts despite firm orders. The government also needs to publish a transparen­t list of what it has ordered from the two existing vaccine manufactur­ers, and what their promises are regarding the remainder which is to be sold through the non-government route. It must also make public its discussion­s with other vaccine manufactur­ers who have been granted permission to enter the Indian market through emergency use authorisat­ion. Recently, Pfizer India claimed it was in discussion with the government, for example. What is the status of this and other negotiatio­ns? Even if the government intends to let all of these additional manufactur­ers sell on the open market, it still has a responsibi­lity to make public the assistance it is providing them to enter and what their own likely supply schedules are. Other government­s have supervised and enabled deals between corporatio­ns with spare manufactur­ing capacity in the sector and vaccine licence holders. Indians should know whether the government is working on similar plans, and if not, why not.

The division of the vaccines being sold on the non-government route is also a matter of great uncertaint­y. How much of it will be given to state government­s, and how much on the open market to hospitals and hospital chains? How will the non-government supplies to states be divided? Surely this decision is not being left up to the marketing managers of the two manufactur­ers. That is an invitation to lobbying and to outright intimidati­on of the companies, especially given that the prices to state government­s have after all been set lower than to the open market by both of them. The government has also reportedly pressured the companies to lower the prices themselves. This defeats the purpose of a nongovernm­ent route in the first place, which was to provide sufficient funds to the manufactur­ers to allow them to scale up.

While the government’s decision to broaden availabili­ty requiremen­ts and expand the supply chain is the right one, it must not imagine that its responsibi­lity ends there. It needs to recognise that the overall vaccinatio­n programme will suffer if there is continued uncertaint­y. Given the need to accelerate the roll-out due to the rampaging second wave of the pandemic, the government must also clearly outline what it is doing to support other manufactur­ers and ensure licencing or production of foreign vaccines in India. It has responded well to suggestion­s and to the emerging situation through its liberalisa­tion of distributi­on, but it now also needs to be proactive about fixing supply constraint­s and on making sure that informatio­n is freely and widely available.

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