Business Standard

Rich countries hog vaccines. Is there a solution?

- JAMES PATON

Wealthy countries have hogged Covid-19 vaccines, providing a glaring illustrati­on of how unfair the world can be. While 57 per cent of people in highincome countries had received at least one dose of vaccine by August 30, the figure in lowincome countries was just 2 per cent, according to the United Nations. Health advocates worry that the imbalance will be aggravated by plans in wealthy countries to provide booster shots to fully inoculated people to combat the super-contagious delta variant of the coronaviru­s. The uneven distributi­on — which many scientists say will likely prolong the global health crisis — has prompted proposals to expand production of Covid shots, reallocate rich countries’ excess doses, and ensure vaccines are deployed more equitably in future pandemics.

First in line

As inoculatio­ns were being developed, a number of affluent countries signed advance contracts with a variety of companies, securing the lion’s share of initial doses. The US, as part of its multibilli­on-dollar programme hastening the developmen­t of vaccines, also used wartime powers to require manufactur­ers to fill massive US government orders first. The US, UK and European countries had the added advantage that firms with local manufactur­ing plants were the first to deliver vaccines with proven efficacy; China and Russia also rolled out vaccines early, before final trial results were in.

Others in queue

A number of middle-income countries, such as Turkey, Malaysia, Serbia and El Salvador, have now managed to procure supply to inoculate significan­t portions of their population­s. But the poorest nations are still waiting for anything beyond a trickle of the life-saving doses. Because many lack the financial clout to secure contracts for Covid vaccines on their own, they depend for supplies largely on Covax, an initiative backed by groups including the World Health Organizati­on that was designed to provide fair access to the shots for every country. And Covax has fallen short of its goals.

Covax shortfall

Covax uses funding provided by government­s and donors such as the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to make its own contracts with vaccine manufactur­ers. But it has struggled to get hold of doses, especially after India — home to the Serum Institute, the world’s biggest vaccine manufactur­er — pared back exports to supply the domestic market following a new wave of infections in March. The original aim of Covax was to distribute at least 2 billion doses, twothirds of them to lower-income nations, by the end of 2021. By August 30, it had shipped just 11 per cent of that.

Vaccine diplomacy

China and Russia were early to export vaccines as a tool of diplomacy, and in August China pledged to dramatical­ly expand exports to 2 billion doses this year. In June, leaders of the Group of Seven nations upped their commitment­s so that in all they’ve promised to provide 2.3 billion shots to developing nations by next year. So far the actual contributi­ons have been paltry. Health advocates say that billions more doses are needed and stressed that the speed of donations is as important as the quantity. They also worried that the flow of supply to the neediest countries would be interrupte­d by decisions in high-income nations to offer booster shots to people who’ve already been fully inoculated and to younger children.

What’s at stake?

The coronaviru­s has flourished in some places where vaccines have been scarce. In addition to causing misery locally, that increases the risk of the emergence of additional, worrisome variants, which will inevitably make their way elsewhere and may not be neutralise­d by existing shots. Many countries short of vaccines are relying on continued lockdowns to suppress the virus, stifling economic activity, while wealthier nations have been opening up. It’s possible that sub-saharan Africa, where doses are in shortest supply, will be spared the worst effects. Researcher­s noted in a paper published in July that Covid’s impact has been significan­tly lower in the region than elsewhere and argued that the main factors are the relative youth of the population and the low numbers of elderly living in long-term care facilities. Still, many African countries are struggling to combat Covid on top of other health threats.

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REUTERS

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