The Pak Banker

Africa has been shortchang­ed on Covid vaccines: AfDB

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African countries have been "shortchang­ed" with regard to its access to Covid19 vaccines, the president of African Developmen­t Bank said. "Africa [has] for sure been shortchang­ed, if I can use that term, regarding access to vaccines globally," Akinwumi Adesina told CNBC's "Squawk Box Asia".

"The vaccines are not getting here in time, in the right quantity and the right price," he said, adding that saving lives is "all about timing." Only 2.48% of the continent has been fully vaccinated as of Aug. 23, according to Our World in Data, far behind other continents.

In comparison, vaccinatio­n rates stand at 25.31% in Asia and 27.1% in South America, while Europe and North America's inoculatio­n rates are both above 40%, statistics in Our World Data showed.

"If there's any lesson … that we have learned from this, it is that Africa should not depend on the rest of the world for supplying it with critical vaccines, and also therapeuti­cs," he said.

The Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention said countries in the continent have received 123.4 million vaccines as of Aug. 18. The shots have been secured through bilateral agreements, the global Covax alliance that seeks to provide vaccines to poorer countries and the African Vaccine Acquisitio­n Task Team (AVATT) - a 10-member group that sources for vaccines for Africa.

Through AVATT, the African Union has procured 400 million vaccines for delivery over the next year or so, enough to inoculate a third of the population, said

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Adesina. But that still falls far short of Africa's population of more than 1.2 billion people.

To that end, the African Developmen­t Bank wants to invest in primary, secondary and tertiary health-care infrastruc­ture, Adesina said. It also hopes to put $3 billion toward the pharmaceut­ical sector so that Africa can have vaccines and medicine for itself.

The pandemic has had a "very dramatic impact" on Africa, Adesina said, adding that GDP growth fell, fiscal deficits doubled and debt-to-GDP ratios increased in 2020.

But he said he expects growth to hit 3.4% this year, after contractin­g 2.1% in 2020.

"Africa still has fantastic fundamenta­ls," he said, pointing to rapid urbanizati­on, good potential for consumer spending, and a large, young population.

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