The Morning Call

Give globalism its due for speedy vaccine rollout

- Jonah Goldberg

In normal times, most people don’t think of vaccines as a political issue at all. But a small minority — one that defies easy pigeonholi­ng on the left or right — thinks vaccines are either unsafe or shouldn’t be mandatory or, presumably, both. (At this point I wouldn’t be shocked if someone out there thinks they should be mandatory even if unsafe.)

But these aren’t normal times. Americans haven’t experience­d anything like the COVID-19 pandemic in over a century, so the politics are abnormal, too

For instance, in November, when Pfizer first announced its vaccine, Vice President Mike Pence credited the “public-private partnershi­p forged” by President Trump. Pfizer then denied it was part of Operation Warp Speed, the administra­tion’s project to accelerate vaccine developmen­t. “We were never part of the Warp Speed,” Kathrin Jansen, the head of vaccine research at Pfizer said in an interview. “We have never taken any money from the U.S. government, or from anyone.” .

It turned out that Pfizer was, in fact, part of the program as a supplier of the vaccine. And while it didn’t take money, the federal government did guarantee a major purchase of the vaccine if Pfizer were successful.

During the brief controvers­y, liberals were cheering the independen­t entreprene­urialism of the private sector, and conservati­ves — most notably Pence, who in the pre-Trump era was a forthright champion of the free market — were celebratin­g the triumph of

industrial policy.

As a free market guy, I don’t mind this flip-flopping too much. Wars and pandemics are traditiona­l exceptions to the rules of limited government. And it’s always nice to see liberals acknowledg­e the glories of the private sector, even if it’s just to deny Trump bragging rights.

The more worrisome and annoying political ploy is the effort to claim these vaccines in the name of nationalis­m. On Dec. 3, Pence declared that “only in America could you see the kind of innovation that’s resulted in the developmen­t of a vaccine in record time.” Sen. Ted Cruz , R-Texas, recently mocked the Canadian prime minister for relying on an American-made vaccine.

In Britain, Gavin Williamson, the education secretary, made an even bolder claim about their vaccine approval process: “I just reckon we’ve got the very best people in this country and we’ve obviously got the best medical regulators, much better than the French have, much better than the Belgians have, much better than the Americans have. That doesn’t surprise me at all, because we are a much better country than every single one of them.”

It shouldn’t surprise anyone that Russia’s vaccine, named “Sputnik V,” is the subject of a broad nationalis­t and anti-Western propaganda campaign. It’s all nonsense.

For starters, the vaccine being distribute­d in Britain was developed by a partnershi­p of Pfizer and BioNTech, American and German companies. More broadly, the effort to defeat the pandemic was, fittingly, a pan-national affair. As Scott Lincicome, a trade scholar and my colleague at The Dispatch, explains, the vaccines Americans will get are a testament to the benefits of globalizat­ion. At every stage, “from corporate leadership to investment to research and developmen­t to production and distributi­on,” globalizat­ion was a major driver of success.

Indeed, BioNTech was founded by two German scientists, both of Turkish descent. The head of Pfizer is Greek. Moderna, based in Cambridge, Massachuse­tts, was co-founded and is chaired by a Lebanese immigrant. The other co-founder is a Canadian immigrant. Moderna’s chief executive is a French immigrant. Biochemist Katalin Kariko, who is central to the developmen­t of the messenger RNA technology used in the vaccines, is Hungarian-born.

All of these companies are beneficiar­ies of global capital markets, global supply chains and, of course, prior scientific achievemen­ts that span the globe. The genetic map of the virus was constructe­d by a Chinese researcher and his team and given, free, to the world.

One of the reasons globalizat­ion is such an easy political target is that it is simple to point out its costs but difficult to credit it for its benefits — in part because politician­s are so quick to take the credit for themselves.

There’s plenty of room for the U.S. to chest-thump about its role in the recordpace rollout of these vaccines. But it’s worth keeping in mind that this was a group project on a global scale, and without the benefits of that global scale, we’d surely be waiting a lot longer.

 ?? DEREKDAVIS/PORTLAND PRESS HERALD ?? Nurse Kayla Mitchell, left, of Maine Medical Center’s COVID ICU unit, is the first person in the state to receive the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine Tuesday in Portland, Maine.
DEREKDAVIS/PORTLAND PRESS HERALD Nurse Kayla Mitchell, left, of Maine Medical Center’s COVID ICU unit, is the first person in the state to receive the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine Tuesday in Portland, Maine.
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