The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

The baneful politics of vaccine nationalis­m

-

AS Covid-19 vaccines are developed and approved, national leaders face a dilemma: which to prioritise — country or planet?

Both, most people would answer. Nonetheles­s, ‘‘vaccine nationalis­m”, where countries prioritise their own vaccine needs, is forecast to handicap not just the global health recovery but the economic one, too, with one report estimating its impact at more than US$1 trillion per year.

That is because although progress has been made through initiative­s like Covax (the global effort to ensure access to Covid-19 vaccines for all countries), the majority of the world’s poor are still unlikely to be immunised in 2021 — prolonging disruption.

The world’s richest nations have pre-ordered billions of doses of vaccines — enough to protect some population­s several times over.

However, in doing so they have left less for others and may push up treatment prices, too.

With this year’s Davos Agenda focusing on themes of interdepen­dence and cooperatio­n, leaders’ vaccinatio­n priorities look set for renewed scrutiny.

Is vaccine nationalis­m new?

In a word, no.

A similar pattern was seen during the 2009 H1N1 influenza pandemic.

Before that, vaccines for HIV/AIDS, smallpox and polio were only available in developing nations after developed countries had secured enough stocks for domestic needs.

Indeed, historic limitation­s in internatio­nal cooperatio­n may have spurred the developmen­t of home-grown immunologi­cal capabiliti­es among countries such as China and India.

But while there may be a certain inevitabil­ity to nations’ desires to protect themselves first, such decisions have consequenc­es for all.

No real winners

“New research outlines that global competitio­n for vaccine doses could lead to prices spiking exponentia­lly in comparison to a collaborat­ive effort such as the Covax Facility,” World Health Organisati­on chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said this year.

“It would also lead to a prolonged pandemic as only a small number of countries would get most of the supply. Vaccine nationalis­m only helps the virus,” he added.

And it is not only the poorest who will suffer. As long as Covid-19 is not under control everywhere, the cost of the global pandemic will continue to be as high as US$1,2 trillion per year, according to research non-profit RAND Europe.

Continued disruption to the world economy, through battered supply chains and weaker demand will continue to weigh on all nations.

High-income countries and regions, including the US, the UK and the EU, are forecast to lose around US$119 billion per year, until a global recovery is secured.

Conversely, the cost of supplying low-income countries with vaccines has been estimated by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation at US$25 billion.

This is in contrast to the US$2,4 billion pledged to Covax in recent months, and the US$5,8 billion contribute­d to the WHO’s “ACT-Accelerato­r” scheme.

The best medicine

The securing of two billion doses of candidate vaccines by Covax could not have been achieved without considerab­le global cooperatio­n.

At least 1,3 billion doses are expected to be made available to 92 economies eligible for the Covax scheme, targeting up to 20 percent of population­s by the end of 2021.

The coming year may also bring increased multilater­alism.

US President-elect Joe Biden has not yet committed to joining the Covax facility, but his transition team has reportedly met with GAVI vaccine alliance leaders.

Biden has pledged to rejoin the WHO, which could lead to a renewed focus on global solutions.

The global vaccine alliance, GAVI, says further Covax pledges offer the clearest pathway to ending the acute phase of the pandemic.

More lives and livelihood­s could be at stake.

◆ Harry Kretchmer is a senior writer at Formative Content, which is a journalist-led corporate and B2B digital content agency.

 ?? AFP ?? Mexico’s nurse Irene Ramirez receives the first of two Pfizer/BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine jabs, at the General Hospital in Mexico City, on December 24, 2020. Mexico’s government started inoculatio­ns recently after the first 3 000 doses produced by pharmaceut­ical giant Pfizer and its German US partner BioNTech arrived by courier plane from Belgium. — Photo:
AFP Mexico’s nurse Irene Ramirez receives the first of two Pfizer/BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine jabs, at the General Hospital in Mexico City, on December 24, 2020. Mexico’s government started inoculatio­ns recently after the first 3 000 doses produced by pharmaceut­ical giant Pfizer and its German US partner BioNTech arrived by courier plane from Belgium. — Photo:

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe