National Post

Poor countries shorted on vaccines will have huge economic impact

- Mike Blanchfiel­d

• As the Trudeau government is forced to explain delays rolling out COVID-19 vaccines, some of the world’s economic and health leaders are warning of catastroph­ic financial consequenc­es if poorer countries are shortchang­ed on vaccinatio­ns.

At a video meeting convened by the Paris-based Organizati­on for economic Co-operation and developmen­t (Oecd) on Monday, Secretary-general Angel Gurria predicted that rich countries would see their economies shrink by trillions of dollars if they don’t do more to help poor countries receive vaccines.

The leaders of the World Health Organizati­on and others also bemoaned the long-term damage of continued “vaccine nationalis­m” if current trends continue — rich countries getting a pandemic cure at a much higher rate than poorer ones.

It was a message that could provide some political cover for the Liberals, who have been widely criticized for shortfalls in deliveries of vaccines from Pfizer-biontech and Moderna while also facing internatio­nal criticism for pre-buying enough doses of vaccines to cover Canada’s population several times over.

Some internatio­nal anti-poverty groups have also criticized Canada for planning to take delivery of 1.9 million doses from the COVAX Facility, a new internatio­nal vaccine-sharing program that is primarily designed to help poor countries afford unaffordab­le vaccines, but also allows rich donor countries — including Canada — to receive vaccines.

Trudeau and his cabinet ministers on the vaccine file have repeatedly said that the pandemic can’t be stamped out for good if it isn’t defeated everywhere, a point the prime minister reiterated on Tuesday. They say Canada is a trading nation that depends on the welfare of others for its economic prosperity — especially with the emergence of new variants of the virus in South Africa and britain.

but their protestati­ons are usually drowned out in the domestic clamour that tends to highlight unfavourab­le comparison­s of Canada’s vaccine rollout with the united States, britain or other countries.

On Monday, Gurria — the veteran Mexican politician who has led the Oecd for 15 years — brought the full force of his political gravitas by offering up a pocketbook argument that eschewed any pretence of altruism.

“It’s a smart thing to do.

It is ethically and morally right. but it is also economical­ly right,” said Gurria.

“The global economy stands to lose as much as $9.2 trillion, which is close to half the size of the u.s. economy, just to put it in context as much as half of which would fall on advanced economies, so they would lose around $5 trillion.”

The Oecd is an internatio­nal forum of more than three dozen mainly democratic and developed countries, including Canada, that aims to help foster economic growth and trade. It also conducts comprehens­ive economic research and issues the world’s most authoritat­ive annual report on what rich countries spend on foreign aid.

On Tuesday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Canada remains committed to helping poor countries cope with COVID-19.

“We continue to work with partners around the world,” he said at a news conference outside his Ottawa residence.

Canada has pledged $220-million to COVAX, and $865-million to the ACT Accelerato­r, which tries to ensure low- and middle-income countries have equitable access to medical treatments during the pandemic.

but Jorge Moreira da Silva, the Oecd’s developmen­t co-operation director, said COVAX is underfunde­d by us$5 billion, while the World Health Organizati­on is predicting at us$27-billion shortfall for the ACT Accelerato­r.

dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s, the WHO director-general, said 75 per cent of vaccine doses are being administer­ed in 10 wealthy countries.

“It’s understand­able that government­s want to prioritize vaccinatin­g their own health workers and older people first. but it’s not right to vaccinate young, healthy adults in rich countries before health workers and older people in low-income nations,” Tedros told the Oecd forum.

At Monday’s forum, a spokesman for the pharmaceut­ical industry said the bumps and grinds of vaccine delivery to poor countries would be transforme­d into “a huge success” in the coming months. “I think it’s dangerous to talk about, you know, this is a huge moral injustice already now because you will have significan­t rollout to developing countries,” said Thomas Cueni, the director-general of the Internatio­nal Federation of Pharmaceut­ical Manufactur­ers and Associatio­ns. “I haven’t seen a single industrial­ized country, maybe with the exception of Israel, where young and healthy people are vaccinated.”

 ?? MICHAEL DANTAS / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Olga D’arc Pimentel, 72, is vaccinated by a health worker with a dose of Astrazenec­a’s COVID-19 vaccine
in the Nossa Senhora Livramento community on the banks of the Rio Negro in Brazil on Tuesday.
MICHAEL DANTAS / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Olga D’arc Pimentel, 72, is vaccinated by a health worker with a dose of Astrazenec­a’s COVID-19 vaccine in the Nossa Senhora Livramento community on the banks of the Rio Negro in Brazil on Tuesday.

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