China Daily

Duterte airs support for Chinese vaccines

Soon to get jab, Philippine leader cites widespread takeup in many countries

- By PRIME SARMIENTO in Hong Kong prime@chinadaily­apac.com Xinhua and Jan Yumul in Hong Kong contribute­d to this story.

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte is willing to receive a Chinese-developed COVID-19 vaccine, his spokesman said on Tuesday.

Harry Roque said in an online news conference that Duterte, 75, wants the jabs of the vaccine from Sinovac Biotech to be administer­ed to him away from the public eye.

The spokesman had been asked if Duterte would receive the shots. Roque said: “Yes, and his answer was, ‘No problem, I will take the vaccine as soon as it’s available’.”

Duterte has talked about the safety of vaccines developed by China’s biopharmac­eutical companies.

In a late-night televised national address on Monday, Duterte said that China’s COVID-19 vaccines, including those from Sinovac and Sinopharm, are being used in Indonesia, Turkey, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates and Brazil.

Duterte also said last week that the Chinese vaccines are “safe, sure, and secure”.

The Philippine government has said that it has secured 25 million doses of the Sinovac-developed CoronaVac vaccine, which is awaiting authorizat­ion for emergency use from the Food and Drug Administra­tion of the Philippine­s.

The first batch of 50,000 doses of CoronaVac will arrive in the Philippine­s as early as February. Chinese State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi, who visited Manila on Saturday, said the Chinese government will donate 500,000 doses of the vaccine to the Philippine­s.

Robert Dan J. Roces, chief economist at Manila-based Security Bank Corp, said the vaccine rollout can serve as a “stimulus” to the Philippine economy because it will help restore business and consumer confidence.

He said the program will cause “positive ripple effects” that will strengthen market conditions as early as the second quarter of this year.

“In turn, tail winds from positive sentiment and improved confidence will only propel the recovery upward,” Roces said.

Nicholas Antonio Mapa, senior economist at Dutch investment bank ING, said the vaccine rollout is “in many ways a game changer given our reliance on household spending to drive growth”.

“Without the vaccine, general anxiety about catching the virus and government prescribed restrictio­ns will continue to curtail and disrupt normal consumptio­n patterns,” said Mapa, alluding to the lockdown measures that were imposed to curb infections.

Ruben Carlo Asuncion, chief economist at Union Bank of the Philippine­s, said the “swiftness of the vaccine rollout will help consumers return to the pre-pandemic buying behavior”.

Better economic recovery

“More people being vaccinated, I believe, would result to a better economic recovery and outlook,” he said.

The Philippine­s has the second highest number of COVID-19 infections in Southeast Asia, after Indonesia. There were more than 504,000 cases in the Philippine­s by Tuesday, according to the country’s health department.

The government is gradually easing movement restrictio­ns to reopen the economy. The vaccinatio­n program is in line with this policy.

Apart from Sinovac, the Philippine government has also secured the supply of 30 million doses of a vaccine from the Serum Institute of India. The Philippine­s also plans to buy vaccines from the Pfizer-BioNTech partnershi­p, Moderna, AstraZenec­a, Johnson & Johnson, Novavax and Russia’s Gamaleya Research Institute.

Analysts said that the government has to assure the public that vaccinatio­ns are safe to encourage more people to get inoculated.

“Major informatio­n campaigns should be out there and the messaging should be clear to help reverse the attitude toward vaccines,” Asuncion said. “The success toward achieving herd immunity through the vaccines is crucial for the economic growth outlook.”

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