FrontLine

COVID and the broken global order

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Despite the COVID-19 pandemic being a severe and truly global crisis, developed countries continue to act in the

instead of focusing on the people of poor nations.

When the COVID-19 pandemic affected every one of the world’s nations, the way forward seemed obvious, even if difficult to traverse. Given the rapid spread of the disease and its severity, which overwhelme­d long-neglected health systems, and the cost to lives and livelihood­s that shutdowns of economic and social activity implied, quick access to drugs and vaccines was crucial.

Fortunatel­y, government support for biotech research, in general, and research on new generation vaccines, in particular, had advanced science to some degree. Many government­s, in both developed and developing countries, were willing to set aside large sums to accelerate further research and pre-order potential production of any promising drugs and vaccines, ignoring the risks of possible failure.

As a result, laboratori­es and companies were able to design, test, and launch vaccines and drugs in record time to reduce the spread and severity of the disease, even if they could not prevent it. Once that was done, the task at hand involved ramping up production and deploying the vaccines and drugs.

This should have been seen as urgent, since the persistenc­e of the disease led to mutation of the virus, allowing for breakthrou­gh infections and new waves of the pandemic. In such circumstan­ces, any restrictio­n of access to the technology underlying the drugs would limit production, make distributi­on unequal, and prolong the pandemic.

IPR AND SHORTAGES

Unfortunat­ely, despite the essential contributi­on of public funds to research and developmen­t and marketing support, the prevalent global intellectu­al property regime, which gives the patent holder control over the technology, did indeed restrict access to it and limit global production. These intellectu­al property rights (IPRS) had been written into the global Agreement on Trade-related Aspects of Intellectu­al Property Rights (TRIPS) regime of 1995 overseen by the World Trade Organisati­on (WTO), following pressure from multinatio­nal companies that successful­ly lobbied government­s in developed countries.

As long as patents remain valid, no similar product can be produced without a licence, which can only be granted by the patent holder. The rapid proliferat­ion of production facilities across the globe for vaccines, diagnostic­s, drugs, and other treatments is also foreclosed by the assertion of IPRS by companies that “own” the technology.

Effectivel­y, this meant that the TRIPS regime reduced the access of poor population­s in developing countries to medicines at reasonable prices and affected the ability of their government­s to address public health emergencie­s. However, there were flexibilitie­s in the TRIPS agreement that allowed countries to bring

in compulsory licencing for domestic producers when the IPR regime was seen to be enabling anti-competitiv­e practices, and to allow parallel imports from cheaper producers by countries that did not have their own production capacities.

The Doha Declaratio­n on TRIPS and Public Health and the subsequent “Agreement on Parallel Imports” were heralded as major concession­s to developing countries, but in fact they restricted the available policy space by specifying very particular conditions under which these flexibilitie­s could be used.

Many developing countries were unable to or chose not to exercise the option of production or import of cheaper generic versions because of fears of retaliator­y action by government­s that were home to Big Pharma companies.

The severity of the COVID-19 pandemic affected all countries and has been prolonged by the shortage of vaccines. The longer the pandemic lasts, the greater the possibilit­ies of new variants originatin­g in countries with lower rates of vaccinatio­n, resulting in renewed waves of infection. This clearly points to the need to completely rethink these IPR provisions, especially in the area of public health. Instead, the discussion was restricted to waivers of TRIPS provisions for tests, vaccines, and treatments related only to COVID-19 infections.

In October 2020, months after the severity of the pandemic was obvious to all, India and South Africa advanced a proposal for the waiver of IPR barriers that were limiting the production of COVID-19 vaccines, tests, and treatments. However, under pressure from Big Pharma and the government­s in developed countries that supported them, the substance of the proposal was diluted substantia­lly in subsequent, nontranspa­rent, discussion­s.

In a leaked text that emerged in the middle of March 2022, which became the basis for the official draft introduced by the WTO Director General in May that year, the EU and the US led a backlash aimed at forcing a compromise that would keep the post-doha status quo in place.

For example, the draft required specification of all patents related to the drugs that would be covered by any new waiver, which is bound to reduce the effectiven­ess of the waiver in the complex and manipulate­d world of intellectu­al property and its multitude of intersecti­ng patents.

The draft also ignored medicines needed for COVID-19 tests and treatments, restrictin­g it to vaccines. Moreover, it left out categories of IPR included in the original proposals such as undisclose­d data, copyright, and industrial design, all of which were bound to have a role in the new technologi­es embodied in MRNA vaccines.

Finally, the waiver was to be effective only for developing countries that export less than 10 per cent of the world’s vaccines in 2021. This effectivel­y ruled out countries like India.

Following the agreement on June 17, 2021, a press release from Oxfam, quoting Max Lawson, cochair of the People’s Vaccine Alliance, which has been closely tracking the discussion­s, said: “This so-called compromise largely reiterates developing countries’ existing rights to override patents in certain circumstan­ces. And it tries to restrict even that limited right to countries which do not already have the capacity to produce COVID-19 vaccines. Put simply, it is a technocrat­ic fudge aimed lives.”

at saving

reputation­s, not

BATTING FOR BIG PHARMA

There is much evidence of the conspirato­rial role of representa­tives of developed countries aimed at furthering the interests of Big Pharma and the ‘community’ of multinatio­nal predators in general. Civil society organisati­ons such as the Third World Network reported that the final agreement at the 12th Ministeria­l Conference, which included the compromise on the TRIPS waiver, was shaped in small group negotiatio­ns from which most member countries were excluded.

In hindsight, in the course of the pandemic until now, developed countries have revealed their cynical willingnes­s to discard the critical internatio­nal cooperatio­n needed to address global crises, and promote only what they see as the best interests of their transnatio­nal companies and elites.

Government­s of developed countries purchased in advance enormous volumes of doses that were often many multiples of the needs of their own population­s. This delayed access to the rest of the world, prolonging waves of infections and providing the basis for mutations that triggered new waves of the pandemic in the developed countries as well.

Clearly, rational thought does not govern decision–making in developed countries. If a crisis as severe and global as the COVID-19 pandemic is being addressed in this fashion, with economic interest and short-term concerns derailing appropriat­e policy options, there is little hope of progress in areas where the crisis is imminent but more distant, such as climate change.

In short, the multilater­alism much needed in today’s world is unlikely to emerge. In such circumstan­ces, it would not be surprising if some developing countries choose to pursue their self-interest and do what the developed countries do, which is to override or circumvent internatio­nal rules. That, however, is an option not open to the most vulnerable. m

In the course of the pandemic, developed countries have revealed their cynical willingnes­s to discard the cooperatio­n needed to address global crises.

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