Business Day

Independen­ce not isolation can counter vaccine nationalis­m

- Benedict Oramah Prof Oramah is president and chair of the African Export-Import Bank.

Acontradic­tion lies at the heart of Africa’s response to Covid-19. The continent consumes a quarter of the world’s vaccines across all diseases, so one would expect African nations to be experience­d at producing, procuring and delivering them to their people. Yet, 20 months from the start of the pandemic, less than 2% of Africans have been vaccinated.

While life-saving Covid-19 vaccines roll out in other parts of the globe, African government­s have been left ruing the injustice of vaccine nationalis­m. Rue they may, but with 99% of vaccines imported from outside the continent Africans have been left exposed to export restrictio­ns and disrupted supply chains. Even with financing available, vaccine deliveries have remained unpredicta­ble and could take years to provide sufficient immunisati­on.

Commitment­s from the EU to support vaccinatio­n hubs are a welcome step. However, these initiative­s are the tip of the iceberg when it comes to preparing the continent for the next pandemic. That other policies such as patent waivers on Covid-19 vaccines remain tied up in internatio­nal negotiatio­ns shows global solidarity only stretches so far.

For Africa to avoid a repeat of the Covid debacle it must learn to stand on its own. This by no means implies isolation but rather independen­ce in areas critical to the wellbeing of its people and resilience of its economy. The key lesson is that African nations must rely less on others and more on fellow Africans.

Joint struggle has awakened the continent to its collective strength. Covid-19 responses have been most effective when African nations stood together. The African Medical Supplies Platform (AMSP), for example, has pooled procuremen­t, enabling Africa to negotiate as a continent rather than 55 fragmented nations. This has delivered discounts, enhanced market power and facilitate­d equitable distributi­on across the continent.

The Africa Vaccine Acquisitio­n Task Team (Avatt)

— backed by $2bn from African Export-Import Bank (Afreximban­k) and coordinate­d with the AU’s Africa Centres for Disease Control & Prevention, the UN Economic Commission for Africa and the AU special envoy on Covid-19, Strive Masiyiwa — has applied a similar approach to vaccine procuremen­t.

By banding together African nations have negotiated directly with vaccine makers rather than relying solely on foreign aid. The initiative has already secured 400-million doses of the Johnson & Johnson Covid-19 vaccine which will be manufactur­ed partly on African soil.

This will escalate efforts to tackle the pandemic call for leaders to double down on a whole-of-Africa approach. This will see the continent’s developmen­t finance institutio­ns pooling resources to resolve common problems.

Moreover, African nations should work together to ensure the $400bn of Africa’s foreign exchange reserves domiciled outside the continent work for Africa — especially heading into the post-pandemic recovery.

Co-ordination must not cease with the pandemic. Lessons from AMSP and Avatt are being channelled into an African Vaccine Acquisitio­n Trust to continue pooled procuremen­t of medical resources. This will offer long-term demand certainty and build a resilient system for the next pandemic.

Greater co-ordination will lead African nations to synchronis­e investment­s in medical infrastruc­ture. The African Continenta­l Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) agreement provides an unpreceden­ted opportunit­y to expand the pharmaceut­ical industry by enabling developers and manufactur­ers to trade across a unified market. This opportunit­y is compelling given McKinsey’s projection­s that the African vaccines market could rise from $1.3bn today to as much as $5.4bn by 2030.

To support this, procuremen­t of vaccines and therapeuti­cs managed by internatio­nal agencies must be used to catalyse demanddriv­en expansion of pharma manufactur­ing on the continent. There is no reason these agencies cannot purchase products for Africa from Africa. That is the kind of “aid” that is sustainabl­e.

African leaders must shift from national to regional thinking to leverage the AfCFTA opportunit­y. This means creating vaccine hubs with access to cross-border markets that ensure manufactur­ers enjoy economies of scale or co-ordinating policies so that different stages of vaccine developmen­t can be carried out efficientl­y across regions.

A renewed effort to align regulation­s for medical supplies, with support directed to initiative­s such as the African Vaccine Regulatory Forum and African Medicines Agency, should underpin these investment­s.

There is a strong chance Covid-19 will not be a oncein-a-lifetime event. Africa risks being sidelined again unless we learn to stand united. By co-ordinating efforts African nations can secure resilience for the future, protect the welfare of their citizens and retain the many skilled individual­s who leave the continent to take medical and pharmaceut­ical jobs abroad.

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