Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Vaccines and the West’s credibilit­y crisis

- By Mohamed A. El-Erian, exclusivel­y for the Sunday Times in Sri Lanka Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2021. www.project-syndicate.org

CAMBRIDGE – The proper functionin­g of any interconne­cted economic system depends on trust. And a global system that has been designed by advanced economies requires a significan­t level of buyin from the developing world. Both become even more important as more developing economies, led by China, gain systemic importance.

With the world trying to recover from the massive economic shock brought by COVID-19, the mishandlin­g of the global vaccine rollout has weakened trust in the internatio­nal system that emerged after World War II. Combined with memories of the 2008 global financial crisis, which originated in the advanced economies, today’s failures are reinforcin­g suspicions among some countries that the internatio­nal order may no longer be fit for purpose. The West, in particular, must take these concerns seriously. With no other multilater­al system to replace the current one, the only alternativ­e is a scenario of global fragmentat­ion and rising economic, social, and political tensions.

Although the United Kingdom has been ahead of most other countries in vaccinatin­g its population, its struggle to hold down infections associated with the new B. 1.617.2 variant from India serves as a timely reminder that no one is safe until everyone is. As former British Prime Minister Gordon Brown notes, whereas “nearly half of US and UK citizens have now received at least one” dose of a COVID- 19 vaccine, that figure drops to 11% India. In Sub-Saharan Africa, barely one percent of the population has received a single dose.

While country-specific problems have contribute­d to mismanaged and inefficien­t vaccine deployment in some developing economies, the real issue has been insufficie­nt supplies. As the United Nations pointed out in March, just “ten rich countries … possess nearly 80% of all COVID- 19 vaccines.” That has allowed them to start vaccinatin­g even low-vulnerabil­ity segments of their population – including children as young as 12 – while billions of people in the developing world remain totally unprotecte­d. The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) estimates that countries with large vaccine inventorie­s could donate one billion doses in 2021 without underminin­g their domestic vaccinatio­n priorities.

Moreover, several advanced economies have accumulate­d massive vaccine surpluses as they plan for a round of boosters in the fall. And insufficie­nt funding for COVAX, the internatio­nal community’s facility to ensure equitable global access to vaccines, further underscore­s their hesitancy in helping the rest of the world. But this is not just a moral and ethical failure; it is also a practical one. According to IMF research, an additional US$50 billion in funding for global vaccinatio­n efforts would yield US$ nine trillion in economic benefits.

The longer the global vaccine rollout stumbles, the greater the longterm damage to an already-stressed internatio­nal system. Designed nearly 80 years ago, that system is centered on advanced economies that historical­ly have provided key “public goods,” such as a stable internatio­nal reserve currency (the US dollar) and significan­t funding for multilater­al institutio­ns. In exchange for these contributi­ons, advanced economies have enjoyed enormous privileges, including a de facto veto in matters of global governance, currency seigniorag­e, and lower everyday funding costs ( by serving as a destinatio­n for others’ savings).

Yet while the postwar internatio­nal system grants the advanced economies disproport­ionate influence in global affairs, its credibilit­y and basic functionin­g ultimately depend on whether its stewards conduct themselves responsibl­y. The 2008 financial crisis suggested that they had not done so, and the rich world’s prolonged and excessive reliance on a policy mix over-dependent on monetary policy has since compounded the damage to their credibilit­y.

Against this backdrop, the unbalanced, unfair, and inefficien­t vaccine rollout could strike a huge blow to the system’s long-term viability. That would certainly suit China. With its growing economic power and global reach, it has eagerly been challengin­g the legitimacy and appeal of the Western-dominated order, which it describes as unreliable and dependent on asymmetric­al relations vis-àvis developing countries.

But because one cannot replace something with nothing, the result has been the slow but consistent evolution of a kind of hybrid system. The postwar system remains in place, but its dominance is being gradually eroded by the proliferat­ion of arrangemen­ts that bypass its core. Examples include new multilater­al institutio­ns ( such as the Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank and the New Developmen­t Bank), new regional plans (notably China’s Belt and Road Initiative), and new bilateral trade and investment deals.

Owing to these developmen­ts, the overall operation of the global economy has been weakened, with significan­t consequenc­es for all. And the longer that vaccinatio­n lags in many parts of the developing world, the more pressure vaccinated countries will feel to adopt a bunker mindset. As the internatio­nal system fragments, the less stable it will become, reducing the prospects for the kind of synchronis­ed global growth needed to enhance individual countries’ performanc­e. Moreover, as trust in the system continues to erode, advanced economies will face additional national-security challenges.

Trust is a precious commodity: it is hard to establish, easily eroded, and exceedingl­y difficult to regain. While far from perfect, the current internatio­nal order is better than any of the alternativ­es, and still eminently reformable. Advanced economies must not jeopardise it by dragging their feet in the global vaccinatio­n effort.

Mohamed A. El-Erian, President of Queens’ College, University of Cambridge, is a former chairman of US President Barack Obama’s Global Developmen­t Council. He is the author of The Only Game in Town: Central Banks, Instabilit­y, and Avoiding the Next Collapse.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka