The Guardian (USA)

BioNTech's Covid vaccine is a triumph of innovation and immigratio­n

- Hans-Werner Sinn

The world took note when the German startup BioNTech announced its breakthrou­gh in the developmen­t of a new type of vaccine to combat Covid-19. After testing tens of thousands of people, BioNTech’s vaccine has been shown to be 95% effective in providing protection for those who would otherwise have been infected. The company was the first to apply for emergency use authorisat­ion for a coronaviru­s vaccine in the US and it has announced it will soon take similar steps in Europe.

Antiviral vaccines are usually made with devitalise­d viral materials fabricated outside the body but BioNTech has pursued a new method of injecting geneticall­y modified RNA into the patient. This prompts the patient’s cells to produce a characteri­stic protein of the relevant Sars-CoV-2 virus themselves, enabling the body’s immune system to build up an effective response before it encounters the real virus.

The great advantage of this approach is that it allows for the production of more than 1bn vaccine doses within the space of only a few months. It is also highly safe because the modified RNA can survive only at a very low temperatur­e and quickly degrades in the body once it has performed its job. Any subsequent damage to the body is therefore extremely unlikely.

In close cooperatio­n with the US pharmaceut­ical giant Pfizer, BioNTech’s success augurs a rapid uptake of widespread vaccinatio­n in Europe and the US. Indeed, delivery contracts for millions of doses of the vaccine are already in place. And it is encouragin­g that the US drugmaker Moderna has also announced quantitati­vely similar results in its trials, using a closely related process involving a slightly more stable RNA variant.

More broadly, many other companies are advancing the frontier of next-generation RNA-based vaccines. Among these is CureVac, a company based in the German town of Tübingen, which has invented a new rapid-programmin­g process for RNA that promises to be widely applicable.

Thanks to these new technologi­es, the world will likely be freed from the scourge of Covid-19 sometime in 2021 or 2022. Once again, we will be able to eat out and go to the theatre without worries; private weddings and parties will no longer be cause for concern. The airline and travel industries will quickly return to normal, and the global economy will be revitalise­d after a long period of lockdown-induced paralysis.

A major difference is that we will emerge with a completely new pharmaceut­ical industry, one that promises to provide extremely effective vaccines against numerous other infectious diseases. Moreover, RNA can, in principle, be programmed in such a way as to produce antibodies against specific types of cancer, promising forms of treatment that are far gentler than chemothera­py.

At BioNTech, the pioneers of the new RNA-based approach to drug developmen­t are Uğur Şahin and Özlem Türeci, a couple specialisi­ng in oncology and genetic research. Şahin, who holds a chair in experiment­al oncology at the University of Mainz, is one of the world’s top researcher­s in the study of personalis­ed vaccines for cancer immunother­apy. Both are German citizens born to Turkish immigrants who came to the country decades ago.

Şahin and Türeci are prime examples of the successful integratio­n of immigrants – including those from Turkey – into German society. They managed not only to gain a foothold in Germany but to thrive, thanks to hard work, an entreprene­urial spirit and strong cultural traditions.

BioNTech’s story shows that successful immigratio­n is about more than welfare magnetism. Managed properly, immigratio­n is a key source of new blood and fresh ideas for an ageing society. It is worth recalling that Germany’s pharmaceut­ical industry was one of the earliest manufactur­ers of the contracept­ive pill, starting in the 1960s. No other country embraced this method of contracept­ion more comprehens­ively. As a consequenc­e, however, the German fertility rate had fallen sharply by the early 1970s – six years before Italy experience­d a similar decline, 10 years before Spain did and 20 years before Poland did.

Germany has been paying the price for this early pharmaceut­ical success. Its largest population cohort comprises people in their mid-50s, who were born just before the pill-induced drop in birthrates. All of the subsequent generation­al cohorts have steadily shrunk. Under these demographi­c conditions, stagnation and decline would be inevitable without immigratio­n. In fact, Germany now needs a continuous inflow of migrants just to fill the population gap that its earlier pharmaceut­ical successes has caused. Fittingly, Germany’s pharmaceut­ical industry is achieving internatio­nal acclaim thanks to the innovative work of two children of immigrants who were lured to the country by the demographi­c vacuum to which the industry itself contribute­d. Şahin and Türeci are pioneers in an area of genetic research that now promises to give a new breath of life to the pharmaceut­ical industry, the European economy and the entire world.

• Hans-Werner Sinn, is professor of economics at the University of Munich. He was president of the Ifo Institute for Economic Research and serves on the German economy ministry’s advisory council.

its own mainstream, and the generosity of the film – like that of Shuggie Bain – is to invite the viewer into it. You may not have been to this kind of party, at this kind of time, in this kind of place, but – particular­ly in this most joy-deprived of years – Lovers Rock is like a memory of all the best parties.

Shuggie Bain and Lovers Rock are examples of art’s capacity to change perspectiv­es, to radically deepen empathy, and to shift the “universal” viewpoint from its old misleading default position of white, male and straight. “Everyman” might be a black teenage girl at a London party, or a gay workingcla­ss Glaswegian kid. It matters who has the platform to tell stories, and what stories are told. And when that platform is shared widely, it is the audience that is enriched.

 ?? Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images ?? In close cooperatio­n with the US pharmaceut­ical giant Pfizer, BioNTech’s success augurs a rapid uptake of widespread vaccinatio­n in Europe and the US.
Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images In close cooperatio­n with the US pharmaceut­ical giant Pfizer, BioNTech’s success augurs a rapid uptake of widespread vaccinatio­n in Europe and the US.

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