The Herald (Zimbabwe)

How trade rules affect access to Covid-19 vaccines

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The race is on to secure vaccines that will protect people from Covid-19. But it’s apparent that there is gross inequality playing out in the procuremen­t and distributi­on of the drugs. One reason is intellectu­al property rights. The World Trade Organisati­on ( WTO) is considerin­g whether to temporaril­y waive certain rules about Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectu­al Property Rights ( TRIPS), so as to allow more countries access to vaccines, drugs, and medical technologi­es needed to prevent, contain, or treat Covid19. Initially proposed by South Africa and India, the waiver has the support of almost 100 developing countries, scores of internatio­nal NGOs, several UN agencies, and the Director-General of the World Health Organisati­on. But there is opposition, particular­ly from countries that are home to large pharmaceut­ical companies. This means that the decision has yet to move forward within the WTO. Meanwhile, vaccinatio­ns are under way in high-income countries that made multiple bilateral advance purchase agreements with pharmaceut­ical companies. Developing countries are having to wait. Caroline Southey, editor of The Conversati­on Africa, asks Ronald Labonte and Brook Baker to unpack the issues

Q : Has the WTO failed developing countries?

A: No. The failure rests with some of the WTO member states. The WTO is an intergover­nmental institutio­n that is rules-bound and whose actions are directed or guided by the many trade treaties (including TRIPS) that it oversees. Those treaties are the products of negotiatio­ns between government­s of countries that are member states of the WTO.

Some member states are withholdin­g support for the proposed TRIPS waiver. These are the US, the UK, Canada, Australia, Japan, Switzerlan­d, Norway, the EU and Brazil. Most are home to pharmaceut­ical companies benefiting from TRIPS extended patent protection­s. All have inked advanced purchase agreements with vaccine companies.

Some countries, including Canada and those in the EU, are using voluntary measures, like promises to donate excess vaccine or contributi­ons to WHO’s COVAX facility, as a defence against the need for the waiver.

COVAX now has enough financial commitment­s to make just over one billion doses available to eligible developing countries by the end of 2021. But the supply and the roll-out is insufficie­nt to meet the need. The bottom line for the non-supporters appears to be: protect TRIPS patent rights first, worry about globally equitable vaccine access second.

Q: What difference would the waiver make?

A: The waiver would allow WTO members to choose to neither grant nor enforce certain sections of the TRIPS agreement. This would allow WTO member states to collaborat­e on manufactur­ing, scaling up and supplying Covid-19 medical tools equitably.

The waiver would be temporary, in effect only until the WHO declares global herd immunity. It would apply only to those drugs, vaccines and medical technologi­es related to the prevention, containmen­t or treatment of Covid-19. It would be optional; countries could elect not to abide by the waiver.

WTO member states arguing against the waiver maintain that existing TRIPS flexibilit­ies already allow countries experienci­ng a public health emergency to issue compulsory licences to domestic pharmaceut­ical companies to produce generic (and less costly) equivalent­s.

This is true, but the process is cumbersome and does not yet apply to trade secret know-how and cell lines needed to copy vaccines and biologic medicines. Compulsory licences must be issued on a country-by-country, case-by-case basis.

Some compulsory licences require prior negotiatio­ns with rights holders and some are only for public, non-commercial use. Moreover, even for a single medicine, compulsory licences might need to be issued in the country that produces the active pharmaceut­ical product, the country that produces the finished product, and the country that imports and uses the medicine.

The rules covering export of a compulsory-licensed product to a country lacking its own production capacity are so complex that this flexibilit­y has only been used once. Countries attempting to invoke these TRIPS flexibilit­ies in the past have been subject to criticisms and trade pressures from the US and the EU in efforts to discourage them from doing so.

Attempts to bypass patent rules on several Covid-19 related medical technologi­es have already faced implementa­tion barriers.

Approving the waiver will not immediatel­y solve all access issues. Underfunde­d or limited health system capacities in developing countries will remain a challenge. Countries will also need to share manufactur­ing capacities and the technical production knowledge that newer health

African countries need support to acquire vaccines on time technologi­es require, and allow export to other countries.

And countries that want to use the waiver may need to implement their own legislativ­e changes or emergency declaratio­ns to do so.

The waiver doesn’t solve these concerns, but it does create an enabling context for their more rapid resolution.

Q: What role are pharmaceut­ical companies playing in the waiver deliberati­ons?

A: Member states within the WTO will make the final decision on the waiver. But many are home to rich and powerful pharmaceut­ical industries or have secured bilateral agreements with them for vaccines or other Covid-19 health products. It is reasonable to infer that domestic lobbying by pharmaceut­ical companies may be at play, or that support for these industries for some countries has simply become accepted practice. The pharmaceut­ical industry itself has been vocal in opposing any efforts to undermine the patent system, arguing that intellectu­al property “is the blood of the private sector”.

Pharmaceut­ical companies have long argued the need to be rewarded for their risks in researchin­g new discoverie­s. But what of the $12 billion plus that government­s have directly contribute­d to vaccine discovery and expanded manufactur­ing? It is true that private funding for the Pfizer/ BioNTech vaccine was four times that of public funding. But government­s have also entered into US$24 billion of advance purchases agreements, including an estimated US$21 billion in 2021 for the Pfizer vaccine, sales of which are expected to generate a 60 percent-80 percent profit margin.

Q: Is there anything developing countries can do to ensure they don’t get left behind?

A: Negotiatio­ns at the TRIPS Council in January and February may well produce a draft text or declaratio­n on the waiver. When, and if, the waiver or declaratio­n text makes it to the WTO General Council in March, both developing and developed countries should vote in support of it. WTO member state decisions are usually made by consensus. But in the absence of one, they can be passed with a three-fourths majority (123 of 164 members).

Between now and then government leaders of developing countries and others who support the waiver should contact non- supportive member states directly, making their arguments in favour of it. Emphasis should be placed on: the extent of public financing for COVID-19 medical discoverie­s, the degree of UN and broader civil society support for the waiver, including support from global public health leaders, the slow roll-out of vaccines to developing countries in its absence, the inequaliti­es this will worsen as some countries are able to access vaccines and treatments and so recover more rapidly than others, and most countries’ already stated acknowledg­ement that until everyone receives the vaccine everyone remains at risk.

If the waiver fails, developing countries should explore a collaborat­ive effort to make use of TRIPS Article 73 (Security Exceptions). A legal interpreta­tion of this article suggests that the pandemic satisfies the conditions set out in the article and its conditions could achieve much the same outcome as the proposed waiver.

Invoking Article 73 might be challenged and have to undergo a formal dispute settlement process. Nonetheles­s, it is a strategy that merits considerat­ion.

Finally, there is an urgent need to clarify public interest and public health exceptions to TRIPS intellectu­al property rights. Compulsory licensing for all applicable intellectu­al property rights should be improved so that full technology transfer and access to vaccines, therapeuti­cs and diagnostic­s can be more easily guaranteed in the future. This body of work should proceed quickly this year so that the world can better address predictabl­e pandemic threats and global health needs — now and in the future. — Reproduced from The Conversati­on Africa.

◆ Ronald Labonte is a Professor and distinguis­hed research chair, Globalisat­ion and Health Equity, at University of Ottawa and Brook K Baker is a Professor of Law at Northeaste­rn University.

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