Scientists are coming up with COVID-19 vaccines. But their efforts will be wasted unless we set up an enforceable global vaccine distribution scheme now.
But this is a trade problem we know how to solve.
My latest, with @TomBollyky 1/
foreignaffairs.com/articles/unite…
First, COMPULSORY LICENSING is unlikely to work.
Manufacturing vaccines is high tech manufacturing, and will only be feasible in a handful of mostly rich countries.
Poor countries are going to need to IMPORT it. 2/
Governments whose scientists discover it first are likely to engage in export bans (vaccine nationalism) to vaccinate their populations first
Eg, already during the pandemic, China, France, Germany, the EU, US and others did this to hoard PPE... 3/
Some of the arguments
1. Public health - no one is safe until everyone is safe
2. Economics
• Imports - foreigners under lockdown = lost inputs
• Exports - foreigners under lockdown = lost markets 4/
Because "its" candidates might not pan out. Diversification of risk.
It's better to get access to SOME vaccine soon with near certainty, through sharing, rather than run the risk of getting no vaccine at all
5 /
Rely on scientists and public health experts to advise
Eg, each country gets enough to vaccinate its most critical populations first - health care workers, essential workers, elderly, immunocompromised, military, teachers...
6 /
Even if we agree to share today (ex ante), whichever country discovers it first has an incentive to renege (ex post) and keep all of the vaccine for itself.
UGH. Without a way to enforce the deal, there will be no deal.
7/
The PRISONER'S DILEMMA.
Because of the belief that everyone else is going to engage in vaccine nationalism, it is rational for "me" to do it too.
Even though we can all be made better off by coordinating and agreeing NOT to do it.
8/
We need a credible punishment for "cheating" - a country signs up, but then reneges by keeping the vaccine for itself upon discovery.
Need credible rules that trading partners would act on to DISSUADE that...
9/
Trading partners can threaten to WITHHOLD INPUTS
Manufacturing vaccines will require IMPORTED inputs of raw ingredients, stabilizers, preservatives, adjuvants, vials, syringes...
Without inputs, no output.
10 /
Trading partners can threaten to WITHHOLD THE NEXT VACCINES.
The first vaccine may not be the best vaccine. Failing to cooperate today means the world may fail to cooperate with you tomorrow...
11/
But if policymakers are stuck because they think a globally cooperative COVID-19 Vaccine Trade and Investment Agreement is unenforceable, so we should not try to negotiate one...
...that is wrong.
12/
This is a trade problem we know how to solve.
My latest, with @TomBollyky for @ForeignAffairs
foreignaffairs.com/articles/unite…
AND ASK QUESTIONS 🤓
Tues, July 28
11:00-11:45am ET
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The amazing @PIIE team produced a Summer 2020 BLOCKBUSTER film [2 minutes] on my @ForeignAffairs essay with @TomBollyky ...
The Tragedy of Vaccine Nationalism: The Movie
📽️🍿👇🏾