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This article first appeared in Forum, The Edge Malaysia Weekly on February 22, 2021 - February 28, 2021

Vaccine developers’ refusal to share publicly funded vaccine research findings is stalling broader, affordable vaccinations that would more rapidly contain the Covid-19 contagion. The pandemic has infected at least 109 million people worldwide, causing more than 2.4 million deaths as at mid-February.

Avoidable delays in preventive vaccination are imposing terrible burdens on the world economy and human welfare, with economic disruption demanding more relief and recovery measures. They have cost US$28 trillion (RM113 trillion) in lost output globally, with developed countries’ GDP contracting 7% in 2020.

National capacities to cope with the pandemic have been largely determined by means and power. Thus, access to Covid-19 tests, treatments, personal protective equipment and other pandemic supplies has been severely lacking in most African and other poor countries.

At current vaccination rates, experts say it would take “not one or two years, but six years” to reach 75% global coverage, currently considered the minimum to achieve herd immunity against the Covid-19 virus.

Patent protections, vaccine production constraints and the scramble among the rich countries to get supply will deprive more than 85 poor countries of public access to vaccines before 2023. As at Feb 5, not a single dose had been administered in 130 countries with 2.5 billion people.

Of the more than 131 million doses available by Feb 8, the US, China, the EU and the UK had 78%, while Africa only had 0.2%! Meanwhile, the African Union has only ordered less than half of what it needs to reach herd immunity — just 670 million doses. Meanwhile, besides Brazil, other Latin American countries have only 150 million doses for less than a quarter of their population.

Supply shortfalls

By year-end, total global capacity of the 13 leading Covid-19 vaccine manufacturers would still be well short of the needs of the world’s almost 7.7 billion people. Even if they all produce at maximum capacity, a fifth of the world’s population would not have access until 2022.

Rich countries continue to oppose the South African-Indian proposal to temporarily suspend relevant provisions of the 1994 World Trade Organization (WTO) Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) to effectively block the rapid scaling-up of generic vaccine production.

The resulting “catastrophic moral failure” is thus mainly due to vaccine suppliers’ profit maximisation, also limiting supplies and access. Meanwhile, rich countries’ grossly excessive vaccine purchases can vaccinate their residents several times over.

The US will soon have enough to vaccinate its population twice over, while Canada and Australia have booked enough to protect residents several times over. Exceptionally, New Zealand — which has also ordered several times its population’s needs — plans to freely share vaccines with its Pacific island neighbours.

Manufactured scarcity and prices

Global needs now greatly exceed available supply. Middle-income countries have joined the scramble, making onerous direct deals with vaccine suppliers, typically on worse terms than if they had bargained collectively. Unsurprisingly, vaccine prices vary considerably, by more than 12-fold, from US$6 to US$74 per dose.

As countries have not published contract details, acceding to vaccine suppliers’ terms, lack of transparency has enabled abuses. And when forced to comply with Freedom of Information Act requests, documents are heavily redacted before release.

Such limited transparency enables “vaccine imperialism” as big power “vaccine nationalism” impairs others’ access. Thus, following its spat with AstraZeneca, the European Commission banned vaccine exports to most countries outside the EU.

In fact, cross-border enforcement of intellectual property rights (IPRs) is relatively recent. Big Pharma successfully lobbied their governments for TRIPS inclusion in the 1994 WTO founding documents. This greatly strengthened and extended IPRs transnationally.

Now, as these non-transparent deals are disputed, European politicians are threatening “patent grabs”. EU President Charles Michel has warned of “urgent measures” demanding compulsory licensing, provided for by the European Treaty.

This would require vaccine developers to facilitate generic production, which the developing country-backed TRIPS temporary waiver proposal seeks for all countries. Nevertheless, the EU, other rich countries and their allies still oppose the request to enable rapid scaling-up of affordable vaccine supplies.

Publicly financed vaccine development

To accelerate vaccine development, expenses and risks have been mainly borne by governments, rather than by developers or private finance. The six top candidate vaccine developers have already received more than US$12 billion of public money, sometimes with little to show for it.

Of the more successful, Moderna received US$955 million for R&D plus a pre-market purchase commitment of US$1.53 billion. In Europe, Pfizer/BioNTech got €375 million (RM1.8 billion) from the German government and another €100 million for debt refinancing from the European Investment Bank.

Yet, despite massive public financing, vaccine developers retain the IP monopoly right to profit. Thus, the prospect of huge gains from 2021 vaccine sales revenue of almost US$40 billion is delaying progress against Covid-19.

AstraZeneca promised Oxford University not to profit off any Covid-19 vaccines “for the duration of the pandemic”. However, its contracts allow it to declare the pandemic over as early as mid-2021. It could then charge higher prices for vaccines developed with public money for the university.

The AstraZeneca vaccine was “trialled” on the South African population. Yet, it is paying 2.4 times more than the EU — US$5.25 compared to US$2.16. This makes a mockery of benefit-sharing and priority post-trial access promises. Meanwhile, turning “ability to pay” on its head, Uganda is paying 20% more than South Africa!

Having the greatest vaccine manufacturing capacity in the world by far, the Serum Institute of India has several contracts to produce the AstraZeneca vaccine for different countries. In India, it will sell 90% to the government and 10% to the private sector at a higher price.

Vaccines produced generically at greater scale will be far more affordable, enabling more rapid containment of the contagion, infections, deaths and disruptions. Until herd immunity is achieved nationally and globally, priority in allocation should be on the basis of urgent need, rather than ability to pay or political muscle.

The best way forward now is the TRIPS waiver proposal, still blocked by governments of rich countries at the WTO. It would enable all countries to affordably make or buy “generic” vaccines. This would most effectively expedite containing the pandemic with the least loss of lives and livelihoods.


Jomo Kwame Sundaram, a former economics professor, was United Nations assistant secretary-general for economic development. He is the recipient of the Wassily Leontief Prize for Advancing the Frontiers of Economic Thought. Anis Chowdhury, a former professor of economics at the University of Western Sydney, held senior United Nations positions from 2008 to 2015 in New York and Bangkok.

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