Labour’s plan to transform global vaccine production
Leading members of Labour’s Shadow Cabinet have today written to
the Government demanding action to resolve the global shortage in
vaccine production, control the spread of Covid-19, and put in
place the infrastructure and mechanisms required to tackle future
pandemics. Labour’s letter to the Trade Secretary, Foreign
Secretary, Health Secretary and Business Secretary urges the
Government to engage constructively with US proposals for a waiver
of vaccine patents, but...Request free
trial
Leading members of Labour’s Shadow Cabinet have today written to the Government demanding action to resolve the global shortage in vaccine production, control the spread of Covid-19, and put in place the infrastructure and mechanisms required to tackle future pandemics. Labour’s letter to the Trade Secretary, Foreign Secretary, Health Secretary and Business Secretary urges the Government to engage constructively with US proposals for a waiver of vaccine patents, but acknowledges that a patent waiver on its own will not solve the vaccine production crisis. Labour’s plan therefore proposes:
Labour’s Shadow International Trade Secretary, Emily Thornberry MP, said: “This plan will not just help the world bring the Covid-19 pandemic to an end, and make us safe against the spread of new variants and strains, but establish the mechanisms, infrastructure and tools that will allow us to tackle future pandemics much more efficiently and effectively. “So while the costs of financing this plan will doubtless be substantial, they must be weighed against the human, social and economic damage we will avoid if we can bring this current pandemic to a rapid end, and ensure it will never be repeated on the same scale.” Ends Notes to Editors The text of the Labour Party’s letter, to International Trade Secretary Liz Truss, is as follows: Dear Liz, Following our discussions as a Shadow Cabinet, we are writing to you and your colleagues, the Foreign Secretary, the Health Secretary, and the Business Secretary, to set out our proposals to maximise the production of Covid-19 vaccines across the world, and urge you all – ahead of the G7 summit – to provide the global leadership that the delivery of this plan requires. The fact that Covid-19 is still killing thousands of people every day around the world is down entirely to the unacceptable and growing gulf between countries like ours where more than two-thirds of adults have had their first jab and many countries in Asia, Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean where vaccination programmes have barely begun, and where billions of people are therefore still left unprotected. We cannot let that inequity continue. The imperative for Britain to lead that effort is not just driven by our basic values and morality, but by our own needs and interests. We will not achieve the permanent return to safety and normality that we all crave, and that our economy desperately needs, as long as billions of people around the world are still waiting for their vaccines, making mass outbreaks such as that in India a regular occurrence, and resulting new variants of the virus a constant threat. The UK should therefore be earmarking any surplus vaccine doses that we do not require to complete our own vaccination programme to go to India and other countries in urgent need of additional support, as well as increasing our donations to those countries of oxygen, ventilators, medicine and other emergency supplies, and lending them UK expertise in tackling the virus, from genome sequencing to epidemiology. But regardless of those efforts, and those of COVAX, Gavi and the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness (CEPI), the fact remains that the world is not producing and distributing the volume of vaccines we need at the pace we need them to contain the spread of Covid, and to limit the risk of new outbreaks and mutations. What we are seeing in India today will therefore be replicated in other countries over and over again if we do not act. To end this cycle, we need to address the fundamental and long-standing problem, namely that the world has more capability to invent and develop vaccines than it has to manufacture and distribute them on a global scale. There are many different reasons for that – technical, procedural, financial and political – but what it ultimately means is that we will not bring an end to this pandemic if we simply trust to the current functioning of the market. We therefore welcome the lead shown by the Biden Administration in recent talks at the World Trade Organisation in relation to the waiver of vaccine patents, and urge you to engage constructively with the United States and our other international partners to turn those discussions into concrete action. As the US Trade Representative, Katherine Tai, said: these are extraordinary circumstances and they require extraordinary measures. Nevertheless, we know that action on patents alone will not deliver the massive global increase in vaccine production that we need to replicate the speed and scale of the UK vaccination programme in every country in the world. We also know success in this effort will not come from handing down demands to the pharmaceutical industry, but by working in partnership with them – and with the scientific community – as we saw with the Vaccines Task Force. With all that in mind, and alongside continued progress on the issue of patents, we would like to summarise below what we regard as the key elements of a plan to address the fundamental problem of production capacity on a global scale.
This plan will require extensive long-term funding, not just to finance the required investment in facilities, equipment, raw materials and supporting supply chains, but to compensate the pharmaceutical industry for its extensive contributions. In addition, the growing debt crisis facing the poorest countries will need to be resolved to enable them to make a sustained recovery from the pandemic, and maintain improvements in their health infrastructure. However, as numerous studies have shown, the costs of funding this plan and resolving that debt crisis must be placed against the far more substantial losses that the global economy will suffer as long as this pandemic continues. A global consensus to finance this plan and resolve the debt crisis in the developing world should therefore be simple common sense. Nevertheless, alongside the funding available from the World Bank and other established donor bodies, we should consider innovative financing mechanisms to meet those costs, including hypothecating the proceeds of other coordinated action on a global scale, such as the long-overdue crackdowns on tax havens, money laundering and multinational tax avoidance. Finally, it is absolutely vital that every step in this plan is taken with preparation for future pandemics in mind, not just in terms of introducing the coordination and financing mechanisms by which vaccines can be produced and distributed on a global scale, but by establishing on a permanent basis the physical infrastructure and skills base that will enable that to happen. In that way, the costs of financing this plan can be weighed not just against the immediate benefits it will bring in respect of Covid-19, but also against the human, social and economic damage we will avoid if we are able to execute this plan and activate the accompanying infrastructure much more efficiently and effectively when the next pandemic strikes. This will be a monumental task, but if we can achieve it, it will save hundreds of thousands of lives around the world now and in the years to come, it will provide the foundation for a sustained global economic recovery, and it will mean having the freedom and confidence to plan for the future without worrying that fresh mutations of the virus – or new pandemics – are going to plunge countries like ours back into the fear and uncertainty of the past year. It is therefore a plan to make the world safe now, and more secure in the future, and it should be Britain leading the way in making it happen. But that cannot wait another three weeks for the set-piece announcements of the G7 summit in June, nor risk being derailed by other priorities and disagreements there. We therefore urge you to make urgent progress on discussing this plan with your international counterparts, and putting it into immediate effect. Because what is happening in India today, and what is happening in countries like ours because of the Indian variant, teaches us a very hard truth. The world should have acted on the vaccine production crisis months ago, and every further day we fail to act on it will see thousands more people suffer cruel deaths that we now have the means to prevent. Yours sincerely, The Rt Hon Emily Thornberry MP Shadow Secretary of State for International Trade Signed on behalf of: The Rt Hon Lisa Nandy MP Shadow Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs The Rt Hon Jonathan Ashworth MP Shadow Secretary of State for Health and Social Care The Rt Hon Ed Miliband MP Shadow Secretary of State for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy Shadow Secretary of State for International Development Shadow Minister of State for International Trade |