IMF, WTO, and WHO call upon top economies for equal distribution of vaccines

IMF, WTO, and WHO call upon top economies for equal distribution of vaccines World leaders must make a "new commitment" to a more equal distribution of coronavirus vaccines to bring the pandemic under control, the heads of four major global organizations said Tuesday, Report informs, citing the Business Times.
Health
June 2, 2021 09:33
IMF, WTO, and WHO call upon top economies for equal distribution of vaccines

World leaders must make a "new commitment" to a more equal distribution of coronavirus vaccines to bring the pandemic under control, the heads of four major global organizations said Tuesday, Report informs, citing the Business Times.

Their joint rallying cry, and calls for tens of billions of dollars more in funding, comes as concerns rise that vaccine inequality between wealthy and poor nations is further complicating and prolonging a pandemic that has already killed more than 3.5 million people globally.

The heads of the World Health Organization, World Bank, International Monetary Fund, and World Trade Organization blamed the gap in vaccination programs for the emergence of virus variants that have fuelled fresh outbreaks in the developing world.

"It has become abundantly clear that there will be no broad-based recovery from the Covid-19 pandemic without an end to the health crisis," they said in a joint op-ed in the Washington Post. "Access to vaccination is key to both."

They called on the Group of Seven wealthiest economies to agree on a "stepped-up coordinated strategy, backed by new financing, to vaccinate the world" at their next meeting in the United Kingdom later this month.

The leaders of the four organizations, speaking at a news conference Tuesday, also urged the G7 countries to fund a $50-billion plan already proposed by the IMF to help even out those inequities and accelerate the end of the pandemic.

The aim is to vaccinate at least 40 percent of the global population by the end of the year and at least 60 percent by the end of next year to enable a lasting economic recovery.

The cash injections "would help us dramatically scale up the production of diagnostics, treatments, oxygen, medical equipment, and vaccines for equitable distribution," WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told reporters.

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