When will the world  have vaccinated 80% of all adults, the level presumed by scientists to produce  herd immunity against COVID-19? Most people’s answer is 2023 or 2024, which  suggests deep pessimism about the progress of vaccinations outside the rich  world. That is also why pledges at the recent G7 summit to donate one billion  doses to poor countries during this year and in 2022 look to some like generous  game-changers.
  But despair is the  wrong sentiment and self-congratulation by the G7 is the wrong reaction. If the  current daily rate of vaccinations can be maintained, the world can reach its  vaccination goal by January 2022. The first step toward effective action is to  convince oneself that a problem is solvable. To that end, the Global Commission  for Post-Pandemic Policy, an independent, non-partisan group of 34 high-level  doers and thinkers from around the globe, has done the math to come up with a  global vaccine countdown. Surprisingly, we found that the challenge is much  more manageable than we imagined, and on a timetable much faster than that  assumed by the G7 governments.
  The arithmetic is  simple, but first you have to decide whether to regard China, the world’s most  populous country, as an inspiration or an exception. According to Our World in  Data, China now accounts for 17-20 million of the 33-36 million doses being  administered worldwide every day. With China included, the countdown reaches  zero in just over 200 days; without China, the time increases to 370 days. That  is an important difference, but it amounts to reaching the finish line in July  2022, rather than in January. Even if a higher threshold of 90% becomes  necessary, owing to the lower efficacy of Chinese vaccines, we are still nearly  there.
  Let’s look at the  numbers. The world’s population is 7.9 billion, an estimated 5.85 billion of  whom are adults (74%). If the goal is an immunization rate of 80%, 4.7 billion  will need shots, which on a two-dose vaccine regimen means 9.4 billion doses.  As of June 11, 2021, Our World in Data reports that more than 2.3 billion doses  have already been administered worldwide, leaving just over seven billion  doses. Divide that by a mid-range daily figure (34 million) and you get roughly  211 days – January 2022.
  Yes, seven billion is  a very large number. But look at what is happening: every day, China is  administering 17-20 million doses; India is administering just over three  million; and even Africa is administering nearly 900,000 – a 37% increase since  the start of the month. Moreover, these numbers are still rising in most  countries. Though not every middle-income country will be able to match China’s  pace, that at least should be the motivating goal.
  Until recently, the  main constraint and source of frustration was the limited supply of vaccines.  But production is rising sharply, with the global monthly output of vaccines  approved by at least one major regulatory body increasing from 420 million  doses in April to 822 million doses in May.
  China’s two vaccine  makers, Sinovac and Sinopharm, accounted for more than half of this total  (nearly tripling output from 164 million doses in April to 454 million in May).  Output of Pfizer-BioNTech and Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine doses in the European  Union doubled, from 69 million to 140 million, while the number of  Pfizer-BioNTech, Moderna, and Johnson & Johnson doses in the United States  rose from 71 million to 105 million. The only disappointing production figures  were in India, where output slipped from 76 million doses in April to 62.6  million in May.
  In the coming months,  the key constraint will no longer be supply shortages but rather financing and  logistical challenges, particularly in poorer countries with limited  infrastructure and health-care coverage. These hurdles can be lowered if rich  countries release their production more quickly for others to buy, and if more  bilateral and multilateral aid funding is made available to support  public-health systems and vaccine purchases.
  Make no mistake: China  will likely play a large and perhaps leading role in this process. As the  world’s biggest producer of COVID-19 vaccines (albeit of a less sophisticated  variety than the Western ones), China will have immunized its own population by  September or thereabouts, giving it abundant spare production capacity to  supply the world (along with funding).
  That is why the  Western pledges at the G7, welcome as they are, are in reality somewhat behind  the curve. The G7 countries are offering their billion doses on a timetable convenient  to them, divided between late 2021 and 2022, but actual demand from poor and  middle-income countries is coming much sooner than that. This means that China  is being given a huge market and diplomatic opportunity of stepping into the  breach with perhaps 500 million doses every month during the last four months  of 2021.
  If that happens, the  surprisingly short timescale indicated by our vaccine countdown can actually be  shortened further. Rural parts of Africa and unstable parts of Latin America  will face the biggest challenges, but these can be overcome with aid from  rich-country governments, including China’s, and from big philanthropic  foundations. Mass vaccination campaigns in the developing world are nothing  new. Success depends on generosity, political will, and a belief that the  solution is both necessary and achievable.
  With new variants  emerging rapidly and new outbreaks in places that had seemed to have the virus  under control, COVID-19 remains a global problem. We should know by now that it  demands a global solution. The recent increase in supplies and the Global  Commission’s vaccine countdown indicate that what we need is well within reach.
Home » Opinion » Herd Immunity Is Closer Than You Think
Herd Immunity Is Closer Than You Think
| Bill Emmott
            