China will participate in a World Health Organization- backed initiative to provide a coronavirus vaccine to developing countries, filling a gap in global health leadership after US President Donald Trump rejected the program.
Beijing on Thursday joined the $18 billion
Covax initiative that aims to give lower-income countries the same access to
vaccines as richer nations. The move came despite China leading the world with several
vaccines in advanced stages of research and development and with extensive production capacity, spokeswoman Hua Chunying said in a statement on Friday.
We are taking this concrete step to ensure equitable distribution of
vaccines, especially in developing countries, and we hope that more capable countries will also join and support the
Covax project, he said.
The measure, which is released about three weeks after the deadline set by the initiative, allows China to positively differentiate itself from the United States. while tensions rise between the world's two largest economies in sectors ranging from trade to technology to human rights.
The Trump Administration withdrew from the WHO and declined to join
Covax. A White House spokesman said the United States would not be restricted by multilateral organizations influenced by the corrupt World Health Organization and China.
In May, Chinese President Xi Jinping promised that the
vaccines developed by China would become a global "public good" to be shared by all.
The decision could also help improve the country's image after receiving widespread criticism from abroad about how it handled the initial outbreak in the central city of Wuhan, where
Covid-19 originated last year. A global survey released this week by the Pew Research Center revealed that negative perceptions of China reached record levels in the United States and other major economies.
In many ways, this is a soft power victory for China, coming amid a lot of negative information in other fields in recent weeks, said Nicholas Thomas, associate professor of health security at the City University of Hong Kong.
According to Thomas, it is a victory facilitated by President Trump's rash decision to withdraw from the WHO and his shortsighted refusal to engage the United States with
Covax. Now, anything the United States does in this area will look like an attempt to tie China, when the United States was expected to lead.
Covid-19 continues to spread in the United States, infecting even Trump himself. His Democratic contender,
Joe Biden, who has a double-digit lead over Trump in national polls, promised in July to rejoin the WHO if he wins the November 3 election and restore our leadership on the world stage.
China's participation is also a big win for
Covax, as the ability to deliver doses to even a fraction of China's 1.4 billion people would increase critical mass, increasing the alliance's bargaining power.
Covax is led by the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI) and the Global Alliance for
Vaccines and Immunization (GAVI). It currently has nine
vaccines in development and nine under evaluation in its portfolio, aiming to secure 2 billion doses by 2021.
While details of China's funding commitment were not immediately disclosed, Hua told reporters at a regular press conference in Beijing later Friday that the country would supply doses of
vaccines to 15 million people as part of its first purchase within
Covax - which is only equivalent to about 1% of its population - so as not to reduce the amount of
vaccines available to other countries. Participating governments can normally request
vaccine doses that cover more than 10% of their population.
This decision was made after deliberation and communication with the WHO and
Covax, Hua said. This is a win-win result for all parties, he continued.
More than 170 economies are now involved with
Covax, deals are in the pipeline for
vaccines, and the program is nearing its initial fundraising goal to support low-income countries, Gavi CEO Seth Berkley said in a statement sent. by email.
China's decision gives even more impetus to our efforts to ensure global and equitable access to
covid-19
vaccines, he said.
China has pioneered the development of
vaccines against the
coronavirus. Nine of its candidate
vaccines have entered clinical trials and four of them have already been approved for end-stage phase III clinical trials in foreign countries. Indonesia, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Morocco, and Egypt have formal agreements with China's major
vaccine manufacturers.
For Beijing, participation would provide a de facto insurance policy that would allow it access to any successfully developed
vaccine. China could also support the manufacture of a successful
vaccine, regardless of which country develops it.
The potential role that Chinese
vaccine manufacturers will play in global distribution under
Covax will not only boost the domestic industry, but will also help add much-needed credibility to
vaccines developed in China, said Xiaoqing Lu Boynton, consultant. from Albright Stonebridge Group, which focuses on healthcare and life sciences.
It is also a good public relations strategy.
China needs more friends, said Yoshikazu Kato, an adjunct professor at the Asia Global Institute at the University of Hong Kong who specializes in Chinese diplomacy. This is why China believes that it needs a clearer message to participate internationally.