Trade Therapy

Page 23

Overview

Cooperation beyond trade agreements Leveraging trade to strengthen pandemic defenses requires cooperation beyond trade agreements. The Multilateral Leaders Task Force on COVID-19 Vaccines, Therapeutics, and Diagnostics—set up by the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the World Bank, WHO, and the WTO—has called on the international community to step up its response to the current pandemic (WHO 2021). These efforts call for enhanced cooperation between states, nonstate actors, and international organizations. Cooperation between states and nonstate actors. The first goal should be to create mechanisms to finance access to essential products such as vaccines in low-income countries and to expand supply and distribution capacity during a crisis and ensure that these facilities do not disappear when demand declines. This effort would include cooperation to build manufacturing facilities in low- and middle-income countries with a latent comparative advantage whose relatively small populations reduce the risk that the host-country governments will intervene to meet domestic needs and the impact of a potential intervention. A second goal is to create mechanisms for sharing information on the operation of supply chains. A priority should be to establish a global clearinghouse to support production of critical medical products (ideally according to an internationally agreedupon list; see chapter 4) and serve as a platform for companies to report bottlenecks, improve visibility on production capacity and distribution, and identify measures to respond to the pandemic. Cooperation among international organizations. Efforts to strengthen collaboration should center on addressing the information and coordination gaps revealed by the pandemic, such as by

• • • •

Strengthening international standardization; Bolstering the capacity of national regulatory agencies; Developing good-practice policy frameworks for public procurement during crises; and Working with the private sector to encourage technology transfer and expand global emergency response capacity.

Multilateral organizations should continue cooperative efforts to provide transparency and achieve truly global health security. Building on the Multilateral Leaders Task Force, a jointly managed platform could ensure that information systems at the firm and supply chain levels are in place so data are available to all governments in an emergency.

NOTES 1. “Health Security: Overview” (n.d.), WHO website: https://www.who.int/health-topics/health​ -security#tab=tab_1. 2. Data on trade in medical goods are from the World Trade Organization (WTO) Integrated Database and the United Nations (UN) COMTRADE database.

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response for future pandemics

18min
pages 177-187

Notes

11min
pages 165-168

References

12min
pages 169-174

3.2 Low levels of GATS commitments in medical services trade

1min
page 147

commitments than in GATS

15min
pages 148-154

Cooperation beyond trade agreements for global health security

22min
pages 155-164

3.3 Potential commitments to bolster governance of trade policy in global crises

20min
pages 131-139

Trade policy cooperation to contribute to global health security

3min
pages 127-128

3.5 Traceability and illicit trade in medical products in Africa

5min
pages 145-146

B3.4.2 Types of health technology transfer programs reported by WTO developed country members under TRIPS Agreement, art. 66.2, 2018–20

5min
pages 142-144

3.2 Pricing policies for medical goods in the context of international trade

6min
pages 124-126

3.1 RTA cooperation during the COVID-19 pandemic

6min
pages 121-123

References

12min
pages 114-118

Policies affecting medical goods and services trade during the COVID-19 pandemic

2min
page 96

the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic (excluding China), January 2020 to March 2022

5min
pages 108-110

Notes

8min
pages 111-113

2.11 NRA decisions on WHO-EUL COVID-19 vaccines, December 2020 to February 2022

8min
pages 104-107

2.7 Government support measures for the medical goods sector predated the pandemic

6min
pages 93-95

2.4 Trade in medical services faces many trade barriers

5min
pages 88-90

References

8min
pages 71-74

2.2 WTO-notified quantitative restrictions, by type and member income group, 2018–19

3min
pages 80-81

2.3 Progress on implementation commitments under the WTO Trade Facilitation Agreement

10min
pages 82-86

1.22 The vaccine value chains

3min
pages 68-69

2.2 Development of export-oriented medical services in selected countries

2min
page 87

1.17 Exports of PPE soared early in the COVID-19 pandemic

0
page 63

Notes

2min
page 70

1.11 Trade in medical services hit US$78.6 billion in 2019

1min
page 56

1.3 Recent FDI trends in medical goods and services

2min
page 46

Personnel—and the blurred boundaries between trade in medical services and migration of health workers

5min
pages 43-44

1.6 MNCs’ contribution to global value added and exports varies by industry

3min
pages 50-51

Patterns in medical goods and services trade before the pandemic

2min
page 52

B1.1.1 Private health insurance schemes as a share of total health expenditure in selected countries, 2019

3min
pages 41-42

1.1 Access to health care: The role of (trade in) health insurance services

2min
page 40

Drivers of trade in medical goods and services

2min
page 36

of medical goods and services, leading to concentration

8min
pages 32-35

Notes

1min
page 23

1 Trade and trade-related policy actions to improve prevention, preparedness, and

2min
page 20

Deepening cooperation on medical goods and services trade

4min
pages 21-22

Stronger trade systems for better global health security

1min
page 25

References

1min
page 24

Organization of the report

1min
page 26

Reference

0
pages 27-28

The medical goods and services trade: Relevance, characteristics, and welfare implications

1min
page 29
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