WASHINGTON, DC:
The Heads of the World Bank Group, International Monetary Fund, World
Health Organization, and World Trade Organization today convened for the
first meeting of the Task Force on COVID-19 Vaccines, Therapeutics and
Diagnostics for Developing Countries. They issued the following joint
statement:
“As many countries are struggling with new variants and a third wave of
COVID-19 infections, accelerating access to vaccines becomes even more
critical to ending the pandemic everywhere and achieving broad-based
growth. We are deeply concerned about the limited vaccines,
therapeutics, diagnostics, and support for deliveries available to
developing countries. Urgent action is needed now to arrest the rising
human toll due to the pandemic, and to halt further divergence in the
economic recovery between advanced economies and the rest.
We have formed a Task Force, as a “war room” to help track, coordinate
and advance delivery of COVID-19 health tools to developing countries
and to mobilize relevant stakeholders and national leaders to remove
critical roadblocks—in support of the priorities set out by World Bank
Group, IMF, WHO, and WTO including in the joint statements of
June 1
and
June 3, and in the IMF staff’s $50 billion
proposal.
At today’s first meeting, we discussed the urgency of increasing
supplies of vaccines, therapeutics, and diagnostics for developing
countries. We also looked at practical and effective ways to track,
coordinate and advance delivery of COVID-19 vaccines to developing
countries.
As an urgent first step, we are calling on G20 countries to (1) embrace
the target of at least 40 percent in every country by end-2021, and at
least 60 percent by the first half of 2022, (2) share more vaccine
doses now, including by ensuring at least 1 billion doses are shared
with developing countries in 2021 starting immediately, (3) provide
financing, including grants and concessional financing, to close the
residual gaps, including for the ACT-Accelerator, and (4) remove all
barriers to export of inputs and finished vaccines, and other barriers
to supply chain operations.
In addition, to enhance transparency we agreed to compile data on dose
requests (by type and quantity), contracts, deliveries (including
through donations), and deployments of COVID-19 vaccines to low and
middle-income countries—and make it available as part of a shared
country-level dashboard. We also agreed to take steps to address
hesitancy, and to coordinate efforts to address gaps in readiness, so
countries are positioned to receive, deploy and administer vaccines.”