Is the vaccine policy being driven by public, private or political interest, asks Anil Singh
India desperately needs to halt this second Covid-19 wave for the sake of its sagging economy. If left unchecked, the new wave could completely derail Indiaâs economic recovery. Much of this can be avoided if the government were to bear the cost of the vaccination programme, which some economists estimate could be as little as 0.3 per cent of the GDP
Earlier this year, India was donating Covid vaccines to the world; now, India is running short of vaccines and its private hospitals are charging some of the steepest rates in the world for it; Rs 700 to Rs 1,500 per dose. The pandemic has reached remote villages, thanks in no small measure to the Union governmentâs stubborn insistence on a Maha Kumbh at Haridwar and protracted poll campaigns in four states. This, when less than two per cent of the population has been vaccinated.
Why experts are not happy with India s COVID-19 vaccine procurement, pricing policy – The Island
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Why experts are not happy with India s COVID-19 vaccine procurement, pricing policy
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