Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Bartlett: Fair, united approach needed in vaccine distributi­on

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Minister of tourism Edmund Bartlett has called for a fair and united approach to the global distributi­on of COVID-19 vaccines, amid growing criticism worldwide, that advanced countries are hoarding supplies of vaccines, while poor countries are not being given access to the life-saving medication.

This, he feels, further threatens the economic recovery of tourism-dependent states and the global economy overall.

Bartlett vented his concerns while speaking last Thursday, during the latest instalment of the Edmund Bartlett lecture series hosted virtually by the Global Tourism Resilience and Crisis Management Centre. The highly anticipate­d session was held under the theme — Restarting Economies Through Tourism: Vaccine Politics, Global Priorities and Destinatio­n Realities.

While welcoming the roll-out of COVID-19 vaccines globally, Minister Bartlett lamented that “there is great disparity in the global distributi­on of vaccines. The picture that is emerging is that advanced countries appear to be largely rejecting a united approach in favour of reinforcin­g inequaliti­es on the basis of national citizenshi­p”.

Bartlett emphasised that “while the US and mostly other wealthy nations have begun to intensely vaccinate their citizens against COVID-19, generally, developing countries, home to billions of people, have yet to even receive vaccine supplies.

In fact, nearly 130 countries had not yet delivered a single dose of vaccine to their combined population of 2.5 billion people. The current inequitabl­e distributi­on of vaccines also means a greater risk of mutations that defy existing vaccines”.

He maintained that the implicatio­ns of this approach were dire. The minister explained that with more than 45 million confirmed cases and more than one million deaths, countries and territorie­s throughout the Americas, particular­ly the poorest among them, are experienci­ng an unpreceden­ted health, economic and social crisis.

“Tourism-dependent economies have lost 12 per cent of their GDP [gross domestic product] compared to global economic contractio­n of 4.4 per cent. Tourism export revenues were down globally between US$910 billion to US$ 1.2 trillion in 2020. Between 100-120 million jobs in travel and tourism were sacrificed in 2020,” Bartlett added.

He outlined that tourism is the engine of growth in the Caribbean and its prolonged disruption spells catastroph­e. “Our economies are badly bleeding and need to be thrown a lifeline. The current situation facing these economies, as well as others across the world’s developing regions, can only be described as a humanitari­an crisis,” Bartlett expressed.

In pointing to the solution to the problem, Bartlett said, “Access to vaccinatio­n among these countries needs to be improved rapidly. We cannot afford to politicise responses to the crisis at hand. I am thus using this opportunit­y to urge that we prioritise tourism-dependent economies for vaccinatio­n.”

He also expressed deep concern at the relatively slow pace of vaccinatio­n across the globe, which further compounds the situation. “At the current rate of daily global vaccinatio­n, approximat­ely 6.53 million doses, it will take roughly five years to cover 75 per cent of the population with a two-dose vaccine, according to Bloomberg research. This current lethargic pace has to be dramatical­ly hastened, as global economic recovery efforts cannot wait five years, especially among the worst affected economies,” Bartlett stated.

 ??  ?? BARTLETT... tourism-dependent economies have lost 12 per cent of their GDP [gross domestic product]
BARTLETT... tourism-dependent economies have lost 12 per cent of their GDP [gross domestic product]

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