Europe faces identity crisis over vaccine trade
war
Free-trading Eurocrats want to avoid protectionism but
are facing strong political headwinds.
BY JAKOB HANKE
VELA
January 26,
2021 9:14 pm
https://www.politico.eu/article/coronavirus-vaccine-europe-faces-identity-crisis-trade-war/
Europe has
three days to decide how tough it will be in a global fight over restricting
vaccine exports.
Infuriated
that vaccine deliveries from Anglo-Swedish pharmaceutical giant AstraZeneca
will fall short, European officials are raising the prospect of export
restrictions on coronavirus vaccines produced in the EU, with Brussels
promising a mechanism "by the end of the week."
The big
question is how far the mechanism will go. That dilemma is now pitting
liberal-minded Eurocrats in Brussels against national politicians, who are
facing growing public outrage over the EU's botched vaccine rollout compared
with faster deliveries in the U.S., U.K. and Israel.
While
political heavyweights like German Health Minister Jens Spahn want EU countries
to be able to restrict exports outright, this is anathema to the evangelical
free-traders who run the EU's overarching trade policy in Brussels.
Indeed, the
call for export restrictions is pushing the European Commission's trade
department into an excruciating position because it is normally one of the
leading global forces preaching against trade restrictions and protectionism as
a way of dealing with economic shocks. It is also acutely aware that such
restrictions could sour relations with EU allies and neighbors who rely on
vaccines produced in the EU.
In a sign
of the Commission's internal agonizing about what restrictions to propose this
week, EU trade chief Valdis Dombrovskis said on Tuesday that this week's
measure was not "primarily" intended to block consignments of drugs
at ports. Instead, it was meant to create more accountability among pharmaceutical
companies by shining a light on when and where they are shipping their
medicines — a subject on which the EU is struggling to get satisfactory answers
from Big Pharma executives.
“It’s worth
noting that we are not planning to impose an export ban or export
restrictions,” he said when asked by POLITICO about the new law. “It’s
primarily an export transparency mechanism to bring clarity on production
capacity of manufacturers, number of doses produced, at which production
centers, how many doses sold to which countries, how many doses exported. So
primarily it’s a matter of transparency on the deliveries.”
And despite
some of the saber-rattling rhetoric coming from the EU, British Health
Secretary Matt Hancock said he was confident that a blockade was not on the
cards. “I’m sure that we can work with the EU to ensure that, while
transparency is welcome, that no block is put in place. I’m glad to say that
I’m confident, having spoken to the chief executives both of Pfizer and
AstraZeneca, I’m confident of the supply of vaccine into the U.K. I’m confident
that won’t be disrupted."
U.K. Prime
Minister Boris Johnson has also called on the EU not to erect actual barriers.
Divergent
visions
While the
free-trading trade officials in Brussels are technically in charge of this
week's measures, two people close to the decision said there is no guarantee
that they will necessarily win the fight over the shape of the new mechanism
and restrict it to the monitoring of transparency.
Politics
are looming large and the Commission must contend with an increasingly brutal
public backlash over why Europe it is lagging so far behind many nations in the
public vaccination campaign.
People
working in the Commission said there was a repeat of the power dynamics that
last year forced the EU to restrict exports of masks and other safety gear.
Last
spring, Germany and France blocked exports of masks outside their own borders.
Fearing a collapse of the single market, the Commission publicly called for the
removal of such restrictions, but Berlin only agreed to remove its ban after
the Commission imposed restrictions on exports outside of the EU.
Under that
EU-wide export authorization scheme, EU producers of masks, protective
spectacles and garments had to ask their national governments for an export
authorization before selling such products outside of the bloc.
Once again,
Germany is one of the driving forces for strong action. “A legal obligation for
authorization of vaccine exports at EU level makes sense," Spahn said on
Twitter Monday, reiterating this point in several TV interviews.
Spahn,
considered a potential candidate to run for chancellor in this year’s national
election, has in recent months faced intense criticism over outsourcing vaccine
purchases to the EU. Critics from the Socialist Democrats and from within his
own center-right Christian Democrats blamed that decision for delays in the
roll-out of vaccines compared to countries such as Israel, the U.S. and U.K.
Escalation
risk
Experts and
EU lawmakers were quick to warn that any export restrictions could promptly
escalate into an all-out trade war over vaccine supplies. One of the major
dangers is that the supply chains to make the vaccines are often interwoven
across several countries, so the effect of mutually escalating restrictions on
vaccines could have a knock-on effect on production.
"Not
long ago, the COVID-19 vaccine was still a 'public good,'" said Bernd
Lange, chair of the European Parliament's trade committee. "Now the fight
for it has well and truly begun."
The message
that even the supposedly open markets of the EU were willing to play the export
restriction card would also risk a global domino effect.
"I
think the opponents and the cynics of globalization are going to have a field
day," said Simon Evenett, professor of international trade at the
University of St. Gallen in Switzerland. "Even among the industrialized
countries, they are now fighting over who gets it: We have the EU about to
impose an export authorization scheme, which is a fancy way of curbing exports,
allowing their member states to curb exports."
The
European Parliament's Lange warned that any new measures would hurt the EU's
credibility internationally, as it has so long lectured other countries against
such policies.
“I believe
this is a double standard," Lange said. "In the World Trade
Organization, the EU is advocating for the free flow of medicines against
COVID. I would find it strange if we now imposed measures that restrict
contrary to that principle and restrict exports.”
Evenett
reckoned the threat to supply chains would ultimately make countries step back
from the brink.
"You
could imagine that some countries which produce the ingredients for these
vaccines are going to hold up the exports there," he said. "We
desperately need here some very sensible heads to be bashed together and to
come up with some type of response which gets enough vaccines out to everyone."
Charlie Cooper,
Sarah Anne Aarup and David M. Herszenhorn contributed reporting.


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