Bill Gates wants to add US$4 billion to the fiscal stimulus package under debate in Congress so that poor countries can get Covid-19 vaccines. Photo / Jeenah Moon, The New York Times
The Covid-19 pandemic has set back public health efforts by years. But in an interview, the tech philanthropist expressed hope about new avenues for foreign aid.
On Monday, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation released the fourth of its annual Goalkeeper reports, which track the slow but steady progress theworld has made toward more than a dozen health-related goals set forth by the United Nations in 2015.
This year's was unrelentingly grim. The coronavirus pandemic has scorched away years of work: More families are in dire poverty, malnutrition is increasing, far fewer children are getting immunised.
The assessment comes as the United States, stung harder by the virus than any other country, is retreating from the global health stage and seems focused primarily on saving itself. Could it ever return to its role as the world's leader in both competence and generosity? In an interview with The New York Times, Gates devoted a half-hour to explaining why he was optimistic that it would.
"It's my disposition," he said. "Plus, I've got to call these people up and make the pitch to them that this really makes sense — and I totally, totally believe it makes sense."
By "these people," he was referring to leading figures in the White House and Congress, whom he has personally lobbied to do "this": namely, add an extra US$4 billion ($5.9 billion) to the fiscal stimulus package now under debate in Congress so that poor countries can get Covid-19 vaccines.
Ultimately his goal is far more ambitious: to double American foreign aid from less than 0.25 per cent of gross domestic product to 0.5 per cent or more. He sees the pandemic as an opportunity to do that.
"As they say," he added cheerily, "the US government — after it's tried every other thing — does the right thing."
As he did in Silicon Valley while battling competitors and antitrust regulators, Gates can calculate his chances of success with a ruthless logic.
That has rarely been as true as it is now, as a once-in-a-century pandemic devastates the impoverished countries where he focuses his giving.
The damage has been wrought less by the virus — so far it has killed much smaller percentages of the populations of Asia and Africa than of the Americas and Western Europe — than by the economic effect, which has been far greater in countries where people and governments "have no spare reserves to draw on," Gates said.
The collapse of tourism, declines in remittances from relatives working abroad, the shutdown of ports, mines and oil wells, school closings and new stresses on fragile health care systems have all created enormous suffering.
Not since 1870 have so many countries been in recession at once, according to the Goalkeeper report. Between 1990 and 2020, the percentage of the world's population living in extreme poverty, which is now defined as living on less than $2 a day, shrank to less than 7 per cent from 37 per cent. In just the past few months, 37 million people have fallen back below the line, the report estimated.
"The longer the pandemic lasts, the worse its economic scars will be," it added.
The percentage of the world's children who received all the vaccines recommended by the World Health Organisation rose last year to a record high of 84 per cent. That figure has now dropped to 70 per cent — back where it was 25 years ago. Deaths from malaria, malnutrition, childbirth complications and diseases like measles and diphtheria have begun to increase.
Nonetheless, Gates was optimistic that the lost ground would be recovered "in two to three years." The pipelines of money from tourism, remittances, World Bank loans and other sources would begin flowing again as soon as the whole world was vaccinated, ending the pandemic; he expected that to be accomplished by sometime in 2022.
Until then, however, there will be a period of intense pain and even greater inequity between rich countries and poor ones.
One of the starkest conclusions in the foundation's report is that nearly twice as many deaths could be prevented if Covid-19 vaccines were distributed to all countries based on their populations rather than to the 50 richest countries first.
That will not happen soon, Gates conceded. The Trump administration has publicly refused to join the international collaborative agreement known as Covax, under which the World Health Organisation; GAVI, the Vaccine Alliance; and the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations have joined forces to make sure both rich and poor countries receive new coronavirus vaccines simultaneously.
Instead, Operation Warp Speed, the Trump administration's unilateral effort to fast-track vaccine development, has paid out US$11 billion ($16 billion) to six vaccine companies in return for ensuring that at least 100 million doses from each company, and options for millions more, are exclusively earmarked for the United States.
Although that position "looks selfish," Gates said, he did not feel it was unjustified. Realistically, he said, "You're not going to succeed in getting the US to treat itself as just a random 5 per cent of the world's population." American taxpayers, he noted, have paid two-thirds of the costs of the clinical trials and of manufacturing doses even before the trials end.
Absent that money, the only available vaccines would be those from Russia or China, which Gates considered untested and potentially weak. "You can't call up Johnson & Johnson or AstraZeneca and say, 'Hey, here's a chance to lose US$500 million."
If just three of the several vaccines that the United States is backing succeed, he said, the country would have more doses than it could use, and the rest could be shared with the world.
Also, Gates said he expected that by early next year, regardless of who wins the presidential election, the United States would come around to paying much of the estimated US$4 billion needed to get vaccines to all the world's poor.
He noted that Congress had repeatedly kept funds for Aids, malaria and childhood vaccines in the foreign aid budget, despite numerous attempts by the White House over the past decade to slash those items; the programs are popular both with liberals and Christian conservatives.
And doing so is in America's interest, Gates said. In a world dependent on tourism and business travel, no country is safe until every country is: "There's a better global argument for generosity on this one than there is for HIV or malaria."
Gates has lobbied both Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and Senator Mitch McConnell, the Senate majority leader, to put the US$4 billion for vaccines in the deadlocked stimulus bill and said he was "60-70 per cent confident" that the item would survive the negotiations.
Congressional leaders "have a sense that the US has a moral presence in the world," he said. And the payoff on that investment "will be in the trillions."
But his ultimate ambitions are far greater. Once the coronavirus threat is gone, he said, "we should go after the modest U.S. foreign aid budget and try to get it to double."
Surveys consistently show that Americans are aware that the United States is the world's largest donor of foreign aid. But when asked to estimate what percentage of the nation's gross domestic product goes toward to foreign aid, the typical guess is 5 per cent. In fact, the real figure is less than 0.25 per cent.
By that measure, Britain and Germany spend almost three times as much, and Sweden and Norway are four times as generous, spending a full 1 per cent of GDP.
This pandemic offers a chance for the United States to step up, Gates said.