| Literature DB >> 35162361 |
Yiqing Su1,2, Yanyan Li2, Yanggui Liu2.
Abstract
Vaccination plays an essential role in the fight against Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19). The currently insufficient vaccine production capacity makes it difficult to balance supply with demand, which has led to a contradiction between command demand and limited supply. According to analysis based on game theory, the attributes of COVID-19 vaccines vary with supply strategies formulated by vaccine-producing countries. This means that vaccine-receiving countries can only be motivated to prepare operable vaccine distribution plans through the supply of COVID-19 vaccines as global public goods. The rational distribution of global public goods must be guaranteed by a global supply institution system. To that end, Elinor Ostrom's eight design principles provide a basis for designing such a global supply system. This paper proposes a nested institution solution for guaranteeing the global supply of COVID-19 vaccines based on the design principles, which include clearly defined boundaries, proportional equivalence between benefits and costs, collective-choice arrangements, monitoring, graduated sanctions, conflict-resolution mechanisms, minimal recognition of rights to organize, and nested enterprises. To win this global fight against COVID-19, COVID-19 vaccines must not only be treated as global public goods, but countries must also be urged to coordinate cooperation in global institutional design, thus ensuring that COVID-19 vaccines can truly benefit all mankind.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19 vaccines; global public goods; institutional design; nested institution
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35162361 PMCID: PMC8834692 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19031339
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Classification of economic goods.
| Competitiveness | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Low | High | ||
| exclusiveness | Low | Pure public goods | Common pool resources |
| High | Club goods | Private goods | |
Supply mode of economic goods.
| Classification of Economic Goods | Representative Figure | Dominant Supply Mode |
|---|---|---|
| Pure public goods | Samuelson | Government supply, Joint supply |
| Club goods | Buchanan | Government supply, Private supply |
| Common-pool resources | Ostrom | System design according to local conditions |
| Private goods | Adam Smith | Market supply |
Figure 1Common pool resources’ attributes of COVID-19 vaccines under open supply strategy.
Figure 2Results of different supply strategies of COVID-19 vaccines.
Ostrom’s eight design principles (adapted from Ostrom 1990).
| Number | Design Principles | Content |
|---|---|---|
| DP1 | Clearly defined boundaries | The boundaries of the resource system and the individuals or households with rights to harvest resource units are clearly defined. |
| DP2 | Proportional equivalence between benefits and costs | Rules specifying the amount of resource products that a user is allocated are related to local conditions and to rules requiring labor, materials, and/or money inputs. |
| DP3 | Collective-choice arrangements | Many of the individuals affected by harvesting and protection rules are included in the group who can modify these rules. |
| DP4 | Monitoring | Monitors, who actively audit biophysical conditions and user |
| DP5 | Graduated sanctions | Users who violate rules-in-use are likely to receive graduated sanctions from other users, from officials accountable to these users, or from both. |
| DP6 | Conflict-resolution mechanisms | Users and their officials have rapid access to low-cost, local arenas to resolve conflict among users or between users and officials. |
| DP7 | Minimal recognition of rights to organize | The rights of users to devise their own institutions are not challenged by external governmental authorities, and users have long-term tenure rights to the resource. |
| DP8 | Nested enterprises | Appropriation, provision, monitoring, enforcement, conflict resolution, and governance activities are organized in multiple layers of nested enterprises. |
Figure 3Nested institution to ensure the global supply of COVID-19 vaccine.