A game theoretic approach identifies conditions that foster vaccine-rich to vaccine-poor country donation of surplus vaccines

Adam Lampert*, Raanan Sulitzeanu-Kenan*, Pieter Vanhuysse, Markus Tepe

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Abstract

Background: Scarcity in supply of COVID-19 vaccines and severe international inequality in their allocation present formidable challenges. These circumstances stress the importance of identifying the conditions under which self-interested vaccine-rich countries will voluntarily donate their surplus vaccines to vaccine-poor countries.

Methods: We develop a game-theoretical approach to identify the vaccine donation strategy that is optimal for the vaccine-rich countries as a whole; and to determine whether the optimal strategy is stable (Nash equilibrium or self-enforcing agreement). We examine how the results depend on the following parameters: the fraction of the global unvaccinated population potentially covered if all vaccine-rich countries donate their entire surpluses; the expected emergence rate of variants of concern (VOC); and the relative cost of a new VOC outbreak that is unavoidable despite having surplus doses.

Results: We show that full or partial donations of the surplus stock are optimal in certain parameter ranges. Notably, full surplus donation is optimal if the global amount of surplus vaccines is sufficiently large. Within a more restrictive parameter region, these optimal strategies are also stable.

Conclusions: Our results imply that, under certain conditions, coordination between vaccine-rich countries can lead to significant surplus donations even by strictly self-interested countries. However, if the global amount that countries can donate is small, we expect no contribution from self-interested countries. The results provide guidance to policy makers in identifying the circumstances in which coordination efforts for vaccine donation are likely to be most effective.

Original languageEnglish
Article number107
JournalCommunications Medicine
Volume2
ISSN2730-664X
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 20. Aug 2022

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  • Can we vaccinate the world?

    Vanhuysse, P., 24. Oct 2022, Oslo : ScienceNordic.

    Research output: Other contributionNet publication - Internet publicationCommunication

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  • Kan vi vaccinere hele verden?

    Translated title of the contribution: Can we vaccinate the world?: Self-interest seems to be a dominant motivating factor for vaccine-rich countries to donate - and it gives modest hope about win-win global cooperation during pandemicsVanhuysse, P., 12. Oct 2022, Videnskab.dk.

    Research output: Other contributionNet publication - Internet publicationCommunication

    Open Access
  • Können wir die ganze Welte impfen? Solide Grundlagen für eine bescheidene Hoffnung bei der Bekämpfung globaler Pandemien.

    Translated title of the contribution: Can we vaccinate the world? : Hard foundations for modest hope in fighting global pandemicsVanhuysse, P., 17. Nov 2022, Duisburg and Bremen : Deutsches Institut für Interdisziplinäre Sozialpolitikforschung.

    Research output: Other contributionNet publication - Internet publicationCommunication

    Open Access

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