The other day a reader of my
blog post on Covid-19, with quite an analytical mind, remarked: “I am glad the
blogger has appropriately paid compliments to the Mumbai commissioner Mr Chahal
for his commendable handling of the wave… He could have dealt in more detail
the two main causes for the surge of second wave one is Kumbh mela and the
second reason… the lack of attention of … The US has paid advance amount to
Pfizer and booked large number of Vaccine doses even in the 1st wave
itself anticipating 2nd wave. The blogger should have emphasized on
these two super spreading events.”
True, I should have also dwelt
on these missing links, but as I was more concerned about drawing the attention
of readers to the excellent work done by Mr Chahal and his dedicated team in
addressing the challenge posed by the 2nd wave so effectively, and
kindle a question in their minds: “How is it no other city thought of at least
emulating BMC?” I made only passing remark about the issues raised by the
reader.
Nevertheless, ever since I read my esteemed reader’s remark, particularly about the US paying Pfizer and BioNTech $1.95 bn as advance to produce and deliver 100 million doses of their Covid-19 vaccine if it proves to be safe and effective and on receiving regulatory approval for emergency use, I have been wondering at this offbeat act of President Donald Trump as early as in July 2020.
Indeed, the US government had
made an attempt to assemble a portfolio of vaccines under its ‘Operation Warp
Speed’ programme by entering into such financial agreements with vaccine
developers such as Novavax, Johnson & Johnson, Moderna and AstraZeneca
involving a financial outlay of about $3.70 bn.
I call this move of Mr Trump
offbeat, because, a study carried out by Harvard TH Chan School of Public
Health found that “errors were committed in the pandemic’s earliest stages.”
The report further observed that the Trump’s administration’s initial US travel
ban of January 31 was applied only to non-US travellers coming from China
though the virus was “already known to be present in Italy, Iran, Spain,
Germany and the UK”. It went on to say that “The evidence suggests that
ineffective national policies and responses, especially as compared to those of
other wealthy nations … have been driving the terrible toll of covid-19 … in
the US”.
Nor did President Trump worried
of the pandemic: While Dr Robert Kadlee, the top disaster response official at
the Health and Human Services Department, was busy in convening the White House
corona virus task force as early as on February 21 with an urgent agenda to
arrest the spread of virus, President Trump was predicting that by April, “when
it gets a little warmer, it [virus] miraculously goes away”.
Noticing the disregard of the US President to corona virus, Prof. Tim Naftali, clinical associate professor of history at NYU, wrote on January 19, 2021 in The Atlantic: “in the face of a devastating pandemic, he [Trump] was grossly derelict, unable or unwilling to marshal the requisite resources to save lives while encouraging behaviour that spread the disease”.
But this very President, surprisingly took a very right decision of paying
advances to vaccine manufacturers to make the vaccines available—once they have
proven their safety and efficacy and regulators have approved them—to vaccinate
the citizens with no further loss of time. What a bold decision!
Intriguingly, this timely and
rightful decision of President Trump reminds us of what a Scottish philosopher
and economist, Adam Smith said in his famous book, An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations, some
240 years back: “It is not
from the benevolence of the butcher, the brewer or the baker that we expect our
dinner, but from their regard to their own self-interest. We address ourselves
not to their humanity but to their self-love, and never talk to them of our own
necessities, but of their advantages.”
Of course, Adam smith, introducing
this as an economic thought that highlights how surprisingly “… an individual
by pursuing his own interest, he frequently promotes that of the society more
effectually than when he really intends to promote it”, set out the mechanism
by which he felt economic society operated.
Now my wonder is: Are political parties and their leaders any way differently operating from this principle? Take for instance our own political climate, we often hear every political party and its leaders talking about their intent to serve people, particularly the interests of the marginalised, those oppressed and the suppressed lot of the society. Leaders establish new parties to serve dalits, minorities and the downtrodden better. Even leaders change parties—yes, even quite frequently—all in their anxiety to serve people better. But the underlying intent is obvious: winning the elections, isn't it?
Isn’t that in their endeavour for winning the elections, political parties/leaders also do good things for the society without even knowing how much good one is doing? In other words, a leader is often “led by an 'invisible hand' (the desire for winning the next election) to promote an end which was no part of his intention”.
That’s precisely the motive behind Mr Trump's paying advances to vaccine manufacturers for developing and supplying vaccines quickely—just three months ahead of Presidential elections. It is because of the invisibility of such underlying reasons behind leader;s action,often times we fail to understand easily why political parties and their leaders do what they do, why do and do not take certain decisions and the timing of such decisions, etc. Sometimes their acts, of course, also prove futile to their own interests!
In the same vein, some of their decisions go against the interests of the ruled. Hence, it is essential for leaders to always remember what Adam Smith said: “The learned [leader?] ignore the evidence of their senses to preserve the coherence of the ideas of their imagination". Indeed, it is expected of a leader to tolerate multifaceted truths and divergent points of view rather than "Subjection to his Empire tyrannous". And that's what commoners aspired for, since ages.
Any way that is the game of
politics, but what India needs in these Covid-days is not quarrelling on who did what wrong and
when, rather it is time for political parties of all hues to bury their
differences, at least temporarily, and to come together as a monolith to focus
on annihilating the corona virus from India sooner!
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