Context: Government of India must adopt the policy of free vaccination to avoid the costs of a freewheeling epidemic and realise the positive externalities of herd immunity.
Arguments in Favour of Free Vaccination Policy
Success of past free vaccination drive: free vaccination for smallpox, cholera, polio, typhoid, yellow fever, rubella, tuberculosis has helped in their eradication and control.
Avoid the economic cost of the epidemic: preventing infections via lockdowns causes economic disruptions in terms of loss of workdays, future productivity and employment.
Over 21 million salaried workers lost jobs in 2020-21 due to economic contraction.
Absence of exact data on Covid-19 R0 rates (helps in determining the level of herd immunity): makes a strong case for free vaccination drive for all
An R0 of 1 indicates that only one person will be infected by an infected individual. An R0 of above 1 indicates chances of an epidemic.
R0 of 2 implies vaccination of over 50% of the population for achieving herd immunity)
India has over 11 million registered Covid cases and 158,000 deaths, but seropositive rates indicate much higher infections (due to high asymptomatic infections).
Globally accepted policy: All of EU, US, China, Brazil are providing vaccines free without ado.
Avoid the dual-pricing system: Insufficient government capacity or efficiency forces many to pay private hospitals for vaccination (for which they have to pay Rs 250).
No need for identification: People won’t take multiple doses because it’s free. Everyone who can’t pay and can’t visit a government hospital, for whatever reason, remains unprotected and at risk.