Export Restrictions During Global Health Crises: The International Community Can and Must do Better

Laura Puccio, A. Sapir
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Abstract

COVID-19 represents one of the biggest pandemic faced by humanity in recent times, spreading to almost all countries and territories on all continents. Because it spread so suddenly and quickly, COVID-19 produced an unparalleled increase in demand in personal protective equipment, medical products and devices, which far outpaced the ability to increase supply. The outcome was a shortage in these products, which lead several countries to introduce export restrictions. This paper offers a legal and economic assessment of these export restrictions and argues that the current international rules – administered respectively by the World Health Organisation (WHO) and the World Trade Organisation (WTO) – are ill-suited to deal with critical shortages that are likely to arise during, or at least in the early days of, a pandemic. Absent better rules and greater international cooperation, there was no alternative to the proliferation of export restrictions. The paper proposes the establishment of a new normative framework involving both WHO and WTO to avert supply shortages and export restrictions during a pandemic.
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全球卫生危机期间的出口限制:国际社会能够而且必须做得更好
2019冠状病毒病是近年来人类面临的最大流行病之一,已蔓延到所有大洲的几乎所有国家和地区。由于疫情传播如此突然和迅速,COVID-19导致对个人防护装备、医疗产品和器械的需求空前增加,远远超过了增加供应的能力。结果是这些产品短缺,导致一些国家实行出口限制。这篇论文对这些出口限制进行了法律和经济评估,并认为目前的国际规则——分别由世界卫生组织(WHO)和世界贸易组织(WTO)管理——不适合处理大流行期间或至少在大流行初期可能出现的严重短缺。如果没有更好的规则和更大的国际合作,出口限制的扩散就没有其他选择。该文件建议建立一个涉及世卫组织和世界贸易组织的新的规范框架,以避免大流行期间的供应短缺和出口限制。
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