In July 2020, United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres called for a ‘New Social Contract and a New Global Deal’ in response to exacerbated international inequalities made glaringly apparent during the COVID-19 pandemic.1 We argue that the COVID-19 pandemic and its economic, political and social crises illuminate the need for a revamped social contract on access to essential medicines and health technologies (including, eg, vaccines and diagnostics). The current social contract, which focuses on the nation-state’s responsibility for its population’s access to essential medicines and health technologies, struggles to sufficiently address the global provision of pharmaceutical products during an international health crisis. Indeed, the limits of the social contract can be observed in the real-time deployment of COVID-19 vaccines, where wealthier countries have purchased large orders of COVID-19 vaccines for the majority of their populations while lower resourced governments struggle to secure even paltry vaccine supplies.2 3
The COVID-19 pandemic is this generation’s canary in the coal mine, underscoring the ongoing and far-reaching global inequities that have been known to the access to medicines community since before the 2000s HIV/AIDS epidemic. Addressing this profound global injustice will require embracing a global model of the social contract, based on a set of principles grounded in global cooperation. Here, we present the shortcomings of the current social contract model for the transnational governance of essential medicines and health technologies, and we argue for a global social contract rooted in the health security and sustainable development agendas.
The concept of the social contract originates from Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s 1762 On the Social Contract; or, Principles of Political Right (“The Social Contract”).4 It describes the implicit agreement between the individual and state, wherein the state attains the authority to govern through the collective consent of its citizens. This mutually beneficial ‘contract’ enables and requires the state to protect the rights of citizens in return for its monopoly on power and control. The protection and promotion of public goods, such as public security and public morals, are essential elements in the pact. Public security and other civil rights (eg, the right to life or the right to obtain and impart information) are distinct yet highly interdependent on social rights (eg, right to health). Ensuring public security is also dependent on public access to ‘goods’ in the collective interest, such as safe and effective medicines, clean air and fresh water. For the social contract to operate effectively, state commitment and action to better society through the creation, protection and promotion of these public goods is needed. Moreover, the stewardship (and in some cases, production) of these public goods demands social cooperation.4 Essential medicines and health technologies are central to attaining health security and the maintenance of functioning health systems.5 Under social contract theory, the state is thus the primary actor responsible for shaping the political, economic and regulatory conditions required to ensure that medicines and health technologies are available, safe, effective, of assured quality and affordable for all.
Today, equitable access to essential medicines and health technologies on a global scale cannot be effectively promoted or guaranteed by a single state. Often this is because the state alone, as an individual unit, cannot sufficiently regulate or incentivise the transnational private pharmaceutical industry, which is an instrumental actor that assists states in fulfilling their obligations towards medicines under the social contract. The persistent challenges of disproportionate research and development (R&D) investments into diseases of the rich compared with poverty-associated diseases, regulatory capture, a lack of price and clinical data transparency and unethical drug promotion all belie the limits of a social contract focused on the nation-state.6–9
The global nature of the pharmaceutical and health product supply chain, as well as the sizeable role of the private sector in the R&D and production of these goods, requires high-level governance, often beyond what one or a small collection of domestic governments can muster in terms of both authority and resources. Therefore, transnational oversight and coordination is needed to move towards equitable global access to essential medicines and health technologies.
Global supply shortages create a tension between the state’s social contract to protect and provide essential medicines to its domestic population, and its duty under international human rights law to assist other states to access these same products. The existing social contract focuses on the power of individual states and legitimises ‘my-nation-first’ approaches during international health crises, even though this can run contrary to national public health interests over the long term. The COVID-19 pandemic illustrates how access to the very public goods that the social contract seeks to protect within national borders (eg, human health, public security) are inextricably linked to the health of all people and the eradication of (infectious) diseases beyond its borders. The ongoing risk to global public health with SARS-CoV-2 variants such as Omicron demonstrates this loud and clear. It is for this reason that a global social contract for the provision of health for all, through which states collaborate with each other in a coordinated fashion, is essential to ensuring equitable access to essential medicines and health technologies.
A global social contract specifically centred on the provision of goods in the interest of global health, rather than national public health, could ensure that individual state interests and incentives are aligned with long-term global health security, and more generally, with advancing the sustainable development goals related to health.
Central to a global social contract is the notion that it should address the provision of undersupplied global public goods.10 Accordingly, we propose four key features of a global social contract for global health security and sustainable development. The first two features describe critical content of a global social contract, and the last two features describe the governance of such a contract.
A global social contract is a governance concept that lays the foundation for how states should act towards one another as members of the international community, as regulators of the private pharmaceutical industry, and as guarantors of public goods (such as global health and health security) benefiting people worldwide. This foundation can serve many purposes, including as a departure point for rethinking state–state and state–industry relationships in the pharmaceutical sector. A global social contract also offers firm grounding for a global instrument on pandemic prevention, preparedness and response (colloquially known as a ‘pandemic treaty’), as well as a model to address the much broader global crisis of inequitable access to medicines and health technologies for infectious and non-communicable diseases.22 23
A pandemic treaty for the provision of medicines, vaccines and health technologies against pandemic pathogens is the subject of much debate. In November 2021, the member states of the WHO began negotiating a new international instrument for this purpose. Although access to medicines and health technologies for pandemics will likely be a key component of such an instrument, the overall content and contours of an agreement are being discussed. The four features of a global social contract for access to medicines and health technologies presented in this article can inform and potentially influence the development of a pandemic treaty.
The COVID-19 pandemic has starkly highlighted the failings of our current social contract and the lack of a global health governance system to ensure timely and equitable access to medicines and health technologies for all. A global social contract is needed to align individual state interests and incentives for the pharmaceutical industry with the global goal of protecting public health and health security. A pandemic treaty could both be shaped by this need and help create the conditions for an effective global social contract for access to medicines and health technologies.
There are no data in this work.