India Calls for further Enhancing Affordable Access to Medicines and
Facilitating Easier Movement of Health Professionals Across
National Borders
·
Piyush Goyal says India has been a dependable and affordable source
of efficacious and high quality medical and pharma products
·
G20 Trade
and Investment Ministers decide to keep their markets open, and ensure smooth and
continued operation of the logistics networks
India has called for working towards creating a global framework
for further enhancing affordable access to medicines for fighting pandemics and
facilitating easier movement of health professionals across national borders. In
his Interventions at the meeting of the Trade and Investment Ministers of the G20
countries, Minister of Commerce and Industry Piyush Goyal stressed on the need to uphold our multilateral commitments
and improve upon its effectiveness to meet current challenges.
Mr. Goyal said that despite many challenges,
India has been a dependable and affordable source of efficacious and high quality
medical and pharma products to nearly 190 countries around the world. “We are confident
that with improved regulatory and R&D cooperation, India can further enhance
its capabilities to serve the world in crisis like this. We must ensure that suitable instruments stay
in place to address these inabilities and preserve the life, livelihood, food and
nutritional security of the poorest.” he said.
The Minister expressed solidarity with the world and expressed
India’s support to all frontline health professionals, sanitation workers and all
those involved in maintaining essential services to fight the pandemic. He said
that the Developing countries and LDCs are particularly vulnerable as they may not
have matching resources, infrastructure and technical capacities to face this unprecedented
pandemic.
Mr. Goyal said that such unprecedented
challenges necessitate innovative, collaborative and proactive response from the
world. “Our collective act must reflect and uphold the centrality of the rules based
multilateral system with development at the centre of
any action in trade as well as other areas. We must ensure that the supply of goods,
and services most importantly that of vital medicines and food products are not
disrupted consistent with national needs. Trade Facilitative responses need to be
in place, and wherever required by doing away temporarily, the requirement by authorities
like Customs, Banks of producing original documents by importers for various clearances.
Additionally, we need to think of a suitable framework under which critical pharma
products, medical devices, diagnostic equipment and kits and healthcare professionals
can be deployed at short notice across territories under a pre-agreed protocol.”
Mr. Goyal said “Let us all act together as per our Leaders instructions in fighting the
pandemic by safeguarding global economy, addressing international trade disruptions
and by enhancing global cooperation to secure
fair, stable and rules based global trade from the vagaries of world market
and ensure that it acts as an instrument for the well-being and prosperity of one
and all, that it enables nations both to look after their own citizens as well as
assist others whenever the need arises, that it leads humanity towards a common
sustainable future in line with our commitments to SDG 2030. “
The Trade and Investment Ministers of the G20 and guest countries
have decided to keep their markets open, and ensure smooth and continued operation
of the logistics networks. The meeting held through Video-conferencing described
COVID-19 pandemic as a global challenge, requiring a coordinated global response.
The statement issued at the end of the meeting, called upon the international community
to step up cooperation and coordination to protect human life and lay the foundations
for a strong economic recovery and a sustainable, balanced, and inclusive growth
after this crisis.
The statement said that emergency measures designed to tackle
COVID-19, if deemed necessary, must be targeted, proportionate, transparent, and
temporary, and that they should not create unnecessary barriers to trade or disruption
to global supply chains, and be consistent with WTO rules. “We are actively working
to ensure the continued flow of vital medical supplies and equipment, critical agricultural
products, and other essential goods and services across borders, for supporting
the health of our citizens. Consistent with national requirements, we will take
immediate necessary measures to facilitate trade in those essential goods. We will
support the availability and accessibility of essential medical supplies and pharmaceuticals
at affordable prices, on an equitable basis, where they are most needed, and as
quickly as possible, including by encouraging additional production through incentives
and targeted investment, according to national circumstances. We will guard against
profiteering and unjustified price increases.”