An Economic Framework for Vaccine Prioritization

Author:

Akbarpour Mohammad1,Budish Eric2,Dworczak Piotr3,Kominers Scott Duke4

Affiliation:

1. Stanford University , United States

2. University of Chicago , United States

3. Northwestern University, United States, and Group for Research in Applied Economics , Poland

4. Harvard Business School, Harvard University , and a16z crypto , United States

Abstract

Abstract We propose an economic framework for determining the optimal allocation of a scarce supply of vaccines that become gradually available during a public health crisis, such as the COVID-19 pandemic. Agents differ in observable and unobservable characteristics, and the designer maximizes a social welfare function over all feasible mechanisms—accounting for agents’ characteristics, as well as their endogenous behavior in the face of the pandemic. The framework emphasizes the role of externalities and incorporates equity as well as efficiency concerns. Our results provide an economic justification for providing vaccines immediately and for free to some groups of agents, while at the same time showing that a carefully constructed pricing mechanism can improve outcomes by screening for individuals with the highest private and social benefits of receiving the vaccine. The solution casts light on the classic question of whether prices or priorities should be used to allocate scarce public resources under externalities and equity concerns.

Funder

ERC

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Economics and Econometrics

Reference76 articles.

1. “Redistributive Allocation Mechanisms,”;Akbarpour

2. “The Economics of ‘Tagging’ as Applied to the Optimal Income Tax, Welfare Programs, and Manpower Planning,”;Akerlof;American Economic Review,1978

3. “Optimal Dynamic Allocation: Simplicity through Information Design,”;Ashlagi,2020

4. “Expanding Capacity for Vaccines against Covid-19 and Future Pandemics: A Review of Economic Issues,”;Athey;Oxford Review of Economic Policy,2022

5. “Taking Vaccine to Where the Virus Is—Equity and Effectiveness in Coronavirus Vaccinations,”;Bibbins-Domingo;JAMA Health Forum,2021

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