| > My wife and I are under 40 and we got the vaccine for free at a government health centre. Like I said, the government reversed its stance after the Supreme Court intervened[0]. > Then some states like Delhi and Maharashtra asked to be allowed to procure vaccines on their own. Some rich states tried to procure vaccines on their own. How does that preclude the Union from extending vaccine coverage to all? And the second link is dated May 8th. The so called Liberalised Pricing and Accelerated National Covid-19 Vaccination Strategy was announced in April and came into effect from May 1st[1]. And I find the notion of the policy being shaped by the demands from opposition ruled states to be farfetched. > This was in the early days when the vaccine supply was less. Why was the supply less? Could it be because in its infinite wisdom, the government did not place orders with SII until January 2021? And then placed an order for a grand total of 11 million doses when SII had already stockpiled 50 million doses[2][3]? 0: https://theprint.in/india/sc-orders-review-of-modi-govts-vac... 1: https://www.narendramodi.in/government-of-india-announces-a-... 2: https://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/can-deliver-vaccin... |
My point was that the states themselves asked to be allowed to procure the vaccines, so blaming the Union for asking them to "compete" is incorrect. As your link to the Liberalized policy states, 50% of the supply was being purchased by the Union, presumably to supply to the "poor" states.
> How does that preclude the Union from extending vaccine coverage to all?
You're right - it doesn't. However I think the (only) Rs. 35000 crore budget should have made it clear that the government was not planning to inoculate everyone for free. Some, like me, got lucky; but I know plenty of people who had to pay for their vaccines.
> And then placed an order for a grand total of 11 million doses
From Jan 16-Feb 28, India was inoculating only frontline workers and healthcare staff. For these AFAICT, the Union ordered 11 million vaccines in Jan[1], as you mentioned, and 14.5 million in Feb[2].
India started inoculating senior citizens and people with co-morbidities from March 1, and in March the Union had ordered 120 million vaccines[3].
The Union claimed, in May, that they were purchasing the entire supply of both SII and Bharat Biologicals, so if there was any shortage it was due to the lack of manufacturing and not lack of purchase. I'm not blaming the manufacturers of course - obviously they took time to scale, and they (especially SII) have done well now.
1. https://www.indiatoday.in/coronavirus-outbreak/story/india-o...
2. https://www.business-standard.com/article/current-affairs/go...
3. https://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/120mn-doses-ordere...
Edit: added some more information on vaccine orders