Listen "Michael Kremer: Investing in Vaccines Now Would Buy Time, Save $Billions"
Episode Synopsis
In the early 2000s, Nobel Laureate, Michael Kremer helped develop the design of advance market commitment models (AMCs). They were used to incentivize the private sector to work on issues of relevance for the developing world by pledging that if they developed an appropriate vaccine, funds would be available for those countries to purchase it. The approach resulted in billions of dollars being devoted to pneumococcal vaccines for strains common in developing countries, saving hundreds of thousands of lives. Kremer's latest research focuses on how to expedite the production and distribution of the COVID-19 vaccines immediately following successful medical trials. In this podcast, Kremer says at-risk investment into vaccine manufacturing capacity before clinical approval would advance vaccine distribution by 6 months or more. Transcript Michael Kremer is Professor in Economics at the University of Chicago, and director of the Development Innovation Lab. He shared the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics in 2019 for his work on experimental approaches to alleviating global poverty. He was invited by the Institute for Capacity Development to present this latest research to IMF economists. Check out the University of Chicago's podcast Pandemic Economics
More episodes of the podcast IMF Podcasts
Marc Palen on Peace Economics and Trade
25/11/2025
Gordon Hanson on Shifting Trade Alliances
13/11/2025
Kenneth Rogoff on Dollar Dominance
04/11/2025
Where Startups Do Roam: Swati Bhatt
02/10/2025
Danny Quah on Rethinking Multilateralism
17/09/2025
ZARZA We are Zarza, the prestigious firm behind major projects in information technology.