Chayakkada Chats

R Ramakumar

In this podcast series, I intend to have freewheeling conversations with friends and experts in multiple fields.

Episodes

  1. 04/30/2021

    Why should Covid19 vaccines be exempted from IPRs? with Dr Arjun Jayadev

    There is a major debate over intellectual property rights and life-saving medicines, particularly Covid19 vaccines. One year has passed since the pandemic broke out. On the one hand, we have only a handful of vaccines. On the other hand, more than 80% of the world’s vaccines have gone to people in high-income countries, and just 0.3% to people in low-income countries. A major campaign for a "people's vaccine" is now ongoing, which asks for exemption of COVID-19 vaccines from IP protections. They say that removing IPRs would incentivise new producers and help address disparities in vaccine access. But proponents of IPRs argue that it would only disincentivise new producers and investors, which will adversely affect the prospects of vaccine development in the long-run. To understand this debate better, we are today joined by Dr Arjun Jayadev, who is a Professor of Economics at the School of Arts and Sciences at Azim Premji University in Bangalore, India. He was previously Associate Professor of Economics at the University of Massachusetts Boston. He is also closely involved with the Institute for New Economic Thinking. I speak to him about the basic links between IPRs and the pandemic; the long-held orthodoxy in economic theory on the importance of IPRs, especially in areas like health; how IPRs lead to suboptimalities like hoarding of knowledge, vaccine grabs and other global inequalities; the relationship between public funding and vaccine production; whether private profits being produced from public investments; and finally, the problem of vaccine nationalism.

    37 min
  2. 04/17/2021

    On the Second Wave of Covid-19 Infections in India, with Dr T. Sundararaman

    Welcome to Episode number 9 at Chayakkada Chats. Just as everyone thought that the Covid crisis was on the ebb, a second wave of infections has spread across large parts of the world. India has been no exception. As of today, we record more than 200,000 infections every day with the total number of active cases at 1.6 million. About 175,000 people have died till now. As we stare at the grim prospect of another lockdown, it is important to ask a few basic questions. How is the second wave different from the first wave? Has India learnt anything from the first wave? What is the story of the new variant of the virus? Is there a shortage of vaccines in India? Was the Indian government too conservative in allowing more vaccines to hit the Indian market? Should India deregulate prices of vaccines so that private players will respond to the price incentives and supply more? To discuss these and more, we are joined today by one of India's foremost public health experts: Dr T. SUNDARARAMAN. Dr Sundararaman spent the first 22 years of his professional life as a member of the faculty and professor of Department of Internal Medicine, JIPMER. He then moved to working with public health systems. He was head of the State Health Resource Center Chhattisgarh from 2002 to 2007. Then he was executive director of National Health Systems Resource Center, from 2007 to 2014. He returned to academics later, as Professor and Dean of the School of Health Systems Studies in Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Mumbai. He is now an independent health consultant. All along, he has also been an activist for health rights and an organizer of people’s health movements or Jan Swasthya Abhiyan as it is popularly known.

    52 min
  3. 10/27/2020

    The Political Message from the Bolivian Elections of 2020, with Sonya Surabhi Gupta

    Last week, in a historic event, the Movimiento al Socialismo (MAS), the party of Evo Morales, was returned to power by the people of Bolivia. Evo Morales was the President of Bolivia from 2006 till 2019. In October 2019, though he had conclusively won the elections, he was forced to flee the country by the military and forces aligned to the CIA and the OAS. They argued that the elections were rigged. But it was nothing but a coup. Morales has been living in Mexico and Argentina since 2019. But the October 2020 elections have shown that the verdict of 2019 was not rigged. Loius Arce of MAS will be the new President and David Choquehuanca will be his deputy. These elections have represented a major victory of the Bolivian people against US-led imperialism. To speak about the Bolivian elections, we are joined today by Sonya Surabhi Gupta, Professor of Latin American Studies at Jamia Millia Islamia, New Delhi. Sonya's interests are in the area of contemporary literary and cultural studies of India and Latin America in a comparative cross-cultural context, as well as translation studies. She remains active in her work as a researcher and social activist. In her dual role as a Latin Americanist and a social activist, she is part of the Committees of solidarity with Cuba and Venezuela in India, and is currently one of the General Secretaries of the All India Peace and Solidarity Organization, which is affiliated to the World Peace Council. She has also served as a translator for important Latin American personalities during their official visits to India, such as Nicolás Maduro (when he visited New Delhi as Foreign Minister in 2012), Aleida Guevara and Nora Cortiñas among others.

    39 min
  4. 08/11/2020

    Kerala and the "Room for the River" Project in the Netherlands: with Paul van Meel

    We all remember the heavy floods that the state of Kerala in India experienced in 2018 and another relatively milder one in 2019. This year too, Kerala has witnessed heavy rainfall and some extreme rainfall events. One of the regions in Kerala acutely affected by the floods is the Kuttanad region in the Alappuzha district, which is globally well known for its scenic backwaters and traditional houseboats. Kuttanad lies 2 to 3 m below the mean sea level, which is what makes it extremely susceptible to floods. For the same reason, historically, Kerala has always looked up to another part of the world with similar features, The Netherlands. More recently, Kerala has been closely studying a very innovative project implemented in the Netherlands from 2000 called the “Room for the River.” Informed by this intervention in the Netherlands, Kerala has begun to implement what the state calls as the "Room for Pamba" project in the Kuttanad region. To understand the basic features of the Room for the River project in the Netherlands and its applicability to the Kuttanad region of Kerala, we are today joined by Paul van Meel. Paul knows the Netherlands and the Kuttanad region from close quarters. By training, he is a civil engineer from the Delft University. He has over 45 years of global experience in integrated water resources development. In the Netherlands, he has been involved as deputy project director in two large flood protection programmes: the Meuse Works and Room for the River.

    45 min

About

In this podcast series, I intend to have freewheeling conversations with friends and experts in multiple fields.