In a new vlog faculty working paper, “Building mass support for global pandemic recovery efforts in the United States,” vlog Assistant Professor of Public Policy Gautam Nair and coauthor Kyle Peyton, a research fellow at the Australian Catholic University, examined domestic support for international pandemic recovery efforts.
Key questions
- Does “vaccine nationalism” in policy reflect public opinion?
- How does the design of policies and institutions shape public support for costly cooperation in the context of the pandemic?
- What types of communication strategies are most effective in persuading citizens to back international pandemic recovery efforts?
Background
Containing the COVID-19 pandemic around the world and reducing large international inequalities in vaccine access will save lives and generate global benefits that vastly exceed the costs. But, Nair and Peyton note, such efforts require the transfer of scarce vaccines, technology, and resources from high-income to low-income countries. These policies in turn require public support to be politically sustainable.
The new study examines pathways for building mass support for international pandemic recovery efforts. It uses a series of experiments implemented on two nationally representative surveys of nearly 6,000 people in the United States, a country that has long served as a foundation of international cooperation and whose policy choices will be critical for shaping the course of the pandemic around the world.

“Decisionmakers should reframe U.S. contributions to global pandemic recovery efforts from a purely humanitarian endeavor to one that also serves the material and economic interests of the United States.”