World BankWorld Trade Organization2022-06-012022-06-012022978-1-4648-1885-1978-1-4648-1888-2 (electronic)Library of Congress Control Number: 2022941749https://hdl.handle.net/10986/37494The COVID-19 pandemic has exposed the upsides and downsides of international trade in medical goods and services. Open trade can increase access to medical services and goods (and the critical inputs needed to manufacture them), improve quality and variety, and reduce costs. But excessive concentration of production, restrictive trade policies, supply chain disruptions, and regulatory divergence can jeopardize the ability of public health systems to respond to pandemics and other health crises. This report, coordinated by Nadia Rocha and Michele Ruta at the World Bank and Marc Bacchetta and Joscelyn Magdeleine at the WTO, provides new data on trade in medical goods and services and medical value chains; surveys the evolving policy landscape before and during the pandemic; and proposes an action plan to improve trade policies and deepen international cooperation to deal with future pandemics.CC BY 3.0 IGOHEALTHCAREHEALTH MARKETHEALTH TRADEPANDEMICCOVID-19CORONAVIRUSGLOBAL TRADE MARKETSMULTILATERALTrade TherapyBookWorld BankDeepening Cooperation to Strengthen Pandemic Defenses10.1596/978-1-4648-1885-1