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Netizens are split on ‘Buy-1-Donate-1’ scheme for private firm’s vax supply

Presidential Adviser for Entrepreneurship and Go Negosyo funder Joey Concepcion confirmed similar details with GMA News—though he adds that at least one company has the buy-one-donate-one scheme in its supply agreement.

With the government struggling to secure more doses of the COVID-19 vaccine for the all-important nationwide vaccination drive, private companies have had to resort to acquiring for their employees—with a catch.

Private companies are supposedly required to donate half of the doses they secure to the government in an alleged “buy-one-donate-one” scheme exposed by a CEO.

A now-viral tweet by Colourette CEO Nina Ellaine Dizon asked her followers and the rest of Twitter-dom on rumors of the said scheme.

This did not sit well with supporters of the Duterte administration, particularly Mark Lopez, who called Dizon “stupid” for “spreading fake news.

Succeeding tweets from Dizon would have her asking which companies—presumably referring to pharmaceutical companies—can she place an order of COVID-19 vaccines from without the buy-one-take-one mandate.

Two employers have since clarified the supposed conditions for a tripartite agreement, which is the only way for private companies to secure vaccines for their employees.

In separate interviews with GMA News, Employers Confederation of the Philippines (ECOP) president Sergio Ortiz-Luis Jr. said private companies could procure vaccines through a tripartite agreement (without the need to donate to the government).

Presidential Adviser for Entrepreneurship and Go Negosyo funder Joey Concepcion confirmed similar details with GMA News—though he adds that at least one company has the buy-one-donate-one scheme in its supply agreement.

“In the case of AstraZeneca, they had a no-profit program—which is why a dose was at $5. We wanted to help the government medical frontliners, and this is how we crafted the first tripartite agreement. And yes, it still stands,” said Concepcion.

Netizens remain split on the matter, as some agree with Dizon.

https://twitter.com/direkchrism/status/1373577326638723072

It includes Vice President Leni Robredo, who also has given her thoughts on the matter.

Even Senator Panfilo Lacson came to her defense.

Lacson earlier alluded to another CEO spreading the wrong information about private firms securing vaccines.

One Netizen, however, saw this act from private firms as a way to “cut in line” with the government’s priority list for vaccines—which, as of today, still sits at healthcare workers.

The same Netizen would ask private companies to [at least] refrain from buying their supply of vaccines until after priority groups before they get inoculated.

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