<p>The central government is in a better position to negotiate the terms of procurement of Covid-19 vaccines and the current vaccine buying policy shows success of cooperative federalism, 15th Finance Commission Chairman N K Singh said on Thursday.</p>.<p>He said a complication that was created earlier was on account of some states believing that they could do a much better job than what the central government could do.</p>.<p>"In the end it's the central government which should have been and was always in a much better position to do so. It was a learning curve, but I think we have reached the right equilibrium in this," he said at a NCAER webinar.</p>.<p>Initially, Singh said, it was the states which wanted the central government to delegate the vaccine procurement to the states and when that was done, states found themselves not in a position to persuade the vaccine manufacturers to give directly to the states on account of various issues.</p>.<p>"In the end, what has succeeded is cooperative federalism," he said adding "the central government is in a much better position negotiate the best conditions and secure the procurement of vaccines involves a interplay of foreign policy, diplomacy, negotiating skills, pricing, marketing".</p>.<p>Reversing a policy where states competed for vaccine supplies for certain age categories, Prime Minister Narendra Modi on June 7 announced that the central government will procure vaccines for all adults.</p>
<p>The central government is in a better position to negotiate the terms of procurement of Covid-19 vaccines and the current vaccine buying policy shows success of cooperative federalism, 15th Finance Commission Chairman N K Singh said on Thursday.</p>.<p>He said a complication that was created earlier was on account of some states believing that they could do a much better job than what the central government could do.</p>.<p>"In the end it's the central government which should have been and was always in a much better position to do so. It was a learning curve, but I think we have reached the right equilibrium in this," he said at a NCAER webinar.</p>.<p>Initially, Singh said, it was the states which wanted the central government to delegate the vaccine procurement to the states and when that was done, states found themselves not in a position to persuade the vaccine manufacturers to give directly to the states on account of various issues.</p>.<p>"In the end, what has succeeded is cooperative federalism," he said adding "the central government is in a much better position negotiate the best conditions and secure the procurement of vaccines involves a interplay of foreign policy, diplomacy, negotiating skills, pricing, marketing".</p>.<p>Reversing a policy where states competed for vaccine supplies for certain age categories, Prime Minister Narendra Modi on June 7 announced that the central government will procure vaccines for all adults.</p>