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CHINA has now delivered more than , hitting that COVID-19 milestone the same weekend that Brazil passed one of its own: more than . Daily case numbers remain worryingly high, and those hospitalized and dying include larger numbers of young people. India, meanwhile, is at risk of a of infections sooner than predicted, after a devastating second.

The end of the pandemic is almost here. But the tail is long and 鈥 thanks to short-sighted global and national policies 鈥 this phase is no more of a 鈥済reat equalizer鈥 than the start was. Blame uneven access to immunization made worse by as rich governments focus on domestic needs. Insufficient state capacity, poor logistics, and distrust and misinformation, often fueled by populist leaders, have left millions behind and widened existing gaps in the global economy. Then there are insular policies in places like Australia or Hong Kong that focus on zero cases, making them reluctant to open up, discouraging vaccination and prolonging the endgame.

We know from past pandemics that the finale was never going to be swift or clear-cut. It鈥檚 easy to track the start of the Spanish Flu pandemic in 1918, but far less simple to pinpoint the end, probably after the winter of 1920. Other mass vaccination efforts to combat infectious diseases, say 鈥 and aren鈥檛 yet over. But we don鈥檛 have to repeat all the same mistakes.

Granted, the world has come far. Vanquishing COVID-19 is no longer a vague possibility; it鈥檚 visible in the distance. Researchers cracked the vaccine puzzle earlier than expected and shots have been distributed in record time, proving effective against even troublesome variants. As my Bloomberg News colleague Todd Gillespie , some epidemiologists are beginning to consider using hospitalizations, not case numbers, as the primary measure of virus risk.

Yet 18 months on, COVID-19 continues to devastate. The developing world doesn鈥檛 have enough shots, too many existing inequities have grown worse, and there鈥檚 excess bureaucracy. It鈥檚 not just a problem for the poorest: Japan has underperformed in large part because of conservative regulation around new medicines that slowed the vaccine rollout, while restrictions on who can give injections led to a chronic staff shortage. With an aging population and the , the country has fully vaccinated of residents.

For some nations, vaccines created an opportunity to earn back some much-needed political capital after botching earlier stages of the pandemic. Britain managed, as did the United States thanks to Operation Warp Speed, and most remarkably Israel, helped by a data-rich health system that encouraged Pfizer, Inc. and BioNTech SE to assure supplies 鈥 plus deep pockets that allowed the country to . That didn鈥檛 keep Benjamin Netanyahu , but it has resulted in getting 57% of the population fully vaccinated.

Others, after handling the pandemic well with effective controls, hung back in the inoculation race but are now sprinting to catch up as new variants threaten. Singapore has become the first Southeast Asian nation to distribute at least one shot to . China has fully vaccinated 80% of adults in Beijing and distributed more than 1 billion doses overall, more than a third of the global total, leaning on a tried-and-tested top-down approach with the July 1 centenary of the Communist Party on the horizon.

The trouble is that state capacity, urgency, and ready cash aren鈥檛 the norm. That ability to efficiently deliver policies, correct course, and hold the population鈥檚 trust has been a big predictor of pandemic-management success, far more than democracy, autocracy, or other measures, as David Skilling of the economic advisory firm Landfall Strategy Group points out. It鈥檚 a rare commodity.

Strongmen leaders have been among the worst, too inflexible to bow to science and fact, and loathe to deliver bad news. Russia is one such mess. Despite a pioneering COVID-19 shot, deep-rooted vaccine hesitancy has gotten worse with time, not better. Rather than prioritizing inoculations, officials including President Vladimir Putin 鈥 never seen in a mask 鈥 signaled all was well. It left the country vulnerable to the Delta variant-fueled third wave now tearing through Moscow, which was forced last week to mandate jabs for service-sector workers. India, too complacent after its first wave ebbed, has paid an even higher price.

The reality of the late stage of this pandemic is, first, that there鈥檚 no end to the cycle of surges and lockdowns without vaccinations. There must be a concerted push to get vaccines to the developing world soon 鈥 and not by backloading donations, as the Group of Seven nations appeared to do earlier this month. At-risk, jab-hesitant weak spots in the West will need to be tackled. And investment is critically needed in logistics and healthcare structures that can, in everyone鈥檚 interest, continue monitoring once the pandemic fades from headlines.

Then, even amid the excitement of reopening, there needs to be a recognition that at home and on a global scale, the pandemic has left the most vulnerable further behind. COVID-19 has accelerated some de-globalization trends, hampering the human mobility that so many states rely upon, and, with lengthy school closures, hurt human capital. It鈥檚 fueling a multi-speed global economy, Landfall鈥檚 Skilling says, and making it harder to close gaps.

After a pandemic that has touched all corners of the world and killed nearly 4 million people, investing in vaccinations, future generations, and healthcare capacity to ensure we do better next time is a worthy memorial.

BLOOMBERG OPINION