No Vaccine
The Ebola outbreak could shave 2 percentage points off economic growth in the three countries, which have a combined gross domestic product of about $14 billion and a population of 20 million people, according to U.S.-based Teneo Intelligence.
Agriculture accounts for more than half of the economies of Sierra Leone and Liberia, where civil wars that lasted for more than 10 years killed hundreds of thousands of people. Most produce in the Ebola-hit states is grown for domestic consumption, and Nestle SA (NESN), the world’s largest food company, said it has limited employee movement there.
There is no vaccine or assured treatment for Ebola, which was first identified in 1976. An ethics panel at the WHO said this week that people in West Africa should be allowed access to promising experimental treatments or vaccines. (Bloomberg)[eap_ad_3]