Not really. The efficacy numbers from clinical trials suggest a 95% reduction in severe illness. The real-world data from Israel suggests a 95.5% reduction in risk of infection.
So take a population of 100 million. Assume 80% of them would eventually become infected without vaccination. That’s 80 million infected. Take that same population of 100 million and vaccinate them. Now we reduce that 80 million infected by 95.5% and we find 3.6 million who become infected and 76.4 million who do NOT become infected. But that’s still 3.6 million infected expected per 100 million in your population.
The smallpox vaccine is only 95% effective. We wiped out smallpox with it. As in, it doesn’t exist on planet Earth anymore. And nobody has been vaccinated for it in decades, because it’s gone now. Same will happen with polio in the next couple of decades. We’ll cut those four shots off the vaccine requirements too because polio will be eradicated from Earth.