Posted on 03/09/2014 8:11:32 PM PDT by ckilmer
Scientists in the US remain the best funded in the world, but they say falling federal investment and cuts due to sequestration, coupled with the enormous resources other countries are lavishing on research, are creating an “innovation deficit”.
The consequence, say the presidents of more than 200 US universities, will be fewer US scientific and technological breakthroughs, fewer US patents and fewer US start-ups, products and jobs. Investment in research is not inconsistent with deficit reduction, indeed it is vital to it, they said in an open letter to President Barack Obama and members of Congress last summer.
The pressure researchers are coming under to justify federal funding was underlined last month in Chicago at one of their big annual conferences, the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS). The meeting, held every year since 1848, is intended to showcase the latest from the laboratory. This year however, the focus was not on research, but on innovation, entrepreneurship and the economy.
“I suspect that this may be the first AAAS meeting in which these three topics are so specifically highlighted,” said Phillip Sharp, AAAS president, Nobel laureate and biotechnology entrepreneur.
In the past, it was assumed that investment in research would inevitably yield innovation at some unspecified point in the future. To take a topical example, back in 1979 the US Department of Energy published a report called “Commercialisation plan for the recovery of gas from unconventional resources” and began to sponsor R&D in hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, for extracting shale-bound oil and gas reserves.
It took more than 30 years, but this research underpinned the exploitation of shale resources that previously were considered irrecoverable, prompting the current US oil and gas boom.
Now it is no longer sufficient to make a discovery and wait for others to commercialise it. Scientists in universities and public research institutes are being called on to take a greater role in translating their findings into new products and services.
What is needed, said Dr Sharp in his AAAS presidential address, is better integration of the discovery process with the entrepreneurial translation process, which turns discoveries into products and devices.
It is ironic that this soul-searching and loss of confidence in the great American innovation machine comes at a time when so many other countries are banking on research spending to expand their economies.
Alongside investing in R&D as an explicit part of economic development policy, these countries have looked at the US model as they have set out to create innovation systems capable of taking basic research through to the market.
China, for example, has tripled its R&D intensity since 1998, according to the OECD. The result, as Rongping Mu of the Chinese Academy of Sciences told the AAAS, has been to push China to second position in the number of scientific papers it publishes and to sixth in the number of citations to these papers.
At the same time as developing an excellent science base, China has put in place a policy framework to couple research and commercialisation and integrate all aspects of the innovation process.
The aim “is to build an innovation-driven country to promote economic development in a more efficient, fair and sustainable way,” said Dr Mu. “There were a lot of criticisms of China, saying China is a copier and so on. But in the past 10 years, there has been fundamental change.”
Similarly Kanetaka Maki of the University of California, San Diego, described how the Japanese government deliberately emulated the US system when it introduced a national innovation system in 1998. “A central pillar was the launch of the university technology transfer office,” said Dr Maki.
The South Korean government too, has put the focus on academic knowledge transfer as part of a new national agenda called The Creative Economy. The ambition is to replace “the catch-up paradigm”, said Jong-Guk Song of the Science and Technology Policy Institute in Seoul.
Universities are expected to lead this economic paradigm shift. “If they don’t collaborate with industry, they don’t get research funds from the government,” said Dr Song.
Until a decade ago, the size and quality of the US research establishment meant its scientists seldom faced international competition for new ideas. Now, large investments in the scientific fabric elsewhere in the world are shifting the balance of power.
At the same time, the US is witnessing “stagnation” in R&D funding, Dr Sharp said. While it will take some time to become evident, it will lead to a slowing of economic growth. In the face of this, “we have no choice but to become better at linking discovery, innovation and entrepreneurship,” he concluded.
Too much regulation has suffocated US innovation.
Regulation, taxation, and waste both of resources and talent.
No longer having the industrial processes in the country has killed innovation too.
The problem is we are outsourcing.
Outsourcing.
America imports far too much from abroad. The money is sent overseas, and America’s segment keeps decreasing.
America needs to manufacture things in America one again.
In America.
Sorry scientists, your precious ‘research’ dollars are going to fund Obamacare subsidies.
Whack 1
Waddaya going to do?
Who was it that said "Necessity" is the mother of invention?
I think much of the research being done currently in the U.S. is of the junk science variety, whose only goal is to obtain further funding. Every half baked idea does not need to be tested in a multi million dollar experiment.
Now that's a crowd I trust. /s
College presidents are a conservative contrarians best friend.
What they like, I hate...and what they hate, I like.
(1) Why invest when we’re not willing to protect our investment? We let every nation have access to our technology for free.
(2) Our taxpayer investment in technology usually ends up creating overseas jobs.
(3) Colleges and universities already feel they have a blank check from the government. They go up to whatever they want and they know student loans will pick up the tab.
(4) Maybe colleges and universities should stick to what they know best — indoctrination of students to their liberal political beliefs and telling students there is no God.
Personally, I am not feeling they need a lot more of my money.
Maybe the gov’t teat suckers can eschew CO2 is a bad thing (as are nuke plants).
It takes hundreds of pages of regulatory paper work to be filed just to run a simple little biotech pilot study. How can innovation thrive in such an environment?
Money always goes to cheap labor (always has, always will)...but when labor gets dear (as it is getting in China and India), money comes homes to our American robots and infrastructure.
Luddites are so 19th century.
Take a course in economics and watch some Milton Friedman videos on youtube.
Life is not fixed in time and space. Things change and the world changes with them.
Should we really be “investing” in Gender Studies in order to advance the economy and individual wealth?
Works like this:
(1) U.S. company comes up with invention.
(2) U.S. company outsources production to other Country (i.e. China).
(3) China company produces product for U.S. company.
(4) China company copies invention product and sells it for less.
(5) U.S. company goes bankrupt as could not compete due to higher taxes and regulations.
(6) China company becomes source of invention product.
(7) China company gets rich.
(8) U.S. company workers go on unemployment.
Our Ruling Class has made themselves and their cronies their top funding priorities. Next on the list are illegal aliens and homos. Scientists will have to wait their turn.
Wonder how much of the “research” has to do with green energy? Seems like a lot of money has been spent (wasted?) on green energy technologies.
Our high tech electronic companies do a pretty good job of keeping up and optimizing and shrinking. However, we don’t manufacture here in the States much.
We might be behind in medical research.
I assume it is true. those that subsist on grants are crying for more grants.
the part that is not at all true is that the 1979 DOE study spawned the shale gas and oil revolution.
the wells completed in that time with DOE funding were found to rely almost entirely on natural fracture porosity and permeability, which is a production enhancing natural feature, but not mandatory for commercial production.
decades of private enterprise and billions of private funds risked spawned the shale boom, not 6 guys with some grant money. hydraulic fracturing was around for over 30 years prior to that study. for a cup of coffee I or thousands of others could have explained that even though often naturally fractured but a low permeability rock, shale reservoirs require hydraulic fracturing to produce economically, basically what the 1979 DOE report states.
what did keep shale on the radar in the late 80s and early 90s was TAX breaks for exploration. about one in 2000 wells were diligently “studied” by DOE. these tax breaks expired, but by then private industry had it figured out vertically. once married with horizontal drilling technology of the late 90s and 2000s, it went nuts.
It's quality that counts, not quantity.
Companies who create don't share their technology. We have patent rights for that.
Works like this:
(1) U.S. company comes up with invention.
(2) U.S. company outsources production to other Country (i.e. China).
(3) China company produces product for U.S. company.
(4) China company copies invention product and sells it for less.
(5) U.S. company goes bankrupt as could not compete due to higher taxes and regulations.
(6) China company becomes source of invention product.
(7) China company gets rich.
(8) U.S. company workers go on unemployment.
Very true.
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