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Nations See Financial Crisis As Opportunity to Build New, Knowledge-Based Economies
CHICAGO--Could scientists stand to see their budgets slashed in the
short run, if it means a deeper, more significant commitment to R&D
over the long term?
At a symposium at the 2009 AAAS Annual
Meeting, an international panel of science policy experts challenged
their colleagues to see the current economic crisis as an opportunity
to build 21st-century economies in their home countries.
It's a
project that will require significant help from the science and
technology communities, and could lead to an "unprecedented focus" on
the potential of basic and applied research, according to the speakers
from the European Union, Japan, and the United States.
In places
like Japan and Europe, policymakers are already using the financial
crisis to leave behind their industrial-based economies in favor of
building "cleaner, greener, fairer" knowledge-based economies with a
global reach.
Jose Manuel Silva Rodriguez, the European
Commission's director general of research, called the crisis an "ill
wind," and urged his colleagues to see the opportunity presented by
changing times. "If you wait until the wind and weather are just right,
you will never plant anything," he observed.
Although some
policymakers question whether R&D investment can create jobs and
alleviate other acute symptoms of an economic downturn, Silva said
investment in environmentally-friendly products and services are
already "showing that they can contribute to growth" in the European
Union. Other public-private initiatives, such as the EU's project to
retrofit buildings with energy-efficient features, will also create
jobs, said Silva.
Japan has already endured a decade of
recession, and the faltering economy there has convinced that country's
leaders to move toward a knowledge-based economy as well, said Tateo
Arimoto, the director general of Japan's Research Institute of Science
and Technology for Society.
But Japan will have to "adjust its
social and science systems" to rebuild in this fashion, said Arimoto.
For instance, universities in Japan and around the world must move away
from being "instruments of national competition" and reorganize
themselves as global centers for learning, he recommended.
Experts
agree that globalization is partly to blame for the scale of current
economic woes, but they also agree that a return to protectionist
policies would "reduce the speed and size of the economic recovery,"
said AAAS Chief International Officer Vaughan Turekian, who organized
the symposium.
Although he believes scientists are "optimists by
nature," the U.S. National Academies' Richard Bissell was less sanguine
than his colleagues about the fallout from the failing economy.
"Budgets
will be severely challenged in ways that we as scientists haven't seen
in a decade," warned Bissell, the Academies' director of policy and
global affairs.
Even if short-term stimulus money does come to
science agencies, a sudden influx of funds can be disruptive, since the
cash may come with unrealistic expectations, he noted.
"You
don't want people asking, 'if I give you a billion dollars, how many
jobs will you produce?'" explained Bissell. "Is that the criteria you
want to be judged by?"
But even Bissell allowed a little of his
optimism to show through by the end of the symposium, saying he was
"encouraged that the public believes science is an avenue to a better
future, even when things are going badly."

