There was yet more evidence of the impact of George Osborne's short-sighted cuts to science and research and development today, reports Shamik Das.
There was yet more evidence of the impact of George Osborne’s short-sighted cuts to science and research and development today. A report (pdf) by the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills (BIS) says the cuts will put the UK’s position as a world leading research base at risk.
The report revealed the UK’s research “has some potential areas of vulnerability”, and that the UK’s:
“…leadership position may be threatened by its declining share of researchers globally, and by its declining share of global spending on research.”
Concluding:
“The UK is a world leader in research, and is the world leader in terms of research efficiency per researcher and per unit of spending on research. However, the global landscape of research is fluid, dynamic and intensively competitive.
“Other countries are outpacing the UK in terms of growth in number of researchers and spending on research. The UK is well positioned, but its ability to sustain its leadership position is far from inevitable.”
BIS’s findings, that Britain risks slipping behind our competitors as a result of the coalition’s cuts, echoes the views of the Institute for Fiscal Studies, the European Union, scientists, academics and researchers, and opposition politicians.
Furthermore, last June, the government’s own Chief Scientific Adviser Sir John Beddington called for a long term investment strategy for science and research, vital for the government to realise its aim of rebalancing the economy and creating more high value and highly skilled jobs, vital for every government department, and, crucially, vital for reducing the deficit.
As Professor Beddington forewarned (pdf):
“The benefits of cutting the debt will be much reduced if, in doing so, we critically damage the wellsprings of our longer term growth and wellbeing and our sources of international competitive advantage…
“We gain huge benefit to our economy, to policy-making, to society and to our reputation in the world from our scientific success. But our competitors have recognised these benefits and are responding by putting massive new investment into science and research, both through recent fiscal stimuli and through long term spending committments…
“If we fail to match our competitors we will lose our world-leading scientific position, and the skills, inward investment and economic and social benefits that derive from it…
“Any long term plan for economic recovery and growth, as well as the necessary rebalancing of the economy, must therefore rest on maintaining and building the UK’s research base to generate technology, ideas and skilled people, and to attract and retain high value internationally mobile investment.”
Without a long-term plan for science – without a long term plan for growth full stop – the coalition’s blind, unflinching adherence to Osborne’s Plan A signals dark days ahead.
See also:
• IFS questions Osborne’s “short sighted” failure to invest in science and skills – Shamik Das, September 5th 2011
• Denham warns science funding freeze will push UK further behind competitors – Claire French, March 11th 2011
• UK’s “disappointing” R&D spending under fire from EU research chief – Shamik Das, February 7th 2011
• Freezing of science budget could hit UK’s global reputation – Claire French, October 29th 2010
• Increased science funding would help reduce the deficit – Michael Burke, October 12th 2010
15 Responses to “More evidence of impact of Osborne’s savage research and development cuts”
Catherine Brunton
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