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It's not rocket science but it's moving at last

By COLIN JAMES - The Dominion Post
Last updated 08:22 31/08/2009
Sir Peter Gluckman
JOHN SELKIRK/The Dominion Post
SCIENCE-SAVVY AND BUSINESS-SAVVY: Sir Peter Gluckman, John Key's science personal and official chief scientific adviser, says the science community 'has slipped into a format of desperation and frustration and begging'.

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OPINION: John Key was going to be science minister but diverted down a cycleway to tourism.

He is now retracing his steps. Innovation is a  central driver of productivity  growth. But it was not one of Bill English's  four "areas" of "initiatives to lift productivity" in his Budget in May. Overall  spending on science went down.

Recent speeches by Mr Key and Mr English have included innovation. Mr Key is now quietly reaffirming the importance of research, science and technology.

Reluctant RST minister Wayne Mapp declared this month that "RST will be expected to play a bigger part in improving our economic performance". A small National backbench science committee has formed.

And Sir Peter Gluckman is settled in to his part-time post as Mr Key's personal and official chief scientific adviser, a post Mr Key first mooted to him last year.

Sir Peter is an entrepreneur-scientist, both at home and in international collaboration. He could have been referring to himself when he told the Australia-New Zealand Leadership Forum in Sydney 10 days ago that the most intellectually entrepreneurial scientists are also the most business-entrepreneurial.

So Sir Peter was never going to disappear behind the ninth-floor curtain, shrouded in confidentiality. Within days of taking office, he embarrassed ministers with his take on folic acid.

Moreover, he is not only science-savvy and business-savvy but also media-savvy, good for a headline. He has strong, critical views about the quality of science reporting. Expect a lot more from him.

At the core of the RST debate is money. The private sector spends a fraction of other developed economies' private sectors. This is not because the public sector crowds it out, as a scientist argued in the New Scientist recently. Public sector spending here is below the rich-country average, too.

This is a legacy of the Treasury's narrow libertarian doctrine of the 1990s. Crown research institutes were required to be companies, doing business for business and making a profit. Universities were paid for student bums on seats.

The public spending focus was on getting scientific discoveries across the valley of death into technology startups. Meanwhile, the science available for translation into innovation was running thin - in agriculture, running out.

The 1999-08 Labour-led governments set up the centres of excellence in universities and funded CRIs for some long-term research. But they also cut spending as a per centage of GDP.

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Mr English's budget showed his suspicion of science. He has told Sir Peter - and the world - he wants to know what bang he is getting for his buck. In that, English- graduate Mr English is a fitting successor to social history academic Michael Cullen.

* * *

Sir Peter has rephrased Mr English's question as: "Is science an indulgence or is it at the core of our economic development?" But Sir Peter's question was rhetorical. He has said: "The science community has slipped into a format of desperation and frustration and begging."

That is a sadly accurate conclusion. But Sir Peter's answer is not simple. And on this point he and Mr English are in sync.

First, a country of 4.3 million can't do everything. Second, we have the most competitive bidding system in the world via too many funding avenues and far too many institutions. Third, a small country requiring peer review of all applications for funding is a recipe for mediocrity. The result is "very confused behaviour across universities and CRIs" - and an exodus of good scientists. That Sir Peter and Sir Paul Callaghan (also an intellectual and business entrepreneur) have stayed here is a puzzle.

So, fourth on a list of four RST "themes" identified by Dr Mapp, who is now warming to his task, is "simplifying the entire system". Dr Mapp wants that sorted by the end of the year.

That can't come soon enough. For 20 years governments have operated as if New Zealand should be only a technology- taker. That is not how - to recite Sir Peter's list of small countries making real use of scientists - Singapore, Israel, Denmark, Sweden, Finland and Switzerland think of science. All are richer than New Zealand and the gap is widening.

Sir Peter's answer (apart from truckloads of money) is cross-border collaboration. He has done it as a scientist, in Singapore, China and Europe - and that way gets more bangs for his bucks. He wants a lot more.

Last week Mr Key took Sir Peter's route and signed up to Australia's bid for the massive Square Kilometre Array astronomy project, which promises high-end jobs in both countries. Sir Peter wants to greatly expand the number of joint projects in biotechnology and other fields, including in joint centres of excellence.

Sir Peter is doing the stirring Mr Key expected. Now for Mr Key to lift his own game out of tourism and on to the route for real riches.

Sir Peter said in Sydney: "A scientifically literate and engaged society at all levels is more likely to be ambitious, innovative and productive."

Over to Mr Key.

* ColinJames@synapsis.co.nz

5 comments
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Ex-Scientist   #5   08:31 am Sep 01 2009

NZ has an appalling attitude to science, research and real innovation across all levels of society, politics and the economy. Witness the lack of posts to this thoughtful opinion piece for one thing, and the well known and continual starvation of the science sector by respective governments and employers. Its just seen as an optional and otherwise annoying tag-on that can be switched on or off as needed. Frankly, if a school student asked me whether science was a good career option I'd have no hesitation in telling them an immediate "No way" - unless they'd be happy to move overseas for their working life or they're just blindly passionate about it (as well as being a glutton for punishment). Better off being a lawyer or accountant... The meaningless lip service given to science, research and innovation in NZ just rubs salt into the wounds really. We don't deserve first world status if we can't play all parts of a first world game - as shown by countries such as Singapore, Israel, Denmark, Sweden, Finland, Switzerland and many more. Good dairy prices and a mythical piece of No.8 wire aren't going to be enough.

Brodie   #4   08:53 pm Aug 31 2009

Good to see someone from the RST sector put the value of innovation into perspective as homeboy Sir PG has done. It's funny how we have Mr English, who has majored in English by the sounds of things, try ask what use we are bang for the buck we're getting out of science. He only need look at the bigger picture and think what bang for the buck innovation does add. does he not have a computer, cellphone, a car and not wonder how they were developed??

James   #3   06:41 pm Aug 31 2009

History reveals that science is behind the advancement of the human race and forms the entire basis of our standard of living. If it weren't for science, Mr English would still be living in a cave. If he wants to know what bang for his buck science is giving him, maybe he should remember that without science he wouldn't be flying overseas, wouldn't be using a computer, and wouldn't be wearing woven textiles. Unfortunately, too few people appear to be aware of the benefits that science has provided, and therefore there is too little public pressure for increased funding for scientific activity.

Jo   #2   05:31 pm Aug 31 2009

Government recognises NZ's two key business barriers; distance from market, and minute local market. To these barriers we must add a third; even our most right wing trading partners massively subsidise investment in technology through defence, state supported aerospace and automotive industries, and other industrial interventions, none of which exist in this country. Our scientists / engineers / industrial entrepreneurs are undervalued. Which is why they are our most valuable export.

barry   #1   09:01 am Aug 31 2009

Im all for research , so long as we stop using animals in experiments ,that are getting us no closer to solving human diseases. In NZ over 300,000 animals are used in experiments behind closed doors ,most is taxpayer funded . Alternatives do exist but researchers continue to go down a century old path of using animals ,despite its incompatibility to the human condition ,there is a valid scientific argument against using animals ,it is not only cruel but quite useless. www.nzavs.org.nz

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