What Next for UK Science and Innovation Policy?

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Thursday, May 7th, 2020

DateTimeLocation
Thursday, May 7, 20202:00PM - 4:00PMSeminar Room 108N,
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Series

IPL - Speaker Series

Description

The UK was an industrial and scientific pioneer and introduced government funding for investigator-driven (‘basic’) research through arms-length, scientist-led agencies decades earlier than the US. Yet the country has, for just as long, fretted about its lack of technological competitiveness, and for several decades the R&D/GDP ratio of less than 1.7% has stubbornly resisted all attempts to improve it. For historical reasons, UK government R&D spending is unusually biased towards the ‘basic’ end of the spectrum, and the geographical distribution of that spending is highly concentrated on a small number of institutions in a few places – the so-called Golden Triangle of Oxford, Cambridge and London. Now, as the UK leaves the European Union, it is once again aiming to transform its technological fortunes with a target of reaching first 2.4 and then 3% of GDP and to use this growth in R&D effort to help ‘rebalance’ regional growth prospects and drive improvements in the UK’s poor productivity record.

Becauase of the relative lack of domestic funding programmes for civil technological development over the last few decades the EU’s R&D programmes have been an unusually important source of public-sector support for technological R&D in the UK relative to other countries. In the short-term, post-Brexit Britain’s access to these programmes is by no means guaranteed. At the same time the UK is dependent on EU scientists and engineers, who make up a significant share of both the public sector science workforce and the private sector R&D workforce. Post-Brexit immigration restrictions and perceptions of a hostile environment are issues of major concern for universities and R&D intensive firms alike.

This seminar will draw out the broader questions about the relationships between research and innovation policy and place, and about the international dimensions of research and innovation policies raised by these short-term Brexit challenges and the long-term challenges of harnessing technological development to drive economic growth, regional rebalancing and productivity improvements.


Speakers

Dr. Kieron Flanagan
Dr. Kieron Flanagan is a Senior Lecturer in Science and Technology Policy at the Alliance Manchester Business School and a member of the Manchester Institute of Innovation Research (formerly PREST); has had a previous stint as Director of Postgraduate Taught Programmes for the Alliance Manchester Business School, responsible for the School's portfolio of specialised MSc programmes (comprising some 900 students), and he has served as Director of Undergraduate Programmes for the School.



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