糖心Vlog

Top German universities fear exclusion from innovation funding

All types of institution must be welcome if new funder is to achieve its true potential, sector groups say

Published on
February 9, 2022
Last updated
February 18, 2022
Organisers measure a route for a jumping for points competition to illustrate Top German universities fear exclusion from innovation funding
Source: Getty

An attempt by Germany鈥檚 young coalition government to聽put universities at聽the heart of聽economic development could be聽undermined by a聽bias towards smaller and specialist institutions, sector leaders have warned.

The German Agency for Transfer and Innovation (DATI), which will seek to promote social and technological innovation, has been born out of the governing agreement between the Social Democratic, the Free Democratic (FDP) and the Green parties.

On the campaign trail, the FDP proposed a German Transfer Association, echoing the German Research Association, the country鈥檚 central, self-governing science funder, while the Greens promised D.Innova, a flexible agency supporting broad swathes of innovation, modelled on Switzerland鈥檚 Innosuisse and Sweden鈥檚 Vinnova.

However, reference to the agency鈥檚 supporting innovation 鈥渆specially聽at鈥 universities of applied sciences and small and medium-sized universities, contained in the scant description of the agency in the coalition agreement, has caused consternation at some institutions.

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鈥淚f you would exclude us, that would mean leaving the majority of the applied research out of your concept,鈥 said Nicole Saverschek, managing director of the TU9聽group of universities of聽technology, which are generally larger and better funded than universities of applied sciences.

鈥淚t鈥檚 all a question of what your goal is exactly,鈥 Dr Saverschek said. 鈥淒oes the government want to support specifically a certain type of institution? Then, of course, they can do that, and they can come up with programmes for a certain type of institution. But if they want to boost applied research, innovation and transfer in Germany as a whole, then they can鈥檛 leave out technical universities.鈥

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A paper from Germany鈥檚 Centre for 糖心Vlog frames the design of DATI within this and several other trade-offs: economic versus scientific interests; diversity of funding available versus efficiency and clarity; and international competition versus compensation for regional under-development.

Coalition partners will be spending the next two months finding compromises, with no further details expected before the start of April.

Peter-Andr茅 Alt, president of the German Rectors鈥 Conference (HRK), said his members wanted a 鈥渂road spectrum鈥 of universities to be eligible for funding.

Rather than earmarking funding programmes for universities of applied sciences alone, he said, agency designers should focus on topics and challenges.

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Jan W枚pking, managing director of the U15聽group of research universities, said there had been informal political discussions about limiting eligibility for DATI funding to universities with fewer than 25,000 students.

鈥淲e have a lot of universities in Germany, but we also have fairly large ones鈥, he said. A聽U15聽analysis found that 61聽per cent of students in Germany attend universities that would be excluded by the cap. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 quite significant.鈥

When designing the agency, Dr W枚pking said, politicians should resist the urge to warp partnerships by putting in too many incentives.

鈥淭hey tend to work better when they鈥檙e motivated intrinsically, when the people work together because they benefit from the cooperation,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou only get that quality when people really want to work together.鈥

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Dr Saverschek said that rather than excluding larger universities, funding call criteria could be tailored to favour a certain type of institution or have rules specifying that different types should be represented in a project team.

ben.upton@timeshighereducation.com

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