糖心Vlog

The UK鈥檚 industrial strategy: what will it mean for universities?

New approach calls research crucial to raising productivity, but there is a shift in focus to industrial challenges

Published on
January 29, 2017
Last updated
February 16, 2017
humanoid manned robot
Source: Getty
To market, to market: South Korea鈥檚 high level of public funding is cited as a factor in its greater success in capitalising on scientific research

The UK government鈥檚 new , unveiled by Theresa May during a visit to northwest England on 23 January, is full of proposals that could change how universities and academics work. Although it is so far only a Green Paper that asks for consultation, it makes some stark admissions about the failings of the British economy, and proposes more spending on research as part of the solution. 聽

Organisations such as the (CaSE) have also repeatedly argued that the UK underspends on research 鈥 and it appears that the government now wholeheartedly agrees. 聽

鈥淭he UK invests 1.7 per cent of GDP in private and public funds on research and development,鈥 the strategy says. 鈥淭his is below the OECD [Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development] average of 2.4 per cent and substantially below the leading backers of innovation 鈥 countries like South Korea, Israel, Japan, Sweden, Finland and Denmark 鈥 which contribute over 3 per cent of their GDP to this area,鈥 it admits.

鈥淲hat鈥檚 really welcome about this strategy is that it鈥檚 quite upfront about the issues,鈥 says Richard Jones, a science and innovation policy expert at the University of Sheffield, who has long raised concerns about leading to weak British productivity. Low R&D spending has been acknowledged in previous policy documents, he says, but this one comes without any 鈥渆xcuses鈥. 鈥淭here鈥檚 an air of realism and acknowledgement of the challenges,鈥 he says.

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The strategy commits to spending an additional 拢2 billion a year by 2020-21 (as announced last November), which it says will increase government R&D spending by around 20 per cent. CaSE has calculated that this will boost R&D spending to 2 per cent of GDP, assuming it also stimulates business spending 鈥 a large increase, but still short of the OECD average.

One of the key questions now is who gets this money and how it will be spent. Part of the funding 鈥 it is not yet clear exactly how much 鈥 will be channelled through a new Industrial Strategy Challenge Fund, which will 鈥渟upport business-led collaborations with coordinated research efforts鈥 and focus on the 鈥渃hallenges, opportunities and technologies that have the potential to transform existing industries and create entirely new ones鈥.

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According to Paul Nightingale, deputy director of the Science Policy Research Unit at the University of Sussex, this suggests a shift in the way the UK commercialises its research. Rather than funding basic science and hoping the resultant discoveries will be turned into new products and technologies 鈥 a 鈥渇ailed model鈥, says Nightingale 鈥 the new strategy will instead ask industry for its 鈥渋ntractable鈥 problems and call on academic scientists to help out. It is a vision of 鈥渜uestions from industry driving research鈥, he explains.

This 鈥渃hallenge鈥 model of innovation is far from new, and is explicitly modelled on the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency in the US (a recent , for example, asked researchers to build robots that could drive cars, climb ladders and fix leaking pipes).

But it is the first time the UK will have put serious money behind it, says Andy Westwood, an expert in politics and policy based at the universities of Wolverhampton and Manchester. 鈥淲hether it overturns the existing model is an interesting question,鈥 he says.

Although the strategy calls for further suggestions, it already has firm ideas on where the new money could be spent: clean energy and storage; robotics and artificial intelligence; satellite and space technologies; healthcare and medicine; manufacturing processes and 鈥渕aterials of the future鈥; bioscience and biotechnology; quantum technologies; and digital technology such as supercomputing and 5G mobile networks.

Quite a few of these areas are familiar from the 鈥溾澛燾hampioned by Lord Willetts, the former universities and science minister. This is important, as 鈥渃ontinuity matters in industrial strategy almost as much as money鈥, says Westwood.

Some researchers may feel left out, as there is no mention of the humanities or social sciences. But Westwood points out that new money for industrial challenges could 鈥渢ake some pressure off鈥 when other researchers compete for other pots of money.

Another question raised by the strategy is how much the government will use research funding to try to spread wealth out of the much richer London and southeast England. It is littered with references to the UK鈥檚 geographical inequality, and pointedly notes that 鈥46 per cent of Research Council and 糖心Vlog Funding Council for England (HEFCE) funding is spent in Oxford, Cambridge and London鈥. It suggests creating 鈥渘ew funding streams to support world-class clusters of research and innovation in all parts of the UK鈥.

But the current system funds research irrespective of place, so the issue of whether to actively spread it out beyond the 鈥済olden triangle鈥 of Oxford, Cambridge and London is still the 鈥済orilla in the room鈥, says Nightingale. To deliberately dish out money to poorer regions would be a 鈥渇undamental challenge鈥 to the long-standing Haldane principle of ministerial non-interference in decisions about how research funding is distributed, he thinks. 聽

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david.matthews@tesglobal.com


Is technical education really a threat to universities?

The industrial strategy also focuses on improving the UK鈥檚 鈥渢echnical education鈥, proposing 拢170 million of capital funding to create 鈥減restigious鈥 Institutes of Technology.

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They are being sold as a direct challenge to universities. The new plans would provide a 鈥渃redible alternative to the academic route鈥, claims the strategy鈥檚 accompanying . The quoted an unnamed government source, who went even further, saying that it was 鈥渦nwise to force less academic pupils into the straitjacket of university, leaving them drowning in debt for the sake of a poor degree鈥.

So will a new German-style parallel system of technical education start sucking students away from universities any time soon?

Andy Westwood, an expert of politics and policy based at the universities of Wolverhampton and Manchester, says that this aspect of the strategy was 鈥渙verspun鈥 when released, as he thinks universities will be heavily involved in technical education regardless.

鈥淚t鈥檚 more a case that people will be able to do degrees in different settings鈥, such as workplace apprenticeships, he says. 鈥淚n that sense it might be competition for the three-year full-time offer, but universities know they can offer a range of things.鈥

There are also concerns that the money promised will be too small to make much difference. 聽

鈥淭he funding proposed is not enough to establish new providers,鈥 argues Chris Jones, chief executive of the City & Guilds Group, which offers vocational qualifications. Care is needed to make sure the Institutes of Technology 鈥渄on鈥檛 simply end up being a rebrand of colleges鈥, he says.

Martin Doel, former head of the Association of Colleges and professor of leadership in further education and skills at University College London, cautions that universities hoping to participate in the strategy need to be aware that the proposed new technical education system will not be 鈥渂usiness as usual鈥.

The sub-degree education envisaged by the strategy is 鈥渘ot the natural domain of most universities鈥, nor is the 鈥渇ocus on directly meeting the needs of employers鈥, he says. Instead, if they want to play a part, universities will most likely have to work with local colleges, he adds.


Fundamental v applied science

This graph, included in the industrial strategy, is used to illustrate the point that the UK devotes a far lower proportion of its research expenditure towards closer-to-market experimental development than some other countries, particularly in Asia. 聽聽

Type of research and development spending at different stages of research
厂辞耻谤肠别:听
OECD research and development database

鈥淲hile the way we distribute funding across different stages of R&D is not out of line with other European countries,鈥 it says, 鈥渋t is striking that in leading innovation nations, such as Israel and countries in Asia, a greater proportion of total R&D investment is on later-stage, experimental development.鈥 China鈥檚 share is twice that of the UK, it points out.

This might explain why the UK has 鈥渟o often pioneered discovery but not realised the commercial benefits鈥, such as in medical imaging and biotechnologies, it says. The strategy does not suggest reducing basic research funding, but makes clear that new government R&D spending will be focused on industrial challenges.聽

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