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UNESCO SCIENCE REPORT

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A world in search of an effective growth strategy<br />

A CLOSER LOOK AT COUNTRIES<br />

AND REGIONS<br />

More countries are covered by the <strong>UNESCO</strong> Science Report<br />

this time than ever before. This reflects the growing<br />

acceptance worldwide of STI as a driver of development. The<br />

following section summarizes the most insightful trends and<br />

developments emerging from Chapters 4 to 27.<br />

Canada (Chapter 4) has managed to dodge the worst<br />

shockwaves from the US financial crisis of 2008, thanks to<br />

a robust banking industry and strong energy and natural<br />

resource sectors, but this is now changing with the decline in<br />

global oil prices since 2014.<br />

Two important weaknesses highlighted by the <strong>UNESCO</strong><br />

Science Report 2010 persist: a tepid private-sector<br />

commitment to innovation and the lack of a strong national<br />

agenda for talent and training in scientific and engineering<br />

fields. Academic research remains relatively strong, overall,<br />

with publications outperforming the OECD average in terms<br />

of average citation rate, but Canada is slipping in higher<br />

education rankings. An additional vulnerability has emerged:<br />

a policy agenda focused almost exclusively on using science<br />

to power commerce, often to the detriment of critical ‘public<br />

good’ science, alongside the downsizing of government<br />

science agencies and departments.<br />

A recent government review has identified a possible<br />

disconnect between Canada’s strengths in science and<br />

technology, on the one hand, and industrial R&D and<br />

economic competitiveness, on the other. Although<br />

overall industrial R&D remains weak, four industries<br />

display considerable strength: aerospace products and<br />

parts manufacturing; ICTs; oil and gas extraction; and<br />

pharmaceutical manufacturing.<br />

Between 2010 and 2013, Canada’s GERD/GDP fell to its lowest<br />

level in a decade (1.63%). In parallel, the share of business<br />

funding of R&D receded from 51.2% (2006) to 46.4%. The<br />

pharmaceutical, chemical, primary and fabricated metals<br />

industries have all experienced an erosion in R&D spending.<br />

Consequently, the number of personnel employed in<br />

industrial R&D shrank by 23.5% between 2008 and 2012.<br />

Notable developments since 2010 include a renewed focus<br />

on polar research and knowledge, enhanced support for<br />

universities, growing applications of genomics through<br />

Genome Canada, a Venture Capital Action Plan (2013), a<br />

Canadian partnership with the EU’s Eureka programme and<br />

an International Education Strategy to attract more foreign<br />

students to Canada’s shores and maximize opportunities for<br />

global partnerships.<br />

In the United States of America (Chapter 5), GDP has been<br />

on the upswing since 2010. However, the recovery from the<br />

2008–2009 recession remains fragile. Despite the decline<br />

in unemployment levels, wages have stagnated. There is<br />

evidence that the economic stimulus package of 2009,<br />

formally known as the American Recovery and Reinvestment<br />

Act, may have buffered immediate job losses for those<br />

working in science and technology, since a significant portion<br />

of this stimulus package went to R&D.<br />

Since 2010, federal investment in R&D has stagnated in<br />

the wake of the recession. Despite this, industry has largely<br />

maintained its commitment to R&D, particularly in growing,<br />

high-opportunity sectors. As a result, total R&D spending has<br />

dipped only slightly and the balance of spending has shifted<br />

further towards industrial sources since 2010. GERD is now<br />

rising and the business sector’s investment in innovation<br />

appears to be accelerating.<br />

Most of the 11 agencies that conduct the bulk of federally<br />

funded R&D have seen flat R&D budgets for the past five<br />

years. The Department of Defense has even experienced a<br />

steep decline, reflecting the winding down of the intervention<br />

in Afghanistan and Iraq and the lesser need for related<br />

technologies. The decline in non-defence R&D appears to<br />

be due to a combination of decreasing federal budgets<br />

for specific research and the budget sequester instigated<br />

by Congress in 2013, which has enacted US$1 trillion in<br />

automatic cuts to the federal budget to reduce the deficit.<br />

This trend is having the greatest impact on basic research<br />

and public-interest science in such areas as life sciences,<br />

energy and climate, which happen to be priority areas<br />

for the executive branch of government. In order to take<br />

up the ‘grand challenges’ in priority areas announced by<br />

the president in 2013, the executive is fostering tripartite<br />

industry–non–profit–government partnerships. Some<br />

milestones built on this collaborative model are the BRAIN<br />

Initiative, the Advanced Manufacturing Partnership and the<br />

American Business Act on Climate Pledge that received a<br />

US$140 billion commitment from its industrial partners in<br />

2015.<br />

While business R&D has been thriving, budget restrictions<br />

have resulted in deep cuts to universities’ research budgets.<br />

Universities have responded by seeking new sources of<br />

funding from industry and relying heavily on temporary<br />

contract or adjunct workers. This is affecting the morale of<br />

both young and established scientists and inciting some<br />

to change career course or emigrate. In parallel, the rate of<br />

return migration among foreign students based in the USA<br />

is rising as levels of development in their country of origin<br />

improve.<br />

Chapter 1<br />

41

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