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Showing posts with label funding. Show all posts
Showing posts with label funding. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

ASIANS TOP USA-EUROPE SCIENCE R&D SPENDING

ASIANS TOP USA-EUROPE SCIENCE R&D SPENDING

Erle Frayne D. Argonza

Another breakthrough news has struck our perception banks recently, with the gladdening news that Asians as a whole have topped both USA and EU spendings on science research & development.

Ten Asian countries are noted to be leading the way for Asians as a whole in sci-tech R & D, to note: China, India, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan, Thailand, and Vietnam. The time frame used for the research on sci-tech R&D funding was 1999 through 2009.

The brightening news surely correlates well with the conclusion of Western observers that the East had already surpassed the West technologically in the year 2007. It also ties up with another news, coming from Western observers, that science research publications in Asia have risen by many folds over the last ten (10) years.

The news is truly brightening, as the Asian ethos of sharing will see the East disseminating its sci-tech knowledge to shore up the stagnating West in the coming decades. That is in far contrast to the bellicose and hostile attitudes of the West during their imperious occupation of Asian territories and post-war hegemonism.

[Philippines, 06 February 201]]

Source: http://www.scidev.net/en/science-and-innovation-policy/finance/news/asian-countries-collectively-top-us-r-d-spend.html

Asian countries collectively top US R&D spend

Mićo Tatalović

19 January 2012 | EN

Overall, Asia now invests in R&D as much as the United States

Ten Asian countries, including some developing countries in South-East Asia, have, as a bloc, caught up with the global leader in research and development (R&D) investment, the United States, according to a US report published this week (17 January).

The total science spend of China, India, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan, Thailand, and Vietnam rose steadily between 1999 and 2009 to reach 32 per cent of the global share of spending on science, compared with 31 per cent in the US.

A "major trend has been the rapid expansion of R&D performance in the regions of East/Southeast Asia and South Asia," according to the biennial report 'Science and Engineering Indicators 2012' produced by the National Science Board, the policy-making body of the US National Science Foundation, which drew upon a variety of national and international statistics.

The report also mentions that the share of R&D expenditure spent by US multinationals in Asia-Pacific has increased.

"Asia's rapid ascent as a major world science and technology (S&T) centre is chiefly driven by developments in China," says the report. "But several other Asian economies (the Asia-8 [India, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan and Thailand]) have also played a role.

"All are intent on boosting quality of, and access to, higher education and developing world-class research and S&T infrastructures.

"The Asia-8 functions like a loosely structured supplier zone for China's high-technology manufacturing export industries.

"This supplier zone increasingly appears to include Japan. Japan, a preeminent S&T nation, is continuing to lose ground relative to China and the Asia-8 in high-technology manufacturing and trade," the report says.

"India's high gross domestic product (GDP) growth continues to contrast with a fledgling overall S&T performance."

The figures show that China, while still a long way behind the United States, is now the second largest R&D performer globally, contributing 12 per cent of the global research spend. It has overtaken Japan, which contributed 11 per cent in 2009.

The proportion of GDP that China devotes to science funding has doubled since 1999 to 1.7 per cent and China's pace of real growth in R&D expenditure "remains exceptionally high at about 20 per cent annually," the report says.

Overall, world expenditures on R&D are estimated to have exceeded US$1.25 trillion in 2009, up from US$641 billion a decade earlier.

"Governments in many parts of the developing world, viewing science and technology as integral to economic growth and development, have set out to build more knowledge-intensive economies," it says.

"They have taken steps to open their markets to trade and foreign investment, develop their S&T infrastructures, stimulate industrial R&D, expand their higher education systems, and build indigenous R&D capabilities. Over time, global S&T capabilities have grown, nowhere more so than in Asia."

A study, published last year in Scientometrics, said South-East Asian science papers have proliferated in the past decade, suggesting a move towards knowledge-based economies in the region.

Asia's combined production of science and engineering publications is also approaching that of the United States and European Union, and Asia is already a top producer of engineering publications.

"Engineering is vital to knowledge-intensive and technologically advanced economies, and many Asian economies are building their engineering capabilities," the report digest says.

"China publishes 15 per cent of global engineering articles, and Asia as a whole publishes twice as many engineering articles as the United States and half again as many as the EU [European Union]."

Link to full report

Thursday, August 25, 2011

DEVELOPING COUNTRIES’ SCIENTISTS FUNDED BY U.S. INITIATIVE

DEVELOPING COUNTRIES’ SCIENTISTS FUNDED BY U.S. INITIATIVE

Erle Frayne D. Argonza

The US National Science Foundation has allotted a fund block aimed at helping out the scientists of developing countries conduct their noble researches. Qualified countries are not only those poor ones but also emerging markets whose scientists are still struggling in the woods to take off with their researches due to fund lack.

In my own country, there are thousands of university-based professors and researchers who suffer from fund sourcing constraints. The likes of the University of the Philippines and Ateneo De Manila University, the leading universities, have already done enormous efforts to solve funding problems, even as their brilliant professors are capable of sourcing funds directly from institutes outside the country. But such isn’t the state of things for other struggling universities and research institutes.

The efforts by the US foundation involved should be welcomed by the appropriate stakeholders. Below is a report on the initiatives of the said foundation.

[Philippines, 07 August 2011]

Source: http://www.scidev.net/en/news/us-scheme-targets-developing-country-researchers-.html

US scheme targets developing country researchers

Mićo Tatalović

8 July 2011

Developing country researchers will have access to new US funds through an initiative launched in the United States yesterday (7 July).

US researchers working in developing countries receive around US$100 million a year in grants from the US National Science Foundation (NSF).

But so far, their developing world collaborators have not been able to apply for any of these funds, creating an asymmetry in relationships, according to Alex Dehgan, science and technology advisor to the administrator of the US Agency for International Development (USAID).

"What you want is … [for developing world scientists] to have their own sources of support so you're truly building a partnership, what Obama called for in Cairo," Dehgan told SciDev.Net, referring to the American president's famous speech in 2009.

Now, USAID has partnered with the NSF to provide grants to developing world partners of NSF US grantees.

The Partnerships for Enhanced Engagement in Research (PEER) initiative will support applied research — science in support of development — in areas of global concern such as climate change, biodiversity, water issues, agriculture, seismic hazards and deforestation.

"It really brings together the best that America has to offer — our science and technology capacity and particularly the peer-review process that NSF uses — with developing country counterparts to finally be able to fund their research, their students, their laboratories."

Most of the funds will be available in any developing country where USAID works. Additionally there will be some funds specific to Indonesia and Lebanon, and potential specific funds for the Islamic world, supported through Obama's Global Engagement Through Partnerships project.

Applications from developing world researchers — who must already be collaborating with US scientists on NSF-funded projects and who will become principal investigators on new projects — will be evaluated on two criteria: scientific merits and development impact.

Pilot projects in Bangladesh, Burkina Faso, Kenya, Mali and Tanzania are already underway.

Dehgan said the funds may motivate new partnerships, as they will not be restricted to existing collaborations.

USAID is making available US$8.3 million for developing country scientist-led projects, but the figure may increase if there is great demand, said Dehgan.

Michael Greene, a scholar at the Policy and Global Affairs division of the US National Academies of Science, said the initiative could benefit all parties.

"A less obvious benefit will be exposing the local scientific community to world-class peer review," Greene said. "The best researchers will like it and want it for nationally funded projects as well, and the governments may also see the benefit of encouraging more productive projects … I hope that some training in proposal writing is available to prospective applicants."

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