"Science Is the Key to Growth"

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如果这个国家要保持领先世界经济,必须继续大手笔的投资基础科学.

 

Science Is the Key to Growth

Houston

MITT ROMNEY said in all three presidential debates that we need to expand the economy. But he left out a critical ingredient: investments in science and technology.

Scientific knowledge and new technologies are the building blocks for long-term economic growth — “the key to a 21st-century economy,” as President Obama said in the final debate.

So it is astonishing that Mr. Romney talks about economic growth while planning deep cuts in investment in science, technology and education. They are among the discretionary items for which spending could be cut 22 percent or more under the Republican budget plan, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.

According to the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the plan, which Mr. Romney has endorsed, could cut overall nondefense science, engineering, biomedical and technology research by a quarter over the next decade, and energy research by two-thirds.

Mr. Romney seems to have lost sight of the critical role of research investments not only in developing new medicines and cleaner energy sources but also in creating higher-skilled jobs.

The private sector can’t do it alone. We rely on companies to translate scientific discoveries into products. But federal investment in research and development, especially basic research, is critical to their success. Just look at Google, which was started by two graduate students working on a project supported by the National Science Foundation and today employs 54,000 people.

Richard K. Templeton, chief executive of Texas Instruments, put it this way in 2009: “Research conducted at universities and national labs underpins the new innovations that drive economic growth.”

President Bill Clinton, for whom I served as science adviser from 1998 to 2001, understood that. In those years, we balanced the federal budget and achieved strong growth, creating about two million jobs a year. A main reason was the longstanding bipartisan consensus on investing in science. With support from Congress, Mr. Clinton put research funding on a growth path, including a doubling over five years (completed under President George W. Bush) of the budget for the National Institutes of Health.

In 2010, the federal government invested about $26.6 billion in N.I.H. research; those investments led to $69 billion in economic activity and supported 485,000 jobs across the country, according to United for Medical Research, a nonpartisan group.

Moreover, the $3.8 billion taxpayers invested in the Human Genome Project between 1988 and 2003 helped create and drive $796 billion in economic activity by industries that now depend on the advances achieved in genetics, according to the Battelle Memorial Institute, a nonprofit group that supports research for the industry.

So science investments not only created jobs in new industries of the time, like the Internet and nanotechnology, but also the rising tax revenues that made budget surpluses possible.

American science has not been faring so well in recent budgets. President Obama has repeatedly requested steady increases for scientific research, aimed at putting the budgets of three key science agencies — the National Science Foundation, the Department of Energy’s Office of Science, and the National Institute of Standards and Technology — on a path to double, by 2016, the combined $10 billion they received in 2006. But a polarized Congress has not delivered at that rate, and the goal could be nullified if next year sees the beginning of draconian cuts.

Meanwhile, the frontiers of science continue to expand. President Obama is proposing that the United States boost its overall national research and development investments — including private enterprise and academia as well as government — to 3 percent of gross domestic product — a number that would still lag behind Israel, Sweden, Japan and South Korea, in that order.

In an increasingly complex world, that should be only a start. If our country is to remain strong and prosperous and a land of rewarding jobs, we need to understand this basic investment principle in America’s future: no science, no growth.

 

所有跟帖: 

教育科研, 多花钱, 也不见得就有啥进展. -worriedmom1- 给 worriedmom1 发送悄悄话 worriedmom1 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 11/05/2012 postreply 15:44:33

同意!其实10000篇垃圾文章中可能只有一篇真正有用的,但没有9999篇垃圾,就没有那篇。。 -周游列国逍遥人生- 给 周游列国逍遥人生 发送悄悄话 周游列国逍遥人生 的博客首页 (15 bytes) () 11/05/2012 postreply 15:45:38

但是,发9999篇垃圾文章的人,很可能就混成发那篇有用的文章人的老板:))~~~~~~~~~~~~ -mysc1234- 给 mysc1234 发送悄悄话 (0 bytes) () 11/05/2012 postreply 15:50:12

所以科研是要一不怕苦,二不怕寂寞 -周游列国逍遥人生- 给 周游列国逍遥人生 发送悄悄话 周游列国逍遥人生 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 11/05/2012 postreply 15:51:45

不对,搞科研第一是要会钻营,第二才是不怕苦,不怕寂寞:))~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -mysc1234- 给 mysc1234 发送悄悄话 (0 bytes) () 11/05/2012 postreply 15:53:37

有用的比例比这个高吧. 当年没用,后来有用的例子很多. 比如维纳40-50年代 -weston- 给 weston 发送悄悄话 weston 的博客首页 (32 bytes) () 11/05/2012 postreply 15:57:52

科研结果分为垃圾,一般应用型,和真正突破型。。 -周游列国逍遥人生- 给 周游列国逍遥人生 发送悄悄话 周游列国逍遥人生 的博客首页 (106 bytes) () 11/05/2012 postreply 16:05:47

投国防, 对高科技很有利的。 -茶园15- 给 茶园15 发送悄悄话 (40 bytes) () 11/05/2012 postreply 15:48:10

Space Agency不是国防部但对制造业很有帮助.当年DOD投资科技的确是挺多的. -weston- 给 weston 发送悄悄话 weston 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 11/05/2012 postreply 15:56:04

这个有道理. 这些东西能促进产业升级. -worriedmom1- 给 worriedmom1 发送悄悄话 worriedmom1 的博客首页 (166 bytes) () 11/05/2012 postreply 15:58:46

掠夺别国的。 -7Sle- 给 7Sle 发送悄悄话 7Sle 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 11/05/2012 postreply 15:48:22

问题是世界各国的理工人才科学家多想来美国,还值得花大本钱投资吗?找不到好老师花钱也没有用。 -lucky8910- 给 lucky8910 发送悄悄话 lucky8910 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 11/05/2012 postreply 15:53:13

不投资, 也就没有RA的钱, 很多人来不了了。 -我是反革命- 给 我是反革命 发送悄悄话 我是反革命 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 11/05/2012 postreply 16:31:04

的确如此. 就是这么直接. -weston- 给 weston 发送悄悄话 weston 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 11/05/2012 postreply 16:38:11

美国的理论就是我有钱雇人来做, 问题这10多年的OUTSOURCING, 自己都不会做了, 光有钱也没用了。 -QiTian- 给 QiTian 发送悄悄话 (94 bytes) () 11/05/2012 postreply 16:31:37

R&D的人还没有外包吧。 -lucky8910- 给 lucky8910 发送悄悄话 lucky8910 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 11/05/2012 postreply 16:33:23

r u kidding? :)))) 经过我手送出去就不少了 :) -QiTian- 给 QiTian 发送悄悄话 (0 bytes) () 11/05/2012 postreply 16:41:06

看看大药物公司裁员,就知道了 -周游列国逍遥人生- 给 周游列国逍遥人生 发送悄悄话 周游列国逍遥人生 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 11/05/2012 postreply 16:43:07

现在美国也意识到了, 但已经来不及了。 这现象咱们10多年前就议论过了, 都是跟风的结果, 再过20年, 美国的科技一定会落后下 -QiTian- 给 QiTian 发送悄悄话 (138 bytes) () 11/05/2012 postreply 16:51:10

和国防,medicare,SS开支相比,科研其实是很小一部分,而O8和Romney都准备再cut。。 -周游列国逍遥人生- 给 周游列国逍遥人生 发送悄悄话 周游列国逍遥人生 的博客首页 (29 bytes) () 11/05/2012 postreply 16:38:53

O8去年增加NIH13%,DOE 8% -weston- 给 weston 发送悄悄话 weston 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 11/05/2012 postreply 16:45:53

要医改,首先要全民医保,再集中整治。不然都是白说 -Africangrey- 给 Africangrey 发送悄悄话 Africangrey 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 11/05/2012 postreply 16:51:45

那是没地方可以cut了. discretionary spending其实不多. -worriedmom1- 给 worriedmom1 发送悄悄话 worriedmom1 的博客首页 (50 bytes) () 11/05/2012 postreply 17:58:37

这个规律好像旧了,日本这么做了也好像回报不大,中国韩国爱盗版但发展得很快 -@shengsheng@- 给 @shengsheng@ 发送悄悄话 (0 bytes) () 11/05/2012 postreply 16:43:53

也要有东西盗,是不? :) -weston- 给 weston 发送悄悄话 weston 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 11/05/2012 postreply 16:46:32

但慢慢地就能把先进的存在打垮:) -@shengsheng@- 给 @shengsheng@ 发送悄悄话 (0 bytes) () 11/05/2012 postreply 16:49:09

这方面我比较支持08,探索新能源的可能性。 -破烂熊- 给 破烂熊 发送悄悄话 (39 bytes) () 11/05/2012 postreply 17:05:28

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