Within the final decade, the UK has had 4 considerably completely different units of expertise priorities, and a brief, however disruptive, interval, the place such prioritisation was opposed on precept. This 3500 phrase piece seems at this historical past of instability in UK innovation coverage, and suggests some ideas of consistency and readability which could give us some extra stability within the decade to come back. A PDF model will be downloaded right here.
Introduction
The issue of coverage churn has been recognized in various coverage areas as a barrier to productiveness progress within the UK, and science and innovation coverage is not any exception to this. The UK can’t do all the things – it represents lower than 3% of the world’s R&D assets, so it must specialise. However current governments haven’t discovered it simple to resolve the place the UK ought to put its focus, after which stick with these selections.
In 2012 this the then Science Minister, David Willetts, launched an initiative which recognized 8 precedence applied sciences – the “Eight Nice Applied sciences”. Willetts mirrored on the destiny of this initiative in a very attention-grabbing paper printed final 12 months. In brief, whereas there was consensus on the necessity for the UK to focus (excluding one quick interval), the areas of focus have been topic to frequent change.
Substantial modifications in path for expertise coverage have occurred even supposing we’ve had a single political celebration in energy since 2010, with specific instability since 2015, within the interval of Conservative majority authorities. Since 2012, the typical life-span of an innovation coverage has been about 2.5 years. Beneath the headline modifications, it’s true that there have been some continuities. However given the lengthy time-scales wanted to determine analysis programmes and to hold them by to their outcomes, this instability makes it completely different to implement any type of coherent technique.
Shifting Priorities: from “Eight Nice Applied sciences”, by “Seven Expertise Households”, to “5 Crucial Applied sciences”
Desk 1 summarises the varied precedence applied sciences recognized in authorities coverage since 2012, grouped in a method which finest brings out the continuities (click on to enlarge).
The “Eight Nice Applied sciences” had been launched in 2012 in a speech to the Royal Society by the then Chancellor of the Exchequer, George Osborne; a paper by David Willetts expanded on the rationale for the alternatives . The 2014 Science and Innovation Coverage endorsed the “Eight Nice Applied sciences”, with the addition of quantum expertise, which, following an in depth lobbying train, had been added to the checklist within the 2013 Autumn Assertion.
2015 introduced a majority Conservative authorities, however continuity within the places of work of Prime Minister and Chancellor of the Exchequer didn’t translate into continuity in innovation coverage. The brand new Secretary of State within the Division of Enterprise, Innovation and Expertise was Sajid Javid, who delivered to the publish a Thatcherite mistrust of something that smacked of commercial technique. The primary sufferer of this world-view was the innovation company Innovate UK, which was subjected to vital cut-backs, inflicting lasting harm.
This interlude didn’t final very lengthy – after the Brexit referendum, David Cameron’s resignation and the premiership of Theresa Could, there was an elevated urge for food for intervention within the economic system, coupled with a rising consciousness and acknowledgement of the UK’s productiveness downside. Greg Clark (a former Science Minister) took over at a renamed and expanded Division of Enterprise, Vitality and Industrial Technique.
A White Paper outlining a “trendy industrial technique” was printed in 2017. Though it nodded to the “Eight Nice Applied sciences”, the main target shifted to 4 “missions”. Cash had already been put aside within the 2016 Autumn Assertion for an “Industrial Technique Problem Fund” which might assist R&D in assist of the priorities that emerged from the Industrial Technique.
2019 noticed one other change of Prime Minister – and one other election, which introduced one other Conservative authorities, with a a lot higher majority, and a relatively interventionist manifesto that promised substantial will increase in science funding, together with a brand new company modelled on the USA’s ARPA, and a promise to “focus our efforts on areas the place the UK can generate a commanding lead within the industries of the long run – life sciences, clear power, house, design, computing, robotics and synthetic intelligence.”
However the “trendy industrial technique” didn’t survive lengthy into the brand new administration. The brand new Secretary of State was Kwasi Kwarteng, from the wing of the celebration with an ideological aversion to industrial technique. In 2021, the economic technique was outdated by a Treasury doc, the Plan for Development, which, whereas inserting sturdy emphasis on the significance of innovation, took a way more sector and expertise agnostic strategy to its assist. The Plan for Development was supported by a brand new Innovation Technique, printed later in 2021. This did establish a brand new set of precedence applied sciences – “Seven Expertise Households”.
2022 was the 12 months of three Prime Ministers. Liz Truss’s hard-line free market place was actually unfriendly to the idea of commercial technique, however in her 44 day tenure as Prime Minister there was not sufficient time to make any vital modifications in path to innovation coverage.
Rishi Sunak’s Premiership introduced one other vital growth, within the type of a equipment of presidency change reflecting the brand new Prime Minister’s enthusiasm for expertise. A brand new division – the Division for Innovation, Science and Expertise – meant that there was now a cupboard stage Secretary of State centered on science. One other vital evolution within the profile of science and expertise in authorities was the growing prominence of nationwide safety as a driver of science coverage.
This had begun within the 2021 Built-in Assessment , which was an try and set a single imaginative and prescient for the UK’s place on this planet, masking safety, defence, growth and overseas coverage. This elevated “Sustaining strategic benefit by science and expertise” as certainly one of 4 overarching ideas. The disruptions to worldwide provide chains in the course of the covid pandemic, and the 2022 invasion of Ukraine by Russia and the next massive scale European land battle, raised the difficulty of nationwide safety even greater up the political agenda.
A brand new division, and a modified set of priorities, produced a brand new 2023 technique – the Science & Expertise Framework – taking a methods strategy to UK science & expertise . This included a brand new set of expertise priorities – the “5 vital applied sciences”.
Thus in a single decade, we’ve had 4 considerably completely different units of expertise priorities, and a brief, however disruptive, interval, the place such prioritisation was opposed on precept.
Continuities and discontinuities
There are some continuities in substance in these expertise priorities. Quantum expertise appeared round 2013 as an addendum to the “Eight Nice Applied sciences”, and survives into the present “5 Crucial Applied sciences”. Problems with nationwide safety are an enormous driver right here, as they’re for a lot bigger scale programmes within the USA and China.
In a few different areas, title modifications conceal substantial continuity. What was referred to as artificial biology in 2012 is now encompassed within the discipline of engineering biology. Synthetic Intelligence has come to excessive public prominence right this moment, however it’s a pure evolution of what was referred to as massive information, pushed by technical advances in machine studying, extra pc energy, and greater information units.
Priorities in 2017 had been outlined as Grand Challenges, not Applied sciences. The language of challenges is taken up within the 2021 Innovation Technique, which proposes a set of Innovation Missions, distinct from the precedence expertise households, to handle main societal challenges, in areas comparable to local weather change, public well being, and intractable illnesses. The 2023 Science and Expertise Framework, nonetheless, describes investments in three of the 5 Crucial Applied sciences, engineering biology, synthetic intelligence, and quantum applied sciences, as “expertise missions”, which appears to make use of the time period in a considerably completely different sense. There may be room for extra readability about what is supposed by a grand problem, a mission, or a expertise, which I’ll return to under.
One other distinction that isn’t at all times clear is between applied sciences and business sectors. Each the Coalition and the Could governments had industrial methods that explicitly singled out specific sectors for assist, together with by assist for innovation. These are listed in desk 2. However it’s controversial that a minimum of two of the Eight Nice Applied sciences – agritech, and house & satellites – could be higher regarded as business sectors relatively than applied sciences.
Desk 2 – industrial technique sectors, as outlined by the Coalition, and the Could authorities.
The sector strategy did underpin main utilized public/non-public R&D programmes (such because the Aerospace Expertise Institute, and the Superior Propulsion Centre), and new R&D establishments, such because the Offshore Renewable Catapult Centre, designed to assist particular business sectors. In the meantime, beneath the banner of Life Sciences, there may be continued express assist from the pharmaceutical and biotech business, although right here there’s a lack of readability about whether or not the first purpose is to advertise the well being of residents by innovation assist to the well being and social care system, or to assist pharma and biotech as excessive worth, exporting, industrial sectors.
However two of the 2023 “5 vital applied sciences” – semiconductors and future telecoms – are considerably new. Once more, these look extra like industrial sectors than applied sciences, and whereas nobody can doubt their strategic significance within the international economic system it isn’t apparent that the UK has a very sturdy comparative benefit in them, both within the dimension of the prevailing enterprise base or the size of the UK market (see my earlier dialogue of the background to a UK Semiconductor Technique).
The story of the final ten years, then, is a scarcity of consistency, not simply within the priorities themselves, however within the conceptual foundation for making the prioritisation – whether or not challenges or missions, business sectors, or applied sciences.
From technique to implementation
How does one flip from technique to implementation: given a set of precedence sectors, what must occur to show these into analysis programmes, after which translate that analysis into business outcomes? An apparent level that nonetheless wants stressing, is that this course of has lengthy lead occasions, and this isn’t suitable with innovation methods which have a median lifetime of two.5 years.
To cite the current Willetts overview of the enterprise case course of for scientific programmes: “One senior official estimated the time from an unique thought, arising in Analysis Councils, to execution of a programme at over two and a half years with 13 particular approvals required.” It might clearly be fascinating to chop among the paperwork that causes such delays, however it’s putting that the time taken to design and provoke a analysis programme is of the identical order as the typical lifetime of an innovation technique.
One information level right here is the destiny of the Industrial Technique Problem Fund. This was introduced within the 2016 Autumn Assertion, anticipating the 2017 Industrial Technique White Paper, and exists to assist translational analysis programmes in assist of that Industrial Technique. As we’ve seen, this technique was de-emphasised in 2019, and formally scrapped in 2021. But the analysis programmes set as much as assist it are nonetheless going, with cash nonetheless within the price range to be spent in FY 24/25.
In fact, a lot worthwhile analysis will probably be being performed in these programmes, so the cash isn’t wasted; the issue is that such orphan programmes could not have any follow-up, as new programmes on completely different matters are designed to assist the newest technique to emerge from central authorities.
Generally the timescales are such that there isn’t even an opportunity to operationalise one technique earlier than one other one arrives. The main public funder of R&D, UKRI, produced a 5 12 months technique in March 2022 , which was underpinned by the seven expertise households. To operationalise this technique, UKRI’s constituent analysis councils produced a set of supply plans . These had been printed in September 2022, giving them a run of six months earlier than the arrival of the 2023 Science and Innovation Framework, with its new set of vital applied sciences.
A pure response of funding companies to this instability could be to resolve themselves what finest to do, after which do their finest to retro-fit their ongoing programmes to new authorities methods as they emerge. However this is able to defeat the purpose of constructing a technique within the first place.
The subsequent ten years
How can we do higher over the subsequent decade? We have to deal with consistency and readability.
Consistency means having one technique that we stick with. If we’ve this, traders can trust within the UK, analysis establishments could make knowledgeable selections about their very own investments, and particular person researchers can plan their careers with extra confidence.
In fact, the technique ought to evolve, as surprising developments in science and expertise seem, and because the exterior setting modifications. And it ought to construct on what has gone earlier than – for instance, there may be a lot of worth within the methods strategy of the 2023 Science and Innovation Framework.
There must be readability on the idea for prioritisation. I believe you will need to be a lot clearer about what we imply by Grand Challenges, Missions, Business Sectors, and Applied sciences, and the way they differ from one another. With sharper definitions, we’d discover it simpler to determine clear standards for prioritisation.
For me, Grand Challenges set up the circumstances we’re working beneath. Some grand challenges may embody:
- Easy methods to transfer our power economic system to a zero-carbon foundation by 2050;
- Easy methods to create an reasonably priced and humane well being and social care system for an ageing inhabitants;
- Easy methods to restore productiveness progress to the UK economic system and scale back the UK’s regional disparities in financial efficiency;
- Easy methods to maintain the UK protected and safe in an more and more unstable and hostile world.
One would hope that there was a large consensus concerning the scale of those issues, although not everybody will agree, nor will it at all times be apparent, what the easiest way of tackling them is.
Some may refer to those overarching points as missions, utilizing the time period popularised by Mariana Mazzacuto , however I would like to consult with a mission as one thing extra particular, with a way of timescale and a particular goal. The 1960’s Moonshot programme is usually taken as an exemplar, although I believe the extra vital mission from that interval was to create the power for the USA to land a half tonne payload wherever on the earth’s floor, with an accuracy of some hundred meters or higher.
The essential characteristic of a mission, then, is that it’s a focused program to realize a strategic purpose of the state, that requires each the mixing and refinement of present applied sciences and the event of recent ones. Defining and prioritising missions requires working throughout the entire of presidency, to establish the issues that the state must be solved, and which are tractable sufficient given cheap expertise foresight to be value attempting, and prioritising them.
The important thing questions for a judging missions, then, are, how a lot does the federal government need this to occur, how possible is it given foreseeable expertise, how nicely outfitted is the UK to ship it given its industrial and analysis capabilities, and the way reasonably priced is it?
For supporting an business sector, although, the questions are completely different. Sector assist is a part of an lively industrial technique, and given the tendency of business sectors to cluster in house, this has a powerful regional dimension. The objectives of commercial technique are largely financial – to lift the financial productiveness of a area or the nation – so the factors for choosing sectors must be based mostly on their significance to the economic system when it comes to the fraction of GVA that they provide, and their potential to enhance productiveness.
Previously industrial technique has usually been pushed by the necessity to create jobs, however our present downside is productiveness, relatively than unemployment, so I believe the important thing standards for choosing sectors must be their potential to create extra worth by the applying of innovation and the event of expertise of their workforces.
Along with the financial dimension, there may be a safety facet to the selection, if there’s a purpose to suppose that sustaining functionality in a specific sector is significant to nationwide safety. The 2021 nationalisation of the metal forging firm, Sheffield Forgemasters, to safe the aptitude to fabricate vital parts for the Royal Navy’s submarine fleet, would have been unthinkable a decade in the past.
Industrial technique could contain assist for innovation, for instance by collaborative programmes of pre-competitive analysis. Nevertheless it must be broader than simply analysis and growth; it might contain growing establishments and programmes for innovation diffusion, the harnessing of public procurement, the event of specialist expertise provision, and at a regional stage, the availability of infrastructure.
Lastly, on what foundation ought to we select a expertise to deal with? By a expertise precedence, we consult with an rising functionality arising from new science, that may very well be adopted by present business sectors, or might create new, disruptive sectors. Right here an understanding of the worldwide analysis panorama, and the UK’s a part of that, is a vital start line. Even the most recent expertise, to be applied, is determined by present industrial functionality, so the form of the prevailing UK industrial base does should be taken account. Lastly, one shouldn’t underplay the significance of the imaginative and prescient of gifted and pushed people.
This isn’t to say that priorities for the entire of the science and innovation panorama should be outlined when it comes to challenges, missions, and business sectors.
A normal framework for expertise, finance, regulation, worldwide collaboration, and infrastructure – as set out by the current Science & Innovation Framework – must underlie extra particular prioritisation. Sustaining the well being of the essential disciplines is vital to offer resilience within the face of the unanticipated, and you will need to be open to new developments and keep agility in responding to them.
The start line for a science and innovation technique must be to grasp that, fairly often, science and innovation shouldn’t be the start line. Science coverage isn’t the identical as industrial technique, despite the fact that it’s usually used as a (less expensive) substitute for it. For challenges and missions, defining the objectives should come first; solely then can one resolve what advances in science and expertise are wanted to carry these in attain. Likewise, in a profitable industrial technique, shut engagement with the prevailing capabilities of business and the calls for of the market are wanted to outline the areas of science and innovation that can assist the event of a specific business sector.
As I pressured in my earlier, complete, survey of the UK Analysis and Growth panorama, underlying any lasting technique must be a settled, long-term view of what sort of nation the UK aspires to be, what sort of economic system it ought to have, and the way it sees its place on this planet.