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Funding of science

Research funding is a term generally covering any funding for scientific research, in the areas of natural science, technology, and social science. Different methods can be used to disburse funding, but the term often connotes funding obtained through a competitive process, in which potential research projects are evaluated and only the most promising receive funding. It is often measured via Gross domestic expenditure on R&D (GERD).

Most research funding comes from two major sources: corporations (through research and development departments) and government (primarily carried out through universities and specialized government agencies; often known as research councils). A smaller amount of scientific research is funded by charitable foundations, especially in relation to developing cures for diseases such as cancer, malaria, and AIDS.

According to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), more than 60% of research and development in scientific and technical fields is carried out by industry, and 20% and 10% respectively by universities and government.[1] Comparatively, in countries with less GDP such as Portugal and Mexico, the industry contribution is significantly lower. The government funding proportion in certain industries is higher, and it dominates research in social science and humanities. In commercial research and development, all but the most research-oriented corporations focus more heavily on near-term commercialization possibilities rather than "blue-sky" ideas or technologies (such as nuclear fusion).[2]

History edit

Conducting research requires funds. Over the past years, funding for research has gone from a closed patronage system to which only few could contribute, to an open system with multiple funding possibilities.

In the early Zhou dynasty (-c. 6th century to 221 BCE), government officials used their resources to fund schools of thought of which they were patron. The bulk of their philosophies are still relevant, including Confucianism, Legalism and Taoism.

During the Mayan Empire (-c. 1200–1250), scientific research was funded for religious purposes. The Venus Table is developed, showing precise astronomical data about the position of Venus in the sky. In Cairo (-c. 1283), the Mamluk Sultan Qalawun funded a monumental hospital, patronizing the medical sciences over the religious sciences. Furthermore, Tycho Brahe was given an estate (-c. 1576 – 1580) by his royal patron King Frederik II, which was used to build Uraniborg, an early research institute.

The age of the academies edit

In 1700–1799, scientific academies became central creators of scientific knowledge. Funded by state sponsorship, societies are still free to manage scientific developments. Membership is exclusive in terms of gender, race and class, but academies open the world of research up beyond the traditional patronage system.

In 1799, Louis-Nicolas Robert patents the paper machine. When he quarrels over invention ownership, he seeks financing from the Fourdrinier brothers. In 19th century Europe, businessmen financed the application of science to industry.

In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, as the pace of technological progress increased before and during the industrial revolution, most scientific and technological research was carried out by individual inventors using their own funds. A system of patents was developed to allow inventors a period of time (often twenty years) to commercialize their inventions and recoup a profit, although in practice many found this difficult.

The Manhattan Project (1942 – 1946) had cost $27 billion and employed 130,000 people, many of them scientists charged with producing the first nuclear weapons. In 1945, 70 scientists signed the Szilard petition, asking President Truman to make a demonstration of the power of the bomb before using it. Most of the signers lost their jobs in military research.

In the twentieth century, scientific and technological research became increasingly systematized, as corporations developed, and discovered that continuous investment in research and development could be a key element of success in a competitive strategy. It remained the case, however, that imitation by competitors - circumventing or simply flouting patents, especially those registered abroad - was often just as successful a strategy for companies focused on innovation in matters of organisation and production technique, or even in marketing.

Today, many funders move towards transparent and accessible research outcomes through data repositories or Open-access mandates. Some researchers turn to crowdfunding in search of new projects to fund. Private and public foundations, governments, and others stand as an expansion of funding opportunities for researchers. As new funding sources become available, the research community grows and becomes accessible to a wider, and more diverse group of scientists.

Methodology to measure science funding edit

The guidelines for R&D data collections are laid down in the Frascati Manual published by the OECD.[3] In the publication, R&D denotes three type of activity: basic research, applied research and experimental development. This definition does not cover innovation but it may feed into the innovative process. Business sector innovation has a dedicated OECD manual.[4]  

The most frequently used measurement for R&D is Gross domestic expenditure on R&D (GERD). GERD is often represented in GERD-to-GDP ratios, as it allows for easier comparisons between countries. The data collection for GERD is based on reporting by performers. GERD differentiates according to the funding sector (business, enterprise, government, higher education, private non-profit, rest of the world) and the sector of performance (all funding sectors with the exception of rest of the world as GERD only measures activity within the territory of a country). The two may coincide for example when government funds government performed R&D.

Government funded science also may be measured by the Government budget appropriations and outlays for R&D (GBAORD/ GBARD). GBARD is a funder-based method, it denotes what governments committed to R&D (even if final payment might be different). GERD-source of funding-government and GBARD are not directly comparable. On data collection, GERD is performer based, GBARD is funder. The level of government considered also differs: GERD should include spending by all levels of the government (federal – state – local), whereas GBARD excludes the local level and often lacks state level data. On geographic coverage, GERD takes into account performance within the territory of a country whereas GBARD also payments to the Rest of the world.  

Comparisons on the effectiveness of both the different sources of funding and sectors of performance as well as their interplay have been made.[5] The analysis often boils down to whether public and private finance show crowding-in or crowding-out patterns.[6][7]

Funding types: public and private edit

Public/State Funding edit

Public funding refers to activities financed by tax-payers money. This is primarily the case when the source of funds is the government. Higher education institutions are usually not completely publicly financed as they charge tuition fees and may receive funds from non-public sources.

Rationale for funding edit

R&D is a costly, and long-term investment to which disruptions are harmful.[8]

The public sector has multiple reasons to fund science. The private sector is said to focus on the closer to the market stage of R&D policy, where appropriability hence private returns are high.[9] Basic research is weak on appropriability and so remains risky and under-financed.[10][11] Consequently, although governmental R&D may provide support across the R&D value chain, it is often characterized as Market failure induced intervention to maintain early-stage research where incentives to invest are low. The theory of public goods seconds this argument.[12] Publicly funded research often supports research fields where social rate of return is higher than private rate of return often related to appropriability potential.[13] The general free rider problem of public goods is a threat especially in case of global public goods such as climate change research, which may lower incentives to invest by both the private sector but also other governments.[14]  

In endogenous growth theories, R&D contributes to growth.[15] Some have depicted this relationship in the inverse, claiming that growth drives innovation.[16][17] Recently, (tacit) knowledge itself is said to be a source of economic driver internalized by science workers.[18] When this knowledge and/or human capital emigrates, countries face the so-called brain–drain. Science policy can assist to avoid this as large shares of governmental R&D is spent on researchers and supporting staff personnel salaries.[3][19] In this sense, science funding is not only discretionary spending but also has elements of entitlement spending.

R&D funded and especially performed by the State may allow greater influence over its direction.[20] This is particularly important in the case of R&D contributing to public goods. However, the ability of governments have been criticized over whether they are best positioned to pick winners and losers.[21] In the EU, dedicated safeguards have been enacted under a dedicated form of competition law called State Aid. State Aid safeguards business activities from governmental interventions. This invention was largely driven by the German ordoliberal school as to eliminate state subsidies advocated by the French dirigiste.[22] Threats to global public goods has refueled the debate on the role of governments beyond a mere market failure fixer, the so-called mission-driven policies.[23]

Funding modalities edit

Governments may fund science through different instruments such as: direct subsidies, tax credits, loans, financial instruments, regulatory measures, public procurement etc. While direct subsidies have been the prominent instrument to fund business R&D, since the financial crisis a shift has taken place in OECD countries in the direction of tax breaks. The explanation seems to lay in the theoretical argument that firms know better, and in the practical benefit of lower administrative burden of such schemes.[24] Depending on the funding type, different modalities to distribute the funds may be used. For regulatory measures, often the competition/antitrust authorities will rule on exemptions. In case of block funding the funds may be directly allocated to given institutions such as higher education institutions with relative autonomy over their use.[3] For competitive grants, governments are often assisted by research councils to distribute the funds.[25] Research councils are (usually public) bodies that provide research funding in the form of research grants or scholarships. These include arts councils and research councils for the funding of science.

List of research councils edit

An incomplete list of national and international pan-disciplinary public research councils:

Name Location
National Scientific and Technical Research Council   Argentina
Australian Research Council, National Health and Medical Research Council, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation, Australian Space Agency, Defence Science and Technology Group   Australia
Austrian Research Promotion Agency, Austrian Science Fund, Austrian Space Agency   Austria
Sciensano, Research Foundation - Flanders   Belgium
National Council for Scientific and Technological Development, Brazilian Space Agency   Brazil
National Research Council, Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council, Canadian Institutes of Health Research, Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council, Canadian Space Agency, Defence Research and Development Canada, Atomic Energy of Canada Limited, Public Health Agency of Canada   Canada
National Commission for Scientific Research and Technology   Chile
National Natural Science Foundation of China, Ministry of Science and Technology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China National Space Administration   China
Czech Science Foundation, Technology Agency of the Czech Republic, Czech Space Office   Czech Republic
Danish Agency for Science, Technology and Innovation[26]   Denmark
European Research Council, European Defence Fund   European Union
Research Council of Finland, Finnish Funding Agency for Technology and Innovation   Finland
National Agency for Research, National Centre for Space Studies, French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission, French National Centre for Scientific Research, French National Institute of Health and Medical Research   France
German Research Foundation, German Aerospace Center   Germany
National Hellenic Research Foundation   Greece
Icelandic Centre for Research[27]   Iceland
Council of Scientific and Industrial Research, Indian Council of Medical Research, Indian Space Research Organisation, Indian Council of Agricultural Research, Defence Research and Development Organization   India
Irish Research Council, Science Foundation Ireland   Ireland
Israel Science Foundation,[28] Israel Innovation Authority, Israel Space Agency   Israel
National Research Council, Italian Space Agency   Italy
National Research and Technology Council, Mexican Space Agency   Mexico
Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research, Netherlands Space Office   Netherlands
Research Council of Norway, Norwegian Defence Research Establishment, Norwegian Institute of Public Health, Norwegian Space Agency   Norway
Pakistan Science Foundation, Pakistan Council of Scientific and Industrial Research, Pakistan Health Research Council, Space and Upper Atmosphere Research Commission, Pakistan Agricultural Research Council, Defence Science and Technology Organization   Pakistan
Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology   Portugal
Science Fund of the Republic of Serbia   Serbia
Agency for Science, Technology and Research, Defence Science and Technology Agency   Singapore
National Research Foundation of South Africa   South Africa
Spanish National Research Council, State Research Agency, National Institute for Aerospace Technology, Centre for the Development of Industrial Technology, Spanish Space Agency, Carlos III Health Institute, Centre for Energy, Environmental and Technological Research   Spain
National Research Council of Sri Lanka   Sri Lanka
Swedish Research Council, Swedish National Space Agency, Swedish Defence Research Agency   Sweden
Swiss National Science Foundation, Swiss Space Office    Switzerland
National Science and Technology Development Agency   Thailand
Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey, Turkish Space Agency   Turkey
Uganda National Council for Science and Technology[29]   Uganda
National Research Foundation, United Arab Emirates Space Agency   United Arab Emirates
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council, Medical Research Council, Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council, Science and Technology Facilities Council, Defence Science and Technology Laboratory, Innovate UK, National Institute for Health and Care Research, Natural Environment Research Council, Economic and Social Research Council, Research England, United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority, UK Energy Research Centre, UK Space Agency, Advanced Research and Invention Agency   United Kingdom
National Science Foundation, National Institutes of Health, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency, Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy, DOE Office of Science, Agricultural Research Service   United States

Conditionality edit

In addition to project deliverables, funders also increasingly introduce new eligibility requirements alongside traditional ones such as research integrity/ethics.

With the Open Science movement, funding is increasingly tied to data management plans and making data FAIR.[30] The Open Science requirement complements Open Access mandates[31] which today are widespread.[32]

The gender dimension also gained ground in recent years. The European Commission mandates applicants to adopt gender equality plans across their organization.[33] The UK Research and Innovation Global Challenges Research Fund mandates a gender equality statement.[34]

Most recently, the European Commission also introduced a “Do No Significant Harm” principle to the Framework Program which aims to curb the environmental footprint of scientific projects.[35] "Do No Significant Harm" has been criticized as coupled with other eligibility requirements it is often characterized as red-tape.[36][37] The European Commission has been trying to simplify the Framework Program for numerous years with limited success.[38] Simplification attempts are also taken by the UK Research and Innovation.[39]

Process edit

Often scientists apply for research funding which a granting agency may (or may not) approve to financially support. These grants require a lengthy process as the granting agency can inquire about the researcher(s)'s background, the facilities used, the equipment needed, the time involved, and the overall potential of the scientific outcome. The process of grant writing and grant proposing is a somewhat delicate process for both the grantor and the grantee: the grantors want to choose the research that best fits their scientific principles, and the individual grantees want to apply for research in which they have the best chances but also in which they can build a body of work towards future scientific endeavors.[citation needed]

The Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council in the United Kingdom has devised an alternative method of fund-distribution: the sandpit.[40]

Most universities have research administration offices to facilitate the interaction between the researcher and the granting agency.[41] "Research administration is all about service—service to our faculty, to our academic units, to the institution, and to our sponsors. To be of service, we first have to know what our customers want and then determine whether or not we are meeting those needs and expectations."[42]

In the United States of America, the National Council of University Research Administrators serves its members and advances the field of research administration through education and professional development programs, the sharing of knowledge and experience, and by fostering a professional, collegial, and respected community.

Hard money versus soft money edit

In academic contexts, hard money may refer to funding received from a government or other entity at regular intervals, thus providing a steady inflow of financial resources to the beneficiary. The antonym, soft money, refers to funding provided only through competitive research grants and the writing of grant proposals.[43]

Hard money is usually issued by the government for the advancement of certain projects or for the benefit of specific agencies. Community healthcare, for instance, may be supported by the government by providing hard money. Since funds are disbursed regularly and continuously, the offices in charge of such projects are able to achieve their objectives more effectively than if they had been issued one-time grants.

Individual jobs at a research institute may be classified as "hard-money positions" or "soft-money positions";[43] the former are expected to provide job security because their funding is secure in the long term, whereas individual "soft-money" positions may come and go with fluctuations in the number of grants awarded to the institution.

Private funding: industrial/philanthropy/crowdfunding edit

Private funding for research comes from philanthropists,[44] crowd-funding,[45] private companies, non-profit foundations, and professional organizations.[46] Philanthropists and foundations have been pouring millions of dollars into a wide variety of scientific investigations, including basic research discovery, disease cures, particle physics, astronomy, marine science, and the environment.[44] Privately funded research has been adept at identifying important and transformative areas of scientific research.[47][48] Many large technology companies spend billions of dollars on research and development each year to gain an innovative advantage over their competitors, though only about 42% of this funding goes towards projects that are considered substantially new, or capable of yielding radical breakthroughs.[49] New scientific start-up companies initially seek funding from crowd-funding organizations, venture capitalists, and angel investors, gathering preliminary results using rented facilities,[50] but aim to eventually become self-sufficient.[45][51]

Europe and the United States have both reiterated the need for further private funding within universities.[52] The European Commission highlights the need for private funding via research in policy areas such the European Green Deal and Europe's role in the digital age.[53]

Influence on research edit

The source of funding may introduce conscious or unconscious biases into a researcher's work.[54] This is highly problematic due to academic freedom in case of universities and regulatory capture in case of government-funded R&D.

Conflict of Interest edit

Disclosure of potential conflicts of interest (COIs) is used by journals to guarantee credibility and transparency of the scientific process. Conflict of interest disclosure, however, is not systematically nor consistently dealt with by journals that publish scientific research results.

When research is funded by the same agency that can be expected to gain from a favorable outcome there is a potential for biased results and research shows that results are indeed more favorable than would be expected from a more objective view of the evidence.[55] A 2003 systematic review studied the scope and impact of industry sponsorship in biomedical research. The researchers found financial relationships among industry, scientific investigators, and academic institutions widespread. Results showed a statistically significant association between industry sponsorship and pro-industry conclusions and concluded that "Conflicts of interest arising from these ties can influence biomedical research in important ways".[56] A British study found that a majority of the members on national and food policy committees receive funding from food companies.[57]

In an effort to cut costs, the pharmaceutical industry has turned to the use of private, nonacademic research groups (i.e., contract research organizations [CROs]) which can do the work for less money than academic investigators. In 2001 CROs came under criticism when the editors of 12 major scientific journals issued a joint editorial, published in each journal, on the control over clinical trials exerted by sponsors, particularly targeting the use of contracts which allow sponsors to review the studies prior to publication and withhold publication of any studies in which their product did poorly. They further criticized the trial methodology stating that researchers are frequently restricted from contributing to the trial design, accessing the raw data, and interpreting the results.[58]

The Cochrane Collaboration, a worldwide group that aims to provide compiled scientific evidence to aid well informed health care decisions, conducts systematic reviews of randomized controlled trials of health care interventions and tries to disseminate the results and conclusions derived from them.[59][60] A few more recent reviews have also studied the results of non-randomized, observational studies. The systematic reviews are published in the Cochrane Library. A 2011 study done to disclose possible conflicts of interests in underlying research studies used for medical meta-analyses reviewed 29 meta-analyses and found that conflicts of interest in the studies underlying the meta-analyses were rarely disclosed. The 29 meta-analyses reviewed an aggregate of 509 randomized controlled trials. Of these, 318 trials reported funding sources with 219 (69%) industry funded. 132 of the 509 trials reported author disclosures of conflict of interest, with 91 studies (69%) disclosing industry financial ties with one or more authors. However, the information was seldom reflected in the meta-analyses. Only two (7%) reported funding sources and none reported author-industry ties. The authors concluded, "without acknowledgment of COI due to industry funding or author industry financial ties from RCTs included in meta-analyses, readers' understanding and appraisal of the evidence from the meta-analysis may be compromised."[61]

In 2003 researchers looked at the association between authors' published positions on the safety and efficacy in assisting with weight loss of olestra, a fat substitute manufactured by the Procter & Gamble (P&G), and their financial relationships with the food and beverage industry. They found that supportive authors were significantly more likely than critical or neutral authors to have financial relationships with P&G and all authors disclosing an affiliation with P&G were supportive. The authors of the study concluded: "Because authors' published opinions were associated with their financial relationships, obtaining noncommercial funding may be more essential to maintaining objectivity than disclosing personal financial interests."[62]

A 2005 study in the journal Nature[63] surveyed 3247 US researchers who were all publicly funded (by the National Institutes of Health). Out of the scientists questioned, 15.5% admitted to altering design, methodology or results of their studies due to pressure of an external funding source.

Regulatory capture edit

Private funding also may be channelled to public funders. In 2022, a news story broke following the resignation of Eric Lander, former director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) at the Biden administration, that the charity of former Google executive Eric Schmidt, Schmidt Futures, paid the salary of a number employees of the OSTP.[64] Ethics inquiries were initiated in the OSTP.

Efficiency of funding edit

The traditional measurement for efficiency of funding are publication output, citation impact, number of patents, number of PhDs awarded etc. However, the use of journal impact factor has generated a publish-or-perish culture and a theoretical model has been established whose simulations imply that peer review and over-competitive research funding foster mainstream opinion to monopoly.[65] Calls have been made to reform research assessment, most notably in the San Francisco Declaration on Research Assessment[66] and the Leiden Manifesto for research metrics.[67] The current system also has limitations to measure excellence in the Global South.[68][69] Novel measurement systems such as the Research Quality Plus has been put forward to better emphasize local knowledge and contextualization in the evaluation of excellence.[70]

Another question is how to allocate funds to different disciplines, institutions, or researchers. A recent study by Wayne Walsh found that “prestigious institutions had on average 65% higher grant application success rates and 50% larger award sizes, whereas less-prestigious institutions produced 65% more publications and had a 35% higher citation impact per dollar of funding.”[71][72]

Trends edit

In endogenous growth theories R&D contributes to economic growth. Therefore, countries have strong incentives to maintain investments in R&D.

By country edit

Different countries spend vastly different amounts on research, in both absolute and relative terms. For instance, South Korea and Israel spend more than 4% of their GDP while many less developed countries spend less than 1%.[73] In developed economies, GERD is financed mainly by the business sector, whereas the government and the university sector dominates in less-developed economies.[74] In some countries, funding from the Rest of the World makes up 20-30% of total GERD, probably due to FDI and foreign aid, but only in Mali it is the main source of fund.[75] Private non-profit is not the main source of fund in any countries, but it reaches 10% of total GERD in Columbia and Honduras.[76]

When comparing annual GERD and GDP Growth, it can be seen that countries with lower GERD are often growing faster. However, as most of these countries are developing, their growth is probably driven by other factors of production. On the other hand, developed countries who have higher GERD also produce positive growth rates. GERD in these countries has a more substantial contribution to growth rate.

Country (and the EU) GERD as % of the GDP in 2017[73] GDP Growth (annual %) in 2017[77] Main GERD source of fund[73] Targets
Israel 4,81 4,38 Business
Republic of Korea 4,29 3,16 Business 5% by 2017
USA 2,81 2,33 Business
European Union 2,15 2,8 Business 3% of EU GDP by 2030
China 2,11 6,95 Business annual increase of 7% (2021- 2025)[78]
Uruguay 0,48 1,63 Higher Education
Mali 0,29 5,31 Rest of the World
Armenia 0,22 7,5 Government
Iraq 0,04 -1,82 Government
Guatemala 0,02 4,63 Higher education

Recessions edit

In crisis, business R&D tends to act procyclically.[79] As R&D is a long-term investments and so disruptions should be avoided Keynesian countercyclical reactions were advocated for in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, but this was difficult to achieve for some countries.[80][81] Due to the nature of COVID-19, the pandemic accelerated publicly funded R&D spending in 2020, primarily into the pharmaceutical industry. A fall is expected in spending for 2021, although not below 2020 levels.[82] The pandemic made health research and sectors with strategic value-chain dependencies the main target of science funding.[83]

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Eisfeld-Reschke, Jörg, Herb, Ulrich, & Wenzlaff, Karsten (2014). Research Funding in Open Science. In S. Bartling & S. Friesike (Eds.), Opening Science (pp. 237–253). Heidelberg: Springer. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-00026-8_16
  • Herb, Ulrich (2014-07-31). . Research Europe Magazine. Archived from the original on 2014-09-03. Retrieved 2014-08-30.
  • Martinson, Brian C.; De Vries, Raymond; et al. (2005). "Scientists behaving badly". Nature. 435 (7043): 737–738. Bibcode:2005Natur.435..737M. doi:10.1038/435737a. PMID 15944677. S2CID 4341622.
  • Mello, Michelle M.; et al. (2005). "Academic Medical Centers' Standards for Clinical-Trial Agreements with Industry". New England Journal of Medicine. 352 (21): 2202–2210. doi:10.1056/nejmsa044115. PMID 15917385. S2CID 8283797.
  • Odlyzko, Andrew (1995-10-04). "The Decline of Unfettered Research". Retrieved 2007-11-02.

External links edit

  • Where to Search for Funding | Science | AAAS, from Science Careers, from the Journal Science.
  • ResearchCrossroads Aggregated funding data from the National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation, NSF, private foundations and the European Union
  • Seventh Framework Programme (2007–2013) The European Unions's programme for funding and promoting research at the European level
  • CORDIS - the official website of the European Unions's programme for funding and promoting research This website contains comprehensive information on research projects already funded.
  • Research Councils UK The portal for the UK-based Research Councils.

funding, science, research, funding, term, generally, covering, funding, scientific, research, areas, natural, science, technology, social, science, different, methods, used, disburse, funding, term, often, connotes, funding, obtained, through, competitive, pr. Research funding is a term generally covering any funding for scientific research in the areas of natural science technology and social science Different methods can be used to disburse funding but the term often connotes funding obtained through a competitive process in which potential research projects are evaluated and only the most promising receive funding It is often measured via Gross domestic expenditure on R amp D GERD Most research funding comes from two major sources corporations through research and development departments and government primarily carried out through universities and specialized government agencies often known as research councils A smaller amount of scientific research is funded by charitable foundations especially in relation to developing cures for diseases such as cancer malaria and AIDS According to the Organisation for Economic Co operation and Development OECD more than 60 of research and development in scientific and technical fields is carried out by industry and 20 and 10 respectively by universities and government 1 Comparatively in countries with less GDP such as Portugal and Mexico the industry contribution is significantly lower The government funding proportion in certain industries is higher and it dominates research in social science and humanities In commercial research and development all but the most research oriented corporations focus more heavily on near term commercialization possibilities rather than blue sky ideas or technologies such as nuclear fusion 2 Contents 1 History 1 1 The age of the academies 2 Methodology to measure science funding 3 Funding types public and private 3 1 Public State Funding 3 1 1 Rationale for funding 3 1 2 Funding modalities 3 1 3 List of research councils 3 1 4 Conditionality 3 1 5 Process 3 1 6 Hard money versus soft money 3 2 Private funding industrial philanthropy crowdfunding 4 Influence on research 4 1 Conflict of Interest 4 2 Regulatory capture 5 Efficiency of funding 6 Trends 6 1 By country 6 2 Recessions 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Conducting research requires funds Over the past years funding for research has gone from a closed patronage system to which only few could contribute to an open system with multiple funding possibilities In the early Zhou dynasty c 6th century to 221 BCE government officials used their resources to fund schools of thought of which they were patron The bulk of their philosophies are still relevant including Confucianism Legalism and Taoism During the Mayan Empire c 1200 1250 scientific research was funded for religious purposes The Venus Table is developed showing precise astronomical data about the position of Venus in the sky In Cairo c 1283 the Mamluk Sultan Qalawun funded a monumental hospital patronizing the medical sciences over the religious sciences Furthermore Tycho Brahe was given an estate c 1576 1580 by his royal patron King Frederik II which was used to build Uraniborg an early research institute The age of the academies edit In 1700 1799 scientific academies became central creators of scientific knowledge Funded by state sponsorship societies are still free to manage scientific developments Membership is exclusive in terms of gender race and class but academies open the world of research up beyond the traditional patronage system In 1799 Louis Nicolas Robert patents the paper machine When he quarrels over invention ownership he seeks financing from the Fourdrinier brothers In 19th century Europe businessmen financed the application of science to industry In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries as the pace of technological progress increased before and during the industrial revolution most scientific and technological research was carried out by individual inventors using their own funds A system of patents was developed to allow inventors a period of time often twenty years to commercialize their inventions and recoup a profit although in practice many found this difficult The Manhattan Project 1942 1946 had cost 27 billion and employed 130 000 people many of them scientists charged with producing the first nuclear weapons In 1945 70 scientists signed the Szilard petition asking President Truman to make a demonstration of the power of the bomb before using it Most of the signers lost their jobs in military research In the twentieth century scientific and technological research became increasingly systematized as corporations developed and discovered that continuous investment in research and development could be a key element of success in a competitive strategy It remained the case however that imitation by competitors circumventing or simply flouting patents especially those registered abroad was often just as successful a strategy for companies focused on innovation in matters of organisation and production technique or even in marketing Today many funders move towards transparent and accessible research outcomes through data repositories or Open access mandates Some researchers turn to crowdfunding in search of new projects to fund Private and public foundations governments and others stand as an expansion of funding opportunities for researchers As new funding sources become available the research community grows and becomes accessible to a wider and more diverse group of scientists Methodology to measure science funding editThe guidelines for R amp D data collections are laid down in the Frascati Manual published by the OECD 3 In the publication R amp D denotes three type of activity basic research applied research and experimental development This definition does not cover innovation but it may feed into the innovative process Business sector innovation has a dedicated OECD manual 4 The most frequently used measurement for R amp D is Gross domestic expenditure on R amp D GERD GERD is often represented in GERD to GDP ratios as it allows for easier comparisons between countries The data collection for GERD is based on reporting by performers GERD differentiates according to the funding sector business enterprise government higher education private non profit rest of the world and the sector of performance all funding sectors with the exception of rest of the world as GERD only measures activity within the territory of a country The two may coincide for example when government funds government performed R amp D Government funded science also may be measured by the Government budget appropriations and outlays for R amp D GBAORD GBARD GBARD is a funder based method it denotes what governments committed to R amp D even if final payment might be different GERD source of funding government and GBARD are not directly comparable On data collection GERD is performer based GBARD is funder The level of government considered also differs GERD should include spending by all levels of the government federal state local whereas GBARD excludes the local level and often lacks state level data On geographic coverage GERD takes into account performance within the territory of a country whereas GBARD also payments to the Rest of the world Comparisons on the effectiveness of both the different sources of funding and sectors of performance as well as their interplay have been made 5 The analysis often boils down to whether public and private finance show crowding in or crowding out patterns 6 7 Funding types public and private editPublic State Funding edit Main article Science policy See also Research council United States national laboratories and List of federally funded research and development centers US Public funding refers to activities financed by tax payers money This is primarily the case when the source of funds is the government Higher education institutions are usually not completely publicly financed as they charge tuition fees and may receive funds from non public sources Rationale for funding edit R amp D is a costly and long term investment to which disruptions are harmful 8 The public sector has multiple reasons to fund science The private sector is said to focus on the closer to the market stage of R amp D policy where appropriability hence private returns are high 9 Basic research is weak on appropriability and so remains risky and under financed 10 11 Consequently although governmental R amp D may provide support across the R amp D value chain it is often characterized as Market failure induced intervention to maintain early stage research where incentives to invest are low The theory of public goods seconds this argument 12 Publicly funded research often supports research fields where social rate of return is higher than private rate of return often related to appropriability potential 13 The general free rider problem of public goods is a threat especially in case of global public goods such as climate change research which may lower incentives to invest by both the private sector but also other governments 14 In endogenous growth theories R amp D contributes to growth 15 Some have depicted this relationship in the inverse claiming that growth drives innovation 16 17 Recently tacit knowledge itself is said to be a source of economic driver internalized by science workers 18 When this knowledge and or human capital emigrates countries face the so called brain drain Science policy can assist to avoid this as large shares of governmental R amp D is spent on researchers and supporting staff personnel salaries 3 19 In this sense science funding is not only discretionary spending but also has elements of entitlement spending R amp D funded and especially performed by the State may allow greater influence over its direction 20 This is particularly important in the case of R amp D contributing to public goods However the ability of governments have been criticized over whether they are best positioned to pick winners and losers 21 In the EU dedicated safeguards have been enacted under a dedicated form of competition law called State Aid State Aid safeguards business activities from governmental interventions This invention was largely driven by the German ordoliberal school as to eliminate state subsidies advocated by the French dirigiste 22 Threats to global public goods has refueled the debate on the role of governments beyond a mere market failure fixer the so called mission driven policies 23 Funding modalities edit Governments may fund science through different instruments such as direct subsidies tax credits loans financial instruments regulatory measures public procurement etc While direct subsidies have been the prominent instrument to fund business R amp D since the financial crisis a shift has taken place in OECD countries in the direction of tax breaks The explanation seems to lay in the theoretical argument that firms know better and in the practical benefit of lower administrative burden of such schemes 24 Depending on the funding type different modalities to distribute the funds may be used For regulatory measures often the competition antitrust authorities will rule on exemptions In case of block funding the funds may be directly allocated to given institutions such as higher education institutions with relative autonomy over their use 3 For competitive grants governments are often assisted by research councils to distribute the funds 25 Research councils are usually public bodies that provide research funding in the form of research grants or scholarships These include arts councils and research councils for the funding of science List of research councils edit An incomplete list of national and international pan disciplinary public research councils Name LocationNational Scientific and Technical Research Council nbsp ArgentinaAustralian Research Council National Health and Medical Research Council Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation Australian Space Agency Defence Science and Technology Group nbsp AustraliaAustrian Research Promotion Agency Austrian Science Fund Austrian Space Agency nbsp AustriaSciensano Research Foundation Flanders nbsp BelgiumNational Council for Scientific and Technological Development Brazilian Space Agency nbsp BrazilNational Research Council Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council Canadian Institutes of Health Research Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council Canadian Space Agency Defence Research and Development Canada Atomic Energy of Canada Limited Public Health Agency of Canada nbsp CanadaNational Commission for Scientific Research and Technology nbsp ChileNational Natural Science Foundation of China Ministry of Science and Technology Chinese Academy of Sciences China National Space Administration nbsp ChinaCzech Science Foundation Technology Agency of the Czech Republic Czech Space Office nbsp Czech RepublicDanish Agency for Science Technology and Innovation 26 nbsp DenmarkEuropean Research Council European Defence Fund nbsp European UnionResearch Council of Finland Finnish Funding Agency for Technology and Innovation nbsp FinlandNational Agency for Research National Centre for Space Studies French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission French National Centre for Scientific Research French National Institute of Health and Medical Research nbsp FranceGerman Research Foundation German Aerospace Center nbsp GermanyNational Hellenic Research Foundation nbsp GreeceIcelandic Centre for Research 27 nbsp IcelandCouncil of Scientific and Industrial Research Indian Council of Medical Research Indian Space Research Organisation Indian Council of Agricultural Research Defence Research and Development Organization nbsp IndiaIrish Research Council Science Foundation Ireland nbsp IrelandIsrael Science Foundation 28 Israel Innovation Authority Israel Space Agency nbsp IsraelNational Research Council Italian Space Agency nbsp ItalyNational Research and Technology Council Mexican Space Agency nbsp MexicoNetherlands Organisation for Scientific Research Netherlands Space Office nbsp NetherlandsResearch Council of Norway Norwegian Defence Research Establishment Norwegian Institute of Public Health Norwegian Space Agency nbsp NorwayPakistan Science Foundation Pakistan Council of Scientific and Industrial Research Pakistan Health Research Council Space and Upper Atmosphere Research Commission Pakistan Agricultural Research Council Defence Science and Technology Organization nbsp PakistanPortuguese Foundation for Science and Technology nbsp PortugalScience Fund of the Republic of Serbia nbsp SerbiaAgency for Science Technology and Research Defence Science and Technology Agency nbsp SingaporeNational Research Foundation of South Africa nbsp South AfricaSpanish National Research Council State Research Agency National Institute for Aerospace Technology Centre for the Development of Industrial Technology Spanish Space Agency Carlos III Health Institute Centre for Energy Environmental and Technological Research nbsp SpainNational Research Council of Sri Lanka nbsp Sri LankaSwedish Research Council Swedish National Space Agency Swedish Defence Research Agency nbsp SwedenSwiss National Science Foundation Swiss Space Office nbsp SwitzerlandNational Science and Technology Development Agency nbsp ThailandScientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey Turkish Space Agency nbsp TurkeyUganda National Council for Science and Technology 29 nbsp UgandaNational Research Foundation United Arab Emirates Space Agency nbsp United Arab EmiratesEngineering and Physical Sciences Research Council Medical Research Council Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council Science and Technology Facilities Council Defence Science and Technology Laboratory Innovate UK National Institute for Health and Care Research Natural Environment Research Council Economic and Social Research Council Research England United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority UK Energy Research Centre UK Space Agency Advanced Research and Invention Agency nbsp United KingdomNational Science Foundation National Institutes of Health National Aeronautics and Space Administration Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency Advanced Research Projects Agency Energy DOE Office of Science Agricultural Research Service nbsp United StatesConditionality edit In addition to project deliverables funders also increasingly introduce new eligibility requirements alongside traditional ones such as research integrity ethics With the Open Science movement funding is increasingly tied to data management plans and making data FAIR 30 The Open Science requirement complements Open Access mandates 31 which today are widespread 32 The gender dimension also gained ground in recent years The European Commission mandates applicants to adopt gender equality plans across their organization 33 The UK Research and Innovation Global Challenges Research Fund mandates a gender equality statement 34 Most recently the European Commission also introduced a Do No Significant Harm principle to the Framework Program which aims to curb the environmental footprint of scientific projects 35 Do No Significant Harm has been criticized as coupled with other eligibility requirements it is often characterized as red tape 36 37 The European Commission has been trying to simplify the Framework Program for numerous years with limited success 38 Simplification attempts are also taken by the UK Research and Innovation 39 Process edit Often scientists apply for research funding which a granting agency may or may not approve to financially support These grants require a lengthy process as the granting agency can inquire about the researcher s s background the facilities used the equipment needed the time involved and the overall potential of the scientific outcome The process of grant writing and grant proposing is a somewhat delicate process for both the grantor and the grantee the grantors want to choose the research that best fits their scientific principles and the individual grantees want to apply for research in which they have the best chances but also in which they can build a body of work towards future scientific endeavors citation needed The Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council in the United Kingdom has devised an alternative method of fund distribution the sandpit 40 Most universities have research administration offices to facilitate the interaction between the researcher and the granting agency 41 Research administration is all about service service to our faculty to our academic units to the institution and to our sponsors To be of service we first have to know what our customers want and then determine whether or not we are meeting those needs and expectations 42 In the United States of America the National Council of University Research Administrators serves its members and advances the field of research administration through education and professional development programs the sharing of knowledge and experience and by fostering a professional collegial and respected community Hard money versus soft money edit In academic contexts hard money may refer to funding received from a government or other entity at regular intervals thus providing a steady inflow of financial resources to the beneficiary The antonym soft money refers to funding provided only through competitive research grants and the writing of grant proposals 43 Hard money is usually issued by the government for the advancement of certain projects or for the benefit of specific agencies Community healthcare for instance may be supported by the government by providing hard money Since funds are disbursed regularly and continuously the offices in charge of such projects are able to achieve their objectives more effectively than if they had been issued one time grants Individual jobs at a research institute may be classified as hard money positions or soft money positions 43 the former are expected to provide job security because their funding is secure in the long term whereas individual soft money positions may come and go with fluctuations in the number of grants awarded to the institution Private funding industrial philanthropy crowdfunding edit See also Private equity fund Private funding for research comes from philanthropists 44 crowd funding 45 private companies non profit foundations and professional organizations 46 Philanthropists and foundations have been pouring millions of dollars into a wide variety of scientific investigations including basic research discovery disease cures particle physics astronomy marine science and the environment 44 Privately funded research has been adept at identifying important and transformative areas of scientific research 47 48 Many large technology companies spend billions of dollars on research and development each year to gain an innovative advantage over their competitors though only about 42 of this funding goes towards projects that are considered substantially new or capable of yielding radical breakthroughs 49 New scientific start up companies initially seek funding from crowd funding organizations venture capitalists and angel investors gathering preliminary results using rented facilities 50 but aim to eventually become self sufficient 45 51 Europe and the United States have both reiterated the need for further private funding within universities 52 The European Commission highlights the need for private funding via research in policy areas such the European Green Deal and Europe s role in the digital age 53 Influence on research editThe source of funding may introduce conscious or unconscious biases into a researcher s work 54 This is highly problematic due to academic freedom in case of universities and regulatory capture in case of government funded R amp D Conflict of Interest edit Disclosure of potential conflicts of interest COIs is used by journals to guarantee credibility and transparency of the scientific process Conflict of interest disclosure however is not systematically nor consistently dealt with by journals that publish scientific research results When research is funded by the same agency that can be expected to gain from a favorable outcome there is a potential for biased results and research shows that results are indeed more favorable than would be expected from a more objective view of the evidence 55 A 2003 systematic review studied the scope and impact of industry sponsorship in biomedical research The researchers found financial relationships among industry scientific investigators and academic institutions widespread Results showed a statistically significant association between industry sponsorship and pro industry conclusions and concluded that Conflicts of interest arising from these ties can influence biomedical research in important ways 56 A British study found that a majority of the members on national and food policy committees receive funding from food companies 57 In an effort to cut costs the pharmaceutical industry has turned to the use of private nonacademic research groups i e contract research organizations CROs which can do the work for less money than academic investigators In 2001 CROs came under criticism when the editors of 12 major scientific journals issued a joint editorial published in each journal on the control over clinical trials exerted by sponsors particularly targeting the use of contracts which allow sponsors to review the studies prior to publication and withhold publication of any studies in which their product did poorly They further criticized the trial methodology stating that researchers are frequently restricted from contributing to the trial design accessing the raw data and interpreting the results 58 The Cochrane Collaboration a worldwide group that aims to provide compiled scientific evidence to aid well informed health care decisions conducts systematic reviews of randomized controlled trials of health care interventions and tries to disseminate the results and conclusions derived from them 59 60 A few more recent reviews have also studied the results of non randomized observational studies The systematic reviews are published in the Cochrane Library A 2011 study done to disclose possible conflicts of interests in underlying research studies used for medical meta analyses reviewed 29 meta analyses and found that conflicts of interest in the studies underlying the meta analyses were rarely disclosed The 29 meta analyses reviewed an aggregate of 509 randomized controlled trials Of these 318 trials reported funding sources with 219 69 industry funded 132 of the 509 trials reported author disclosures of conflict of interest with 91 studies 69 disclosing industry financial ties with one or more authors However the information was seldom reflected in the meta analyses Only two 7 reported funding sources and none reported author industry ties The authors concluded without acknowledgment of COI due to industry funding or author industry financial ties from RCTs included in meta analyses readers understanding and appraisal of the evidence from the meta analysis may be compromised 61 In 2003 researchers looked at the association between authors published positions on the safety and efficacy in assisting with weight loss of olestra a fat substitute manufactured by the Procter amp Gamble P amp G and their financial relationships with the food and beverage industry They found that supportive authors were significantly more likely than critical or neutral authors to have financial relationships with P amp G and all authors disclosing an affiliation with P amp G were supportive The authors of the study concluded Because authors published opinions were associated with their financial relationships obtaining noncommercial funding may be more essential to maintaining objectivity than disclosing personal financial interests 62 A 2005 study in the journal Nature 63 surveyed 3247 US researchers who were all publicly funded by the National Institutes of Health Out of the scientists questioned 15 5 admitted to altering design methodology or results of their studies due to pressure of an external funding source Regulatory capture edit Private funding also may be channelled to public funders In 2022 a news story broke following the resignation of Eric Lander former director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy OSTP at the Biden administration that the charity of former Google executive Eric Schmidt Schmidt Futures paid the salary of a number employees of the OSTP 64 Ethics inquiries were initiated in the OSTP Efficiency of funding editThe traditional measurement for efficiency of funding are publication output citation impact number of patents number of PhDs awarded etc However the use of journal impact factor has generated a publish or perish culture and a theoretical model has been established whose simulations imply that peer review and over competitive research funding foster mainstream opinion to monopoly 65 Calls have been made to reform research assessment most notably in the San Francisco Declaration on Research Assessment 66 and the Leiden Manifesto for research metrics 67 The current system also has limitations to measure excellence in the Global South 68 69 Novel measurement systems such as the Research Quality Plus has been put forward to better emphasize local knowledge and contextualization in the evaluation of excellence 70 Another question is how to allocate funds to different disciplines institutions or researchers A recent study by Wayne Walsh found that prestigious institutions had on average 65 higher grant application success rates and 50 larger award sizes whereas less prestigious institutions produced 65 more publications and had a 35 higher citation impact per dollar of funding 71 72 Trends editMain article List of countries by research and development spending In endogenous growth theories R amp D contributes to economic growth Therefore countries have strong incentives to maintain investments in R amp D By country edit Different countries spend vastly different amounts on research in both absolute and relative terms For instance South Korea and Israel spend more than 4 of their GDP while many less developed countries spend less than 1 73 In developed economies GERD is financed mainly by the business sector whereas the government and the university sector dominates in less developed economies 74 In some countries funding from the Rest of the World makes up 20 30 of total GERD probably due to FDI and foreign aid but only in Mali it is the main source of fund 75 Private non profit is not the main source of fund in any countries but it reaches 10 of total GERD in Columbia and Honduras 76 When comparing annual GERD and GDP Growth it can be seen that countries with lower GERD are often growing faster However as most of these countries are developing their growth is probably driven by other factors of production On the other hand developed countries who have higher GERD also produce positive growth rates GERD in these countries has a more substantial contribution to growth rate Country and the EU GERD as of the GDP in 2017 73 GDP Growth annual in 2017 77 Main GERD source of fund 73 TargetsIsrael 4 81 4 38 BusinessRepublic of Korea 4 29 3 16 Business 5 by 2017USA 2 81 2 33 BusinessEuropean Union 2 15 2 8 Business 3 of EU GDP by 2030China 2 11 6 95 Business annual increase of 7 2021 2025 78 Uruguay 0 48 1 63 Higher EducationMali 0 29 5 31 Rest of the WorldArmenia 0 22 7 5 GovernmentIraq 0 04 1 82 GovernmentGuatemala 0 02 4 63 Higher educationRecessions edit In crisis business R amp D tends to act procyclically 79 As R amp D is a long term investments and so disruptions should be avoided Keynesian countercyclical reactions were advocated for in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis but this was difficult to achieve for some countries 80 81 Due to the nature of COVID 19 the pandemic accelerated publicly funded R amp D spending in 2020 primarily into the pharmaceutical industry A fall is expected in spending for 2021 although not below 2020 levels 82 The pandemic made health research and sectors with strategic value chain dependencies the main target of science funding 83 See also editScientific funding advisory bodies category Funding bias Metascience Science policy Self Organized Funding Allocation Industry funding of academic researchReferences edit OECD Science Technology and Industry Scoreboard 2015 Innovation for growth and society OECD 2015 p 156 doi 10 1787 sti scoreboard 2015 en ISBN 9789264239784 via oecd ilibrary org Taylor R A 2012 Socioeconomic impacts of heat transfer research International Communications in Heat and Mass Transfer 39 10 1467 1473 doi 10 1016 j icheatmasstransfer 2012 09 007 a b c OECD 2015 10 08 Frascati Manual 2015 Guidelines for Collecting and Reporting Data on Research and Experimental Development The Measurement of Scientific Technological and Innovation Activities OECD doi 10 1787 9789264239012 en ISBN 978 92 64 23880 0 OECD 2018 10 22 Oslo Manual 2018 Guidelines for Collecting Reporting and Using Data on Innovation 4th Edition The Measurement of Scientific Technological and Innovation Activities OECD doi 10 1787 9789264304604 en ISBN 978 92 64 30455 0 S2CID 239892975 Guellec Dominique Van Pottelsberghe de la Potterie Bruno July 2004 From R amp D to Productivity Growth Do the Institutional Settings and the Source of Funds of R amp D Matter Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics 66 3 353 378 doi 10 1111 j 1468 0084 2004 00083 x ISSN 0305 9049 S2CID 59568599 David Paul A Hall Bronwyn H Toole Andrew A 2000 04 01 Is public R amp D a complement or substitute for private R amp D A review of the econometric evidence Research Policy 29 4 497 529 doi 10 1016 S0048 7333 99 00087 6 ISSN 0048 7333 S2CID 1590956 Rehman Naqeeb Ur Hysa Eglantina Mao Xuxin 2020 01 01 Does public R amp D complement or crowd out private R amp D in pre and post economic crisis of 2008 Journal of Applied Economics 23 1 349 371 doi 10 1080 15140326 2020 1762341 ISSN 1514 0326 S2CID 225720398 Mansfield Edwin February 1991 Academic research and industrial innovation Research Policy 20 1 1 12 doi 10 1016 0048 7333 91 90080 A Jones C I Williams J C 1998 11 01 Measuring the Social Return to R amp D The Quarterly Journal of Economics 113 4 1119 1135 doi 10 1162 003355398555856 ISSN 0033 5533 Nelson Richard R June 1959 The Simple Economics of Basic Scientific Research Journal of Political Economy 67 3 297 306 doi 10 1086 258177 ISSN 0022 3808 S2CID 154159452 Arrow K J 1972 Economic Welfare and the Allocation of Resources for Invention PDF Readings in Industrial Economics London Palgrave pp 219 236 doi 10 1007 978 1 349 15486 9 13 ISBN 978 0 333 10964 9 S2CID 38456056 Ostrom Vincent Ostrom Elinor 2019 08 26 Savas E S ed Public Goods and Public Choices Alternatives for Delivering Public Services 1 ed Routledge pp 7 49 doi 10 4324 9780429047978 2 ISBN 978 0 429 04797 8 S2CID 150900527 retrieved 2022 04 13 Vuong Quan Hoang 2018 The ir rational consideration of the cost of science in transition economies Nature Human Behaviour 2 1 5 doi 10 1038 s41562 017 0281 4 PMID 30980055 S2CID 46878093 Archibugi Daniele Filippetti Andrea 2015 01 29 Knowledge as Global Public Good Rochester NY SSRN 2557339 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Nelson Richard R Romer Paul M January 1996 Science Economic Growth and Public Policy Challenge 39 1 9 21 doi 10 1080 05775132 1996 11471873 ISSN 0577 5132 Mensch Gerhard 1979 Stalemate in technology innovations overcome the depression Cambridge Mass Ballinger Pub Co ISBN 0 88410 611 X OCLC 4036883 Schmookler Jacob 2013 10 01 Invention and Economic Growth Harvard University Press doi 10 4159 harvard 9780674432833 ISBN 978 0 674 43283 3 Kastrinos N 2013 12 01 The financial crisis and Greek R amp D policy from a Schumpeterian perspective Science and Public Policy 40 6 779 791 doi 10 1093 scipol sct025 ISSN 0302 3427 Goolsbee Austan April 1998 Does Government R amp D Policy Mainly Benefit Scientists and Engineers PDF American Economic Review Cambridge MA w6532 doi 10 3386 w6532 S2CID 2763177 Mazzucato Mariana December 2015 6 Innovation the State and Patient Capital The Political Quarterly 86 98 118 doi 10 1111 1467 923X 12235 Falck Oliver Gollier Christian Woessmann Ludger 2011 Arguments for and against Policies to Promote National Champions Industrial Policy for National Champions The MIT Press doi 10 7551 mitpress 9780262016018 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 262 01601 8 retrieved 2022 03 28 Warlouzet Laurent January 2019 The EEC EU as an Evolving Compromise between French Dirigism and German Ordoliberalism 1957 1995 JCMS Journal of Common Market Studies 57 1 77 93 doi 10 1111 jcms 12817 ISSN 0021 9886 S2CID 159378013 Mazzucato Mariana 2014 The entrepreneurial state debunking public vs private sector myths Revised ed London ISBN 978 0 85728 252 1 OCLC 841672270 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link OECD 2021 01 12 Government support for business research and innovation in a world in crisis OECD Science Technology and Innovation Outlook 2020 doi 10 1787 7a7891a5 en ISBN 9789264391987 S2CID 242590616 Lepori Benedetto 2019 The changing governance of research systems Agencification and organizational differentiation in research funding organizations Handbook on Science and Public Policy Edward Elgar Publishing pp 448 465 doi 10 4337 9781784715946 00034 ISBN 978 1 78471 594 6 S2CID 197812506 retrieved 2022 03 28 Larsen Mikael Home Uddannelses og Forskningsministeriet RANNIS Icelandic Centre for Research Rannis is Israel Science Foundation Archived from the original on 2015 12 16 Uganda National Council for Science and Technology www uncst go ug Wilkinson Mark D Dumontier Michel Aalbersberg IJsbrand Jan Appleton Gabrielle Axton Myles Baak Arie Blomberg Niklas Boiten Jan Willem da Silva Santos Luiz Bonino Bourne Philip E Bouwman Jildau 15 March 2016 The FAIR Guiding Principles for scientific data management and stewardship Sci Data 3 1 160018 Bibcode 2016NatSD 360018W doi 10 1038 sdata 2016 18 ISSN 2052 4463 PMC 4792175 PMID 26978244 OECD Legal Instruments legalinstruments oecd org Retrieved 2022 03 28 How many Open Access policies are there worldwide ROARMAP roarmap eprints org Retrieved 2022 03 28 European Commission 31 March 2021 Horizon Europe Work Programme 13 General Annexes PDF Retrieved 9 April 2022 Equality diversity and inclusion www ukri org Retrieved 2022 03 28 European Commission 1 February 2022 Horizon Europe Programme Guide PDF Retrieved 9 April 2022 Jaffe Matthew 2021 10 03 Levels of Requirements Robustness Unicorns and Other Semi Mythical Creatures in the Requirements Engineering Bestiary Why Types of Software Requirements Are Often Misleading 2021 IEEE AIAA 40th Digital Avionics Systems Conference DASC IEEE pp 1 8 doi 10 1109 dasc52595 2021 9594323 ISBN 978 1 6654 3420 1 S2CID 244137490 MEPs decry inclusion of do no significant harm principle in Horizon Europe Science Business Retrieved 2022 04 06 European Commission April 2020 Implementation Strategy for Horizon Europe Version 1 0 PDF Retrieved 14 April 2022 How we re improving your funding experience ukri org 28 February 2022 Retrieved 9 April 2022 Corbyn Zoe 2009 07 02 Sandpits bring out worst in infantilised researchers Times Higher Education TSL Education Sandpits which were devised by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council typically involve about 30 selected researchers from different areas who are brought together for several days of intensive discussions about a particular topic The wheels of such events are oiled with the promise of up to 1 million in funding which is dished out at the end through a group peer review process Gonzales Evelina Garza External Funding and Tenure at Texas State University San Marcos 2009 Texas State University Applied Research Projects Paper 315 http ecommons txstate edu arp 315 Robert A Killoren Jr Associate Vice President for Research Office of Sponsored Programs Penn State U Fall 2005 From Lowry Peggy 2006 Assessing the Sponsored Research Office Sponsored Research Administration A Guide to Effective Strategies and Recommended Practices Archived 2009 04 22 at the Wayback Machine a b What is a soft money research position Academia StackExchange a b William J Broad 2014 03 15 Billionaires With Big Ideas Are Privatizing American Science The New York Times Retrieved 30 November 2014 a b Giles Jim 2012 Finding philanthropy Like it Pay for it Nature 481 7381 252 253 Bibcode 2012Natur 481 252G doi 10 1038 481252a PMID 22258587 Possible Funding Sources Anderson Barrett R Feist Gregory J 2017 03 04 Transformative science a new index and the impact of non funding private funding and public funding Social Epistemology 31 2 130 151 doi 10 1080 02691728 2016 1241321 ISSN 0269 1728 S2CID 151739590 Diamond Arthur M April 2006 The relative success of private funders and government funders in funding important science European Journal of Law and Economics 21 2 149 161 doi 10 1007 s10657 006 6647 0 ISSN 0929 1261 S2CID 17707551 Jaruzelski B V Staack B Goehle 2014 Global Innovation 1000 Proven Paths to Innovation Success Technical report Strategy amp Stephanie M Lee 27 August 2014 New Palo Alto lab for life science startups SFGate Dharmesh Shah 7 Lessons On Startup Funding From a Research Scientist Research and Innovation ec europa eu Retrieved 2022 03 28 Muscio Alessandro Quaglione Davide Vallanti Giovanna February 2013 Does government funding complement or substitute private research funding to universities Research Policy 42 1 63 75 doi 10 1016 j respol 2012 04 010 hdl 11385 36074 Who pays for science 18 April 2022 Vuong Quan Hoang 2020 Reform retractions to make them more transparent Nature 582 7811 149 Bibcode 2020Natur 582 149V doi 10 1038 d41586 020 01694 x S2CID 219529301 Lenard I Lesser Cara B Ebbeling Merrill Goozner David Wypij David S Ludwig January 9 2007 Relationship between Funding Source and Conclusion among Nutrition Related Scientific Articles PLOS Medicine PLOS 4 1 e5 doi 10 1371 journal pmed 0040005 PMC 1764435 PMID 17214504 Marion Nestle October 2001 Food company sponsorship of nutrition research and professional activities a conflict of interest Public Health Nutrition Cambridge University Press 4 5 1015 1022 doi 10 1079 PHN2001253 PMID 11784415 Davidoff F Deangelis C D Drazen J M Nicholls M G Hoey J Hojgaard L Horton R Kotzin S Nylenna M Overbeke A J Sox H C Van Der Weyden M B Wilkes M S September 2001 Sponsorship authorship and accountability CMAJ 165 6 786 8 PMC 81460 PMID 11584570 Scholten R J Clarke M Hetherington J August 2005 The Cochrane Collaboration Eur J Clin Nutr Suppl 1 59 S1 S147 S149 doi 10 1038 sj ejcn 1602188 PMID 16052183 Welcome www cochrane org How Well Do Meta Analyses Disclose Conflicts of Interests in Underlying Research Studies The Cochrane Collaboration website Cochrane Collaboration 2011 06 06 Retrieved 24 March 2014 Levine J Gussow JD Hastings D Eccher A 2003 Authors Financial Relationships With the Food and Beverage Industry and Their Published Positions on the Fat Substitute Olestra American Journal of Public Health 93 4 664 9 doi 10 2105 ajph 93 4 664 PMC 1447808 PMID 12660215 Martinson BC Anderson MS De Vries R 2005 Scientists behaving badly Nature 435 7043 737 8 Bibcode 2005Natur 435 737M doi 10 1038 435737a PMID 15944677 S2CID 4341622 A Google billionaire s fingerprints are all over Biden s science office POLITICO 28 March 2022 Retrieved 2022 04 06 Fang H 2011 Peer review and over competitive research funding fostering mainstream opinion to monopoly Scientometrics 87 2 293 301 doi 10 1007 s11192 010 0323 4 S2CID 24236419 Read the Declaration DORA Retrieved 2022 03 28 Hicks Diana Wouters Paul Waltman Ludo de Rijcke Sarah Rafols Ismael 2015 04 23 Bibliometrics The Leiden Manifesto for research metrics Nature 520 7548 429 431 Bibcode 2015Natur 520 429H doi 10 1038 520429a hdl 10261 132304 ISSN 0028 0836 PMID 25903611 S2CID 4462115 Tijssen Robert Kraemer Mbula Erika 2018 06 01 Research excellence in Africa Policies perceptions and performance Science and Public Policy 45 3 392 403 doi 10 1093 scipol scx074 hdl 1887 65584 ISSN 0302 3427 Wallace L Tijssen Robert 2019 Transforming research excellence Cape Town ISBN 978 1 928502 07 4 OCLC 1156814189 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Lebel Jean McLean Robert July 2018 A better measure of research from the global south Nature 559 7712 23 26 Bibcode 2018Natur 559 23L doi 10 1038 d41586 018 05581 4 ISSN 0028 0836 PMID 29973734 S2CID 49692425 Research Dollars Go Farther at Less Prestigious Institutions Study The Scientist Magazine Retrieved 2018 07 23 Wahls Wayne P 2018 07 13 High cost of bias Diminishing marginal returns on NIH grant funding to institutions bioRxiv 367847 doi 10 1101 367847 a b c Science technology and innovation UNESCO Science technology and innovation indicators 2017 Retrieved 13 June 2022 Global Investments in R amp D PDF UNESCO June 2020 Retrieved 26 August 2023 Science technology and innovation GERD financed by the rest of the world UNESCO Science technology and innovation Statistics 2017 Retrieved 13 June 2022 Science technology and innovation GERD financed by non profit UNESCO Science technology and innovation Statistics 2017 Retrieved 13 June 2022 GDP Growth annual World Bank 2017 Retrieved 13 June 2022 The People s Government of Fujian Province 9 August 2021 Outline of the 14th Five Year Plan 2021 2025 for National Economic and Social Development and Vision 2035 of the People s Republic of China Retrieved 13 April 2022 Barlevy Gadi 2007 08 01 On the Cyclicality of Research and Development American Economic Review 97 4 1131 1164 doi 10 1257 aer 97 4 1131 ISSN 0002 8282 Guellec Dominique Wunsch Vincent Sacha 2009 06 01 Policy Responses to the Economic Crisis Investing in Innovation for Long Term Growth OECD Digital Economy Papers doi 10 1787 222138024482 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Abi Younes George Ayoubi Charles Ballester Omar Cristelli Gabriele de Rassenfosse Gaetan Foray Dominique Gaule Patrick Pellegrino Gabriele van den Heuvel Matthias Webster Elizabeth Zhou Ling 2021 04 24 COVID 19 Insights from innovation economists Science and Public Policy 47 5 733 745 doi 10 1093 scipol scaa028 ISSN 0302 3427 PMC 7337780 OECD Directorate for Science Technology and Innovation March 2022 OECD Main Science and Technology Indicators R amp D Highlights in the March 2022 Publication PDF Retrieved 2022 04 13 UNESCO 2021 UNESCO Science Report The race against time for smarter development unesdoc unesco org Retrieved 2022 04 13 Further reading editEisfeld Reschke Jorg Herb Ulrich amp Wenzlaff Karsten 2014 Research Funding in Open Science In S Bartling amp S Friesike Eds Opening Science pp 237 253 Heidelberg Springer doi 10 1007 978 3 319 00026 8 16 Herb Ulrich 2014 07 31 Open science s final frontier Research Europe Magazine Archived from the original on 2014 09 03 Retrieved 2014 08 30 Martinson Brian C De Vries Raymond et al 2005 Scientists behaving badly Nature 435 7043 737 738 Bibcode 2005Natur 435 737M doi 10 1038 435737a PMID 15944677 S2CID 4341622 Mello Michelle M et al 2005 Academic Medical Centers Standards for Clinical Trial Agreements with Industry New England Journal of Medicine 352 21 2202 2210 doi 10 1056 nejmsa044115 PMID 15917385 S2CID 8283797 Odlyzko Andrew 1995 10 04 The Decline of Unfettered Research Retrieved 2007 11 02 External links editWhere to Search for Funding Science AAAS from Science Careers from the Journal Science ResearchCrossroads Aggregated funding data from the National Institutes of Health the National Science Foundation NSF private foundations and the European Union Seventh Framework Programme 2007 2013 The European Unions s programme for funding and promoting research at the European level CORDIS the official website of the European Unions s programme for funding and promoting research This website contains comprehensive information on research projects already funded Research Councils UK The portal for the UK based Research Councils Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Funding of science amp oldid 1193274458, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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