“A key reason” for Canada’s middle-of-the-pack spending on research and development, Naylor told the Economic Club of Canada in May, “is Canada’s disappointingly low level of spending in business R & D. In fact, R & D spending by Canadian businesses has been decreasing since 2002.”
And that trend is not about to turn around. “The majority of the private sector investment in R & D is actually done by a small handful of companies,” Naylor said. “In 2007 the top two private R & D investors spent more on R & D than the next eight investors combined. Those top two were Nortel and BCE.” Nortel, of course, is now being torn apart and sold piece by piece, and BCE has had its own distractions of late.
McGill’s Heather Munroe-Blum is a member of the new Science and Technology Innovation Council, or STIC, which the Conservatives created in 2007 to advise them on the global knowledge economy. The STIC’s first report in May suggested Canada does quite well against other big countries on university research, but that business innovation lags badly.
There’s an irony here, because to the limited extent that parliamentarians and news organizations spend any time at all discussing productivity and innovation, it’s usually to mull over arcane details of university research funding. But Munroe-Blum says that, to some extent, “the fact that we’ve spent a decade asking, ‘What’s wrong with university research?’ has become part of the problem”—because it distracts from broader questions about how new ideas are implemented in the economy.
But if the problem lies outside the university gates, it’s an open question what university presidents’ role should be in addressing it. The remarks of Canada’s big five presidents, when we publish them next week, will be likelier to spark a national conversation than to be its last word.
Next week, Part II of our Special Report: the presidents of five leading Canadian universities talk about reforming the system, Canada’s challenge, and what it will take for them to be the best in the world.
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