Economic Survey Strikes Right Notes on R&D, Research Spending

Whether any of this means the government will finally increase R&D spending to 1% of GDP or distribute resources more favourably on February 1 remains to be seen.

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The Economic Survey 2017-2018 includes a separate chapter on India’s science and technology efforts. It provides a bird’s-eye overview of the outcomes of major R&D investments in the country and advises steps that can be taken to improve them.

These are some notable points (quoted verbatim from the report):

8.12 … in 2015, there was a sizeable decline in R&D spending even as GDP per capita continued to rise. At its current rate, India would just barely reach GERD [Gross domestic expenditure of research and development] of 1 percent of GDP by the time it was as rich as the US.

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Through [8.12],  the survey also acknowledges that while India’s R&D spending has been on the rise, the total fraction of GDP it constitutes has stagnated at 0.6-0.7% of the GDP over the last two decades, and that the bulk of this spending has been focused on the atomic energy, space and defence sectors. Additionally, [8.6] also notes that, “Given the country’s severe health challenges, the low – and virtually stagnant in real terms – budget of the ICMR [Indian Council for Medical Research] is striking.” According to another survey (discussed below), the ICMR’s cut is just 2.4% of government spending on R&D.

Whether any of this means the government will finally increase R&D spending to 1% of GDP or distribute resources more favourably on February 1, when the Union budget for 2018 will be announced, remains to be seen.

8.17 The Nature Index (which publishes tables based on counts of high-quality research outputs in the previous calendar year covering the natural sciences) – ranked India at 13 in 2017. But there is still a considerable lag in levels between India and the other two large countries, and the rate of improvement in China between 2001 and 2011 is dramatically better than India’s.

8.19 … On one hand, much of India’s low patent output could be due to its lower middle-income status. However, patents have grown much faster with income in countries like China, Korea, and Japan. Unless there is a greater focus on R&D, rising income alone will not allow India to catch up in the near future.

8.21 Reports indicate that due to manpower shortages there is a backlog of almost 2 lakh patents pending examination. In 2016-2017, there were only 132 examiners for all patent applications in India. … 8.22 The government’s recent hiring of over 450 additional patent examiners and creation of an expedited filing system for Indian residents in 2017 will therefore be a welcome and crucial intervention to help fix the existing patent system.

8.29 The separation of research from teaching has been an Achilles heel for Indian science. Universities have students but need additional faculty support, while research institutes have qualified faculty but are starved of bright young students brimming with energy and ideas. A closer relationship between the two in specific geographic and spatial settings would help nurture research in areas reflecting the fields of science in which the national research centres have strengths.

8.30 Government rules such as those requiring L1 for procurement are simply not geared [towards] providing the flexibility that is needed at the frontiers of research, where speed, product quality and reliability make all the difference between success and failure.

The numbers quoted in the survey are not entirely new. Many of them echo the recently released findings of the National Science and Technology Management Information System (NSTMIS), a body under the Department of Science Technology (DST). Some salient findings – from The Wire‘s report on this – include: