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New Zealand resists call to create independent research council

White paper vows to reshape science sector but also shies away from suggested creation of base operating grants for institutions

Published on
December 7, 2022
Last updated
December 7, 2022
One of the domes of University of Canterbury Mount John Observatory. This image was taken on a sunny afternoon in early Spring.
Source: iStock

New Zealand鈥檚 government has vowed to reshape the country鈥檚 fragmented science sector into a coherent system framed around refreshed national priorities, while resisting university calls for it to be put under the stewardship of an independent national council.

础听聽outlining 鈥渇uture pathways鈥 for the research, science and innovation system also shies away from an earlier suggestion that the government would consider introducing base operating grants for research organisations.

The document, which builds on last year鈥檚 green paper, prescribes a three-stage overhaul to 鈥渟hift from a system with multiple small entities and strategies to one in which we focus our efforts on nationally significant priorities鈥, according to research minister Ayesha Verrall.

But the paper does not revisit its聽green paper proposal聽for a 鈥渂ase grant鈥 to cover research overheads. Instead, it vows to improve the 鈥渢ransparency鈥 of overhead funding to address 鈥渋nformation asymmetry鈥 about the costs of research and the use of government funds.

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The document is also silent on the green paper suggestion that the crown research institutes (CRIs) could be co-located with universities, while noting that the seven institutes鈥 structure as 鈥渟tandalone companies鈥 inhibits collaboration and encourages 鈥渇ragmentation, lack of role clarity and apparent overlaps鈥.

But in a聽, Dr Verrall said that the government would consider reforming the CRIs鈥 company model 鈥渢o foster science for the public good鈥.

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鈥淲e will develop an infrastructure roadmap to co-ordinate investment and co-locate buildings where that offers synergies,鈥 she added.

The document also promises to liberate researchers from 鈥渦nproductive competition for grants鈥 and the precarity of 鈥渃ontract churn鈥, while offering scant detail about either measure.

The headline reform will see refreshed national research priorities developed by 2024, superseding the聽聽of a decade earlier. The new priorities will have a dedicated funding mechanism to garner investment in 鈥渕ission-led research鈥, acting as a lightning rod for collaboration and capability-building.

The document also promises increased funding for M膩ori and Pacific Peoples research, and supports the government鈥檚 goal to increase overall investment in research and development to 2 per cent of gross domestic product by 2030.

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Universities New Zealand endorsed the focus on national priorities but expressed disappointment that the government had not heeded its call for聽new oversight聽of the research system. Chief executive Chris Whelan said that an independent body would be the 鈥渂est way鈥 of achieving the white paper objectives at 鈥渁rm鈥檚 length鈥 from political cycles.

鈥淎n independent research council could oversee the research system 鈥 including infrastructure, capability development and emerging frontiers of knowledge 鈥 and be responsible for setting research priorities,鈥 Mr Whelan said.

john.ross@timeshighereducation.com

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