Forcing universities to submit all their researchers to the UK鈥檚 main sector audit is discouraging academics from doing applied science, a former universities minister has argued.
In a paper setting out 12聽policies to boost science and technology, by The Policy Institute at King鈥檚 College London on 2聽December, Lord Willetts calls for a reversal of the rule brought in for the 2021 research excellence framework that requires all active full-time researchers to submit at least one output.
It was introduced in November 2017 to eliminate game-playing by institutions, which were previously able to choose which researchers they submitted to the 2014 REF.
However, Lord Willetts, who was universities and science minister from 2010 to 2014 and is now a visiting professor at King鈥檚, says that scrapping the policy would 鈥渂oost practical applied science鈥, which, he claims, is often neglected as researchers chase publications in leading journals that can be submitted to the REF.
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The framework鈥檚 promotion of a 鈥渃lassic academic picture of research excellence鈥rives a certain type of research excellence where advances at the boundaries of a discipline are rewarded rather than useful application鈥, says Lord Willetts.
The paper, The Road to 2.4聽Per Cent, describes how a dramatic rise in spending on science promised by the three main political parties might be spent effectively, given that the Conservatives, Labour and the Liberal Democrats have all vowed to spend at least 2.4聽per cent of gross domestic product on research and development. The Campaign for Science and Engineering that public spending on R&D of 拢20聽billion would be needed to meet the 2.4聽per cent total target, an increase of 拢9聽billion on baseline levels.
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Lord Willetts calls on government to fund the full economic cost of research, instead of the 80聽per cent that it does at present, at a cost of 拢1聽billion a聽year. Universities are currently forced聽to find extra funds, often from the charitable sector or from international student fees, to make up this shortfall if they are successful in winning research funds.
Speaking at 罢贬贰听Live on 28聽November, Lord Willetts said he was 鈥渙ptimistic鈥 about the chances of obtaining more research funding given the cross-party consensus on the issue, despite promises from previous governments to hit the 2.4聽per cent target going unfulfilled.
鈥淭here is a very strong commitment on this,鈥 said Lord Willetts, who, in his paper, describes the main parties鈥 support as a 鈥渙nce-in-a-generation opportunity to set our science and research budget on a new path鈥.
Speaking at 罢贬贰听Live, Lord Willetts added that extra money would need to be diverted into research council spending.
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鈥淚f we do get 2.4聽per cent or 3聽per cent, part of the money has to go into core funding for research councils,鈥 said Lord Willetts, noting that the 鈥渄owry offered by Theresa May of 拢2聽billion [in 2016] came with political direction鈥.
鈥淭here is some realisation that this [freeze] cannot continue and we need to rescue the core funding.鈥
However, Bill Rammell, vice-chancellor of the University of Bedfordshire and a former higher education minister under Labour, who also spoke at 罢贬贰听Live, expressed doubt that this would happen.
鈥淚f you get a big increase in investment, the iron law of politics is that there will be strings attached,鈥 he said.
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