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S&T in South Africa – 2005 SA-Norway w/shop Dhesigen Naidoo DDG International 1 Historical Perspective Pres Mandela’s government inherited an isolationist S&T system. The post-1994 goals of SA S&T were : ! addressing economic growth, ! improving the quality of life of all, ! broadening capacity base and to ! becoming a significant international player in S&T 2 National R&D strategy: challenges Small S&T base Wealth creation in modern economies is dependent on innovation, research and development Need for investment and partnership 3 Wealth Creation Quality of Life SET Human Capital Technical progress (Improvement and Innovation) Business Performance Imported Knowhow Future R&D Capacity Current R&D Capacity R & D Strategy framework 4 Pillars of a STRS Achieving mastery of technological change in our economy and society (Innovation) Increasing investment in the Science base (Human Capital and Transformation) Strengthening the government S&T system (Alignment and Delivery) 5 OVERSEAS TECHNOLOGY SOURCES Research Development Production Local Industry & Local Industrial Products KnowledgeInnovation “Chasm” Research Development Manufacturing 6 DST GOALS and Objectives • • • • • • Implementing the new S&T strategic management model; Ensure that the NSI addresses national growth and development goals in both the first and second economy Develop and maintain a highly competent and representative cohort of scientists in South Africa; Ensuring that South Africa has world class scientific infrastructure in place Administer an optimal set of funding instruments, and Respond creatively to global and continental challenges 7 DST Key Deliverables • • • • Strong innovation chains in biotechnology, nanotechnology, the hydrogen economy, space science, information technology and manufacturing Technologies to address poverty Careers for young people careers in SET SA as preferred S&T destination 8 S&T Strategic Management Model • • • Large scale, broad scope new technology platforms and challenges (e.g. space science, nanotechnology, the hydrogen economy etc) - type I capacity. Cross-cutting. Sector-focused relatively mature research domains (mining, medicine, water etc) - type II capacity. Sector-specific. Routine technology based services (e.g. marine resource estimation, standards writing, geological surveying, forensics etc)- type III capacity. Technology services 9 Director General DST GE: ‘Frontier Science and Technology’ GE: Intergov. Programmes GE: International Expert scientific services (Structured under a GE and GM) GE: Corp. Services CD: Minister’s office CD: New programs and cross cutting institutions and agencies CD: Human capital CD: Departments A – Economic ++, Local Innovation and Development CD: Departments B – Social and others CD: International co-operation CD: International resources • • • • • • • • • • Specific expertise: ICT Biotechnology Space Science Energy Manufacturing Nanotechnology Poverty reduction Indigenous knowledge Indicators Etc etc D: Deputy Minister office D: Office of DG CD: HR CD: Finance CD: Comm D: Performance audit CD: R&D plans of all departments, Sector institutions and agencies Attaché's D: Governance D: IT D: Legal service 10 President and Cabinet Minister Dep Min DG/CEO Frontier Sc IGP International SciTes Corporate 11 President and Cabinet PC S&T Minister Dep Min Parliament DG/CEO Frontier Sc IGP International SciTes Corporate 12 Public Labs SA R&D Landscape Science Councils DST Public Pvt Pvt Pvt Labs Pvt Labs Labs Labs HEIs Private 13 Sw eden Finland Japan Sw itzerland (1996) United States Korea Germany Iceland OECD France Denmark Netherlands (1998) United Kingdom EU Belgium (1997) Austria Norw ay Canada Australia (1998) Ireland (1997) Czech Republic New Zealand (1997) Italy Spain South Africa Poland Slovak Republic Hungary Portugal (1997) Greece (1997) Turkey (1997) Mexico * 0 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 3 3.5 Source: OECD 4 14 5,000,000 0.20% 0.18% 4,000,000 0.16% 0.14% 3,000,000 0.12% 0.10% 2,000,000 0.08% 0.06% 1,000,000 0.04% 0.02% 0 0.00% 2000/01 2001/02 2002/03 2003/04 2004/05 Science Councils Science Councils + DST Science Councils %GDP Science Vote %GDP 15 7.0 7 7.2 6 6.4 3 4 5 5.0 1.9 2 2.0 1 1.0 0 Number of Researchers per 1000 Employed 8 Number of Full Time Equivalent [FET] Researchers per 1000 Total Employed in 2001 Australia Malaysia South Korea Spain Argentina South Africa China *South Africa is too low to permit sustained contributions in the global economy Source: 2001 R&D Survey 16 Engineering disciplines are poorly represented in SA institutions and without high impact research 25 Finland Sweden Britain Singapore Japan 20 15 10 5 0 Engineers per 1000 workers Australia US South Korea SA - 1990 SA - 2002 17 Summary Focus: The “Innovation Chasm” Build innovation capacity in key technology missions for competitiveness and development Enhance sub-regional and regional initiatives Act locally ->globally Enhance multilateralism as international instrument of choice for positive global change 18 A new Strategic S&T Management Approach for SA • • • • • • DST provides a core service to Government and the nation by managing the entire portfolio of type I activity, whether in government laboratories or universities. DST ensures a common governance framework and KPIs, system indicators and records government S&T budget. Line departments assume primary responsibility for type II activity with DST partnership. Line departments have full responsibility for type III activities. Votes will be restructured over an agreed period to reflect the classification described above. An integrating S&T System Act to provide a mandate. 19