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Slowakei fordert eigenes Forschungsziel

Veröffentlicht 01. Juni 2010 - Aktualisiert 04. Juni 2010
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Die slowakische Regierung sieht die Zielsetzung der EU, bis 2020 drei Prozent des BIP in Forschung und Entwicklung (R&D) zu investieren, als illusorisch und möchte ihr eigenes, kleineres und erreichbares, Ziel etablieren. EurActiv Slowakei berichtet.

According to the country's deputy prime minister for the knowledge society, European affairs, human rights and minorities, Dušan Čaplovič, Slovakia has ''a tradition of planning everything in five-year or ten-year terms and from our experience, we don't consider setting numbers without real analysis as natural: because they are unrealisable''.

The government would prefer to see more output-oriented measures, he said.

Čaplovič's words echo those of Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico. Fico has expressed concern that the 'Europe 2020' initiative will suffer the same fate as its predecessor, the Lisbon Strategy, because some of the targets – including the 3% GDP target for R&D – are unattainable.

Instead, the prime minister proposed that the country launch its own plan for expenditure on R&D. ''The long-term target of Slovakia is to invest 1.8% of GDP in the research and development area by the end of 2015,'' Fico stated.

Yet Slovak officials recognise the urgent need to improve the R&D situation in Slovakia – citing the lack of basic infrastructure and the huge gap between the capital Bratislava and the rest of the country as two of the biggest problems.

To tackle the shortcomings, the government launched a special operational programme (OP) dedicated to meeting its targets. ''We are one of few countries to have built a special research and development OP, where we allocated a significant sum of money from EU funds,'' said Prime Minister Fico in an interview with Slovak press agency TASR.

With a budget of €1.2 billion, the R&D programme is the country's fourth-largest OP after those for transport, regional development and health care.

Public vs. private investment

The Slovak government predicts that two-thirds of its 1.8% research target will be funded by the private sector. Some consider this a bold statement, considering that around 52% of funding currently comes from public sources, only 34% comes from private sources and the remaining 14% comes from abroad.

Unlike the government, private companies still believe public investment in R&D is insufficient and do not just see an increase in government spending as a number, but as a necessity.

''If the Slovak economy is to successfully develop further, we have to significantly scale up public expenditure in order to support our R&D. I stress the words 'public expenditure'. Moreover, we need to fundamentally change and improve measures through which our state supports these activities,'' said Martin Bruncko, founder and CEO of Neulogy, a private R&D and knowledge-management company.

''That is the only way to lure more private investment in this particular area and hence improve the competitiveness of our country,'' he explained, adding that ''in terms of research, we are now tens of years behind other small EU countries like Denmark, Finland and Austria''.

According to government data, Slovakia is now spending around 1.2% of its GDP on R&D and innovation. Although this may not seem enough, the figure has grown significantly in recent years. According to the European Innovation Scoreboard for 2009, ''Slovak innovation performance is well below the EU-27 average but the rate of improvement is above that of the EU 27''.

However, quantity does not always mean quality. ''We annually invest around €1 billion in research and development but our potential is decreasing,'' says Milan Gregor, chairman of HLG ManauFuture SK, a company.

Deputy Prime Minister Čaplovič admitted that ''though government spending in research and development has grown significantly over the years, Slovakia is still at the bottom of EU and OECD charts in this area".

"The number of Slovak researchers is below average and we also lag behind in other output indicators such as patents, publications and quotations,'' he added. 

Nächste Schritte: 
  • 17-18 June 2010: EU summit to adopt further details of 2020 strategy, including country-specific targets.
  • Autumn 2010: Member states to submit stability and convergence programmes, as well as national reform programmes.
Hintergrund : 

Raising investment in R&D to 3% of the EU’s GDP is one of the five priorities of a draft ten-year economic plan unveiled by the European Commission in March, called 'Europe 2020' (EurActiv 03/03/10).

The strategy defines five headline targets at EU level, which member states will be asked to translate into national goals reflecting their differing starting points:

  • Raising the employment rate of the population aged 20-64 from the current 69% to 75%.
  • Raising the investment in R&D to 3% of the EU's GDP.
  • Meeting the EU's '20/20/20' objectives on greenhouse gas emission reduction and renewable energies.
  • Reducing the share of early school leavers from the current 15% to under 10% and making sure that at least 40% of youngsters have a degree or diploma.
  • Reducing the number of Europeans living below the poverty line by 25%, lifting 20 million out of poverty from the current 80 million.

In a series of articles, the EurActiv network will present the state of play in individual EU countries on each of the targets. This series looks at how member states react to the 3% R&D target.

The EurActiv network already found that Eastern EU countries have either rejected or dismissed as irrelevant the planned EU target to reduce poverty (EurActiv 06/05/10).

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