Week of 30th of September
"On research, immigration and funding Boris Johnson’s government offers much for universities. Now they must be proactive too. The government could be forgiven for not having higher education reform at the top of its agenda as it commutes back and forth from the Conservative Party conference in Manchester this week.
But behind the drama of current debates on Brexit, the pressures that dictate the attitudes of the different political parties to universities and to their funding and regulation, remain. The instinct that drove the Labour Party to announce that only 7 per cent of people from private schools should go to university (each university or all of them? It’s unclear) won’t change."
Rachel Wolf is a founding partner at the consultancy Public First and a former higher education policy adviser to Boris Johnson.
This paper explores the link between different types of training and innovation outcomes using the Longitudinal Small Business Survey. Much of the evidence on innovation and the link to the capabilities of the workforce is based on evidence from the Community Innovation Surveys and as a result emphasis is on larger businesses and on formal skills acquired in Higher Education Institutions. Read more here.
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An essay colection
Just over two months ago we (ODI Leeds) started our project to figure out how we could track local funding. Key questions they seek to answer:
Whose spending were we interested in? Whose definition of local funding were we going to use? Had we thought through the complexities and difficulties of the project? What even is local funding?
On 29th July 2019, NCUB played host to a launch event for a review of university-investor links, commissioned by Research England from Mike Rees, former deputy group CEO of Standard Chartered, start-up commercialisation expert and angel investor. In this blog, he lays out some of his high-level findings and sets them in their national policy context. See related reports below:
The transition to net-zero greenhouse gas emissions needs to be an inclusive process, delivering social justice for workers, communities and consumers: this is the agenda of the just transition. This report sets out the role that investors can play in delivering a just transition in the UK. It seeks to understand the growing momentum in favour of a just transition and to illustrate the implications through a set of place-based examples from Yorkshire and the Humber, before setting out recommendations for investor action. Please see full report and policy brief below:
Week of 23rd of September
Universities Minister Chris Skidmore has announced a new strategic direction for university knowledge exchange funding to drive the high performance needed to deliver the government’s commitment to raise research and development investment to 2.4% of GDP.
The measures announced at the Research England Engagement Forum event in London, on Thursday 26 September, include:
At a time of rapid economic and technological change, the places that will be successful in the knowledge economy are those that can create and commercialise innovation. The opportunity is to spin out and diffuse research and knowledge from universities and other knowledge intensive anchor institutions (such as teaching hospitals or major cultural bodies). By doing so places can support the start-up and scaling-up of more of the fast-growing, innovation-driven, high-export firms that are so important to more rapid productivity growth. Read more.
NESTA kicks off the debate makes a number of provocative recommendations on how the UK Government should spend its R&D budget, including:
Government set to invest nearly £100 million to back the rising stars of science and innovative small businesses.
The UK2070 Commission, which is chaired by the former head of the Civil Service, Lord Kerslake, says deep-rooted economic divides across the UK will worsen unless government addresses strategic failings in regional policy which stretch back 50 years. The Commission reported earlier this year that London’s global success was contrasted elsewhere in the UK with some of the worst inequalities in Europe, with stop-start regional policy failing to tackle problems that have led to economic under-performance and lower healthy life expectancy.
Our Second Report says government must urgently develop a long-term vision for the UK which decisively addresses deprivation, unlocks regional economic potential and confronts the challenges presented by climate change and new technologies. It identifies seven national priorities for action which we believe are vital if worsening performance and widening divisions between different parts of the UK are to be avoided.
Week of 16th of September
Read about progress so far in the areas of the four IS grand challenges
Week of 9th of September
The Science and Technology Committee has released a report on research and innovation spending. The committee recommends that the government urgently publish plans outlining how they will achieve the recently reiterated target for research and developing funding to reach 2.4 per cent of GDP by 2027.
Returning universities minister Chris Skidmore spoke at the UUK conference, reiterating the government’s target that 2.4% of GDP be invested into research and development.
Innovation panel speakers (2.15 - 3.15 pm):
Background papers: summary and policy paper
Background and issues for consideration concerning the Government's proposed Shared Prosperity Fund, which will replace EU structural funding after Brexit. Jump to full report >>
Summary on Third Sector website
Towns across England will work with the government to develop innovative regeneration plans:
Out of the 100 sixteen towns and cities in Yorkshire and the Humber and 42 places within the Northern Powerhouse.
Abstract: This paper examines the issue of whether the UK displays high levels of interregional inequality or only average levels of inequality. The question arises due to major differences in public perceptions. Following on from recent UK public debates, the UK evidence is examined in the context of 28 different indicators and 30 different Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries. Answering this question involves a careful consideration of the ways in which we use different spatial units of analysis, different measures of prosperity and different indices of inequality in order to understand interregional inequality, and the issues that arise are common to all countries. In the specific case of the UK, the result is clear. The UK is one of the most regionally unbalanced countries in the industrialized world.
Week of 2nd of September
A new £500,000 funding opportunity is being made available to support research organisations UK-wide to pilot place-based public engagement partnerships and activities.
UKRI’s Enhancing place-based partnerships in public engagement will support capacity building in collaborative, place-based public engagement between research organisations, partner organisations and communities. Projects and partnerships will be driven by a geographically defined community's need that can be approached by engagement with research and innovation and therefore shape and generate new learning opportunities. Read more here.
The fastest planned increase in day-to-day departmental spending for 15 years was announced today (4 September 2019) by the Chancellor of the Exchequer, Sajid Javid – ‘turning the page’ on austerity.
Today’s Spending Round set out departmental spending plans for 2020-2021 to deliver on the public’s priorities, including health, education, and security. Departmental day-to-day spending is paid for through resource budgets which covers things like schools and hospitals’ running costs, and public sector pay.
Thirteen things you need to know about the Spending Round - read more
Quarterly economic activity within the countries of the UK (England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland) and the nine English regions: North East, North West, Yorkshire and The Humber, East Midlands, West Midlands, East of England, London, South East, South West. Main points:
These estimates are designated as Experimental Statistics and should be interpreted with some caution.
The challenge: Inequality in cities
Inequality is one of the pressing issues of our time. China’s growth has reduced inequality globally, yet within countries disparities have tended to increase. This increase in inequality has been most present in cities. Urban areas can be the most unequal: the benefits of scale and specialisation often failing to find their way to the poorest citizens’ pockets. Global narratives are useful in spurring action to reduce these inequalities. However, they must be used with caution. The catch-all nature of inclusive growth means targeting and measurement – the heart of evidence-based policy – can easily be lost in the fuzz. Read more.
We are seeking projects that will contribute to producing independent evidence that can aid the development of policies to support the UK's creative industries. We have identified four areas of research need which we encourage applicants to focus on:
Applicants can also propose other areas that are ripe for research, and relevant to the policy and evidence needs of the creative industries. The deadline for applications is 16:00 on Monday 30th September 2019. Find out more
Scaleups are driving UK global tech advantage. Ambitious tech entrepreneurs across the country are more networked than ever, and they are accelerating growth through international connections.
This report presents UK tech on the global stage. It shows that the UK is a critical hub in the global tech ecosystem, and a strong economic performer. An exploration of companies, communities and technologies uncovers the pioneers in this era of global tech.
The Strength in Places Fund (SIPF) – a new UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) programme that targets funding to support significant economic growth in areas across the UK – straddles the domains of research and development, innovation and place.
There are relatively few examples of programmes, even internationally, that cover these broad domains; academic research and conceptual theories each address part of this terrain but seem sometimes to have contradictory perspectives or raise conflicting debates.
This is why, as part of my wider learning about how UKRI can engage with place, I benefited from discussion with a set of experts from different knowledge domains, organised by the University of Cambridge. The resulting academic think pieces are published today by the Centre for Science, Technology and Innovation (CSTI). Read more.