jueves, 12 de noviembre de 2009

El recorte de la ciencia española en "Nature"

Sintoo ser pesado pero é que hai que decilo. Saíu esta noticia na revista Nature, que é a revista de maior impacto científico. Para os que non saibades inglés fala do esforzo que fixo España nos últimos vinte anos que por fin puxeran o noso país na senda dos países que fan ciencia e son respectados por elo. O recorte supón unha volta atrás, e o que é máis perigoso, perder todo o esforzo feito xa que como dixen en outras entradas, cando se perde unha xeración de científicos non hai outra pra reemplazalos. Os científicos tardan moito en formarse, e cando están formados van tirando das novas xeracions porque o seu traballo ademáis de xerar coñecemento está en formar a xente máis nova. Se perdemos os nosos científicos rompemos a cadea e hai que empezar de moito máis abaixo. Isto debería ser un aviso os nosos políticos.

Nature 462, 137-138 11 November 2009

No turning back



Spain should not use the recession as an excuse to stall plans to boost its scientific enterprise.

The past two decades have seen Spain transform itself from a scientific backwater into an internationally respected player in the research world. Much of that progress has occurred since the Socialist Party swept to power in 2004, pledging to turn Spain into an innovation economy (see Nature 451, 1029; 2008).

During the Socialists' first term in office, for example, they doubled the science budget to just over euro8 billion (US$12 billion), pushing it above 1.1% of the country's gross domestic product (GDP) and much closer to the European Union average of 1.8% of GDP. The party was re-elected in 2008, having pledged to cut bureaucracy and push funding for research to a target of 2% of GDP. Almost immediately it set up the Ministry of Science and Innovation, finally extracting science from under the purview of the education ministry. Cristina Garmendia, a molecular biologist who has founded several successful biotechnology companies, was appointed as head of the new ministry.

Since then, however, the momentum has been lost. Garmendia's political inexperience has shown. She was slow to build up a functioning ministry, and has not developed the necessary political clout to convince the government, now grappling with the global recession, to stick to its vision for science.

Granted, the government has bolstered financial support for the country's budding biotechnology and other high-tech industries. But its draft budget for 2010, unveiled in September, proposed a cut of 45% for directly funded basic research. An outcry from the research community reduced that cut to 15%, and an extra 2.8% top-up for the science ministry is likely to emerge during parliamentary discussions. But this would still be a heavy blow to the country's research base.

Meanwhile, the government has yet to produce its much-heralded law for science. This was supposed to create an independent granting agency and reform the country's inflexible system of academic recruitment, under which university professors and government scientists are civil servants with an automatic right to employment until they retire. Dates for the law to be presented to parliament have been set and then withdrawn, apparently because some parts of the government do not want to exclude scientists from rules that apply to other government employees. Hiring new researchers continues to be a difficult and slow process, and it is almost impossible to offer a competitive package of salary and research money. The science ministry now says that the reform law will be presented to parliament before the end of the year, but the research community is losing faith that this will happen.

In the long-term, industry will be poorly served by a failure to develop and maintain a strong basic-research base. Spain is ill-advised to wed itself to the simplistic and outdated notion that a country can live on transferring knowledge while running down the knowledge generator. This is not a wise way to respond to the financial crisis.

Spain would do far better to emulate the commitments made last month by two other European nations as they too wrestle with the economic downturn. In Germany, a rich country with a near-stagnant economy, the centre-right government is cutting back public expenditure for 2010 everywhere except research and education, to which it is giving huge increases (see Nature 462, 24; 2009). In Greece, a poor country with an economy in recession, the centre-left government says it will likewise cut public expenditure for 2010 everywhere except research and education, to which it is giving modest increases. The governments in both countries also plan to remove some of the red tape that restricts research.

Spain enjoyed one great period of intellectual brilliance in the early nineteenth century, referred to as its Silver Age. Until recently, Spanish scientists were optimistic that they were on their way to a second Silver Age. Now they joke that Spain is heading towards a Bronze Age. But they're not laughing.

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