New funding won't save health research
New funding won't save health research
Health research funding problems will continue regardless of the Government's $5.5 million Budget increase in funding, says Dr Paul Hutchison, National's Science and Associate Health spokesperson.
Between 1999 and 2003 the percentage of world-class peer-reviewed applications accepted for funding has gone down from just under 40% to around 15% according to the recently released paper 'The Crisis in New Zealand Health Research', December 2003.
Dr Hutchison says the funding increase alone is not sufficient to keep our best and brightest scientists in New Zealand.
"It was made worse by the full cost of funding requirements, when academic scientists had to take on all overhead costs as universities separated funding from research.
"Labour has identified biotechnology as a key area for economic growth, five years later biotechnology-related health research is suffering badly.
"Though the Budget has given some relief, it in no way meets the long-term needs and assurances that scientists require and will mean 75% of world-class research applications will be rejected by lack of funding.
"The
2004 Biotechnology Taskforce recommended 'immediate action
to change regulations that support the sector'; they also
recommended tax changes. "But the Government has not
responded. By failing to improve the complicated regulatory
process, Labour continues to make it difficult for many of
our best and brightest scientists, and risks losing them
overseas." Dr Hutchison says the Government has poured
money into welfare dependency programmes, but has done
little to ensure that the fundamental regulatory or tax
environments are ideal to attract and retain a significant
number of top scientists and investors.