Privatising Public Knowledge

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The statutory privatisation of publicly funded knowledge through the Intellectual Property Rights from Publicly Financed Research Act

 

The Inverted Universe of Academic Unfunding

Wednesday, March 4th, 2009

Science fiction stories often ask their readers to willingly suspend disbelief and imagine a parallel universe, one just like the one which readers inhabit, except for one or two minor details. Imagine, the story goes that a human develops an ability to know what others are thinking.

As the story develops it usually transpires that these details are not so minor but have dramatic consequences. Those consequences in turn, if the story displays any insight into the human condition, illuminate ironically, tragically or humorously an incongruity in the reader’s universe, such as discovering that its better not to know what other’s are thinking about oneself.

We could call these parallel universe stories.

What would we call stories in which the difference between universes is not a minor one but major one, in which an important feature is the exact opposite of the one with which readers are familiar. I think the term inverted universe would do nicely.

And it is an inverted universe story that we find, not in science fiction but in the strange history of universities and economics over the last 30 years. A little more than 30 years ago saw the imposition of a new role on universities, this imposition was part of a far bigger story, the story known as Reagonomics in the United States, and Thatcherite economics in the United Kingdom and its (former) colonies. The new role was to serve not as centres for learning, innovation and life saving discoveries such as the polio vaccine, which had been their role previously but as out-sourcing companies for corporate research and development.
The rationale advanced for this change was that universities should be entrepreneurial by which was meant not that universities should transform the societies in which they are situated, which is Peter Drucker’s idea of innovation, but that the social capital represented by universities would no longer be matched by investment capital from a state intent on reducing corporate taxation.
Universities would henceforth have to pay their own way. That the state had quite deliberately made universities dependent on it for funding in order use the universities to serve its ends in homogenising the ruling class, or for military technology was conveniently forgotten. Society could not afford to subsidise learning. Universities would have to compete as firms in the market (despite having public interest mandates). That role is still being thrust on universities, especially resource poor universities in the global South, which are under pressure to obtain “3rd stream income”.

Over the last six months governments, especially in the global North, have spent extraordinary amounts of money subsidising banks and investment companies, entities which by their very definition are market players, able to extract a premium for their re-allocations of capital (and risk). By their nature banks are profit making institutions, just as by their nature universities are not.

And so we realise with a start that we inhabit an inverse universe to the one inhabited by our grandparents; one in which banks are subsidised, heavily subsidised by the state, while universities are meant to fend for themselves.

I’ll admit of course that many universities still grudgingly receive some State funding, although less and less for core functions, and more and more for rendering services, such as bolstering a state patent portfolio. I’ll also admit that the state funding for banks is touted as a desperate measure for a desperate situation, ostensibly a unique situation. Its the scale that is revealing though, the bail out will burden tax payers for a generation, while directors continue to take home bonuses. A mere 10% of that amount of the bail outs thus far would have given universities a massive capital injection, making them free of reliance on state funding for the foreseeable future.

Does the story of the inverse universe illuminate our present? Unfortunately it is our present, one in which public institutions like universities must seek private funding to survive while market players are subsidised with taxpayer money. If we can learn anything it must be that the social capital represented by universities is well worth state investment, and that the claims that value lies only, or indeed primarily in market mechanisms is profoundly mistaken.

Prizes over Patents

Friday, January 30th, 2009

In a previous post Eyes on the Prize I said that I would elaborate on some of the reasons why innovation prizes are better than patents for African universities.

the winner gets the money faster

Prizes are given whenever a problem is solved problem or an innovation meets the criteria. At worst a successful research institution will have to wait a few months until a prize giving ceremony is held.

Compare that to one of the success stories of university patenting their research, a drug called Emtriva. Fifteen years after the patent application was filed, and after ten years, and bankrolling millions of dollars of patent litigation, Emory received the coveted payoff. That is not a worst case scenario, complex technologies take years to develop, more years to achieve market success, if they achieve it, and more years to achieve profitability, if they ever do. Ten to fifteen years to break even is regarded as normal in most industries.

But win an innovation prize and you get paid right away.

the award is worth far more than money, it also confers prestige which is very important to institutions to attract talent

Prizes are awarded for demonstrated solutions to problems.

These are either solutions which by their nature are not contestable, such as the highest prime number, or judged by experts according to pre-defined criteria. In other words they are a far more powerful demonstration of scientific excellence than the award of a patent. The South African patent system does not examine patent applications, its easier to get a patent than to publish a peer reviewed article, a patent merely indicates that you’ve paid a lawyer.
Prizes receive a great deal of publicity so that recipients and even serious competitors are profiled as leaders in research and innovation. Its the kind of publicity that money can’t buy, attracting talented students and staff.

knowing whether you have won or not in a specific time frame helps decisions to terminate research that is not going anywhere

Many prizes set a time frame. We all know that deadlines can be a powerful motivation. So can knowing that others are working on the same problem. Even when prizes don’t set a time frame if someone else gets there first that’s a clear endpoint. But even if no-one has won yet, the clear criteria of prizes make decisions about continuing investing into a particular line of research far easier than the elusive criterion that maybe one can make something that can maybe make some money.

its not necessary to go through the long, costly and uncertain process of taking a product to market

Universities in search of the legendary pot of revenue at the end of the patent rainbow eventually learn that once researchers achieve a breakthrough there is an inevitably lengthy process of filing and obtaining a patent, then, whether the university chooses to licence the patent to others for the next steps or go it alone, there is further development of a marketable product, manufacturing processes, launching the product, distribution deals, and then, if the product is a commercial success, the process may pay for itself, or, exceptionally, may yield a product. Its a process that requires a great deal of specialist management capacity, almost inevitably results in having to manage relationships with profit hungry corporations, and distracts from the mission of universities.

Win a prize and the job is done. All a research institution needs is to focus on its core competence; research.

Winning prizes doesn’t just happen though, it requires a deliberate focus, attention to incentives for talented researchers, and institutional commitment to pursuing the prize.