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来源类型 | REPORT |
规范类型 | 报告 |
Turning the Page: Reimagining the National Labs in the 21st Century Innovation Economy | |
Matthew Stepp; Sean Pool; Nick Loris; Jack Spencer | |
发表日期 | 2013-06-20 |
出版年 | 2013 |
语种 | 英语 |
概述 | The Information Technology and Innovation Foundation, the Center for American Progress, and the Heritage Foundation teamed up to release a joint report assessing options to reform the national lab system to better position it to meet 21st century challenges. |
摘要 | Since their creation in the 1940s, the Department of Energy’s, or DOE’s, National Labs have been a cornerstone of high-impact, federally funded research and development. The labs have helped seed society with new ideas and technologies in leading disciplines such as energy, biotechnology, nuclear physics, and material science. While the labs’ primary mission must continue to focus on supporting the nation’s research needs not met by the private sector, the time has come to move the DOE labs past their Cold War roots and into the 21st century. As the United States moves deeper into the 21st century, the importance of advancing innovation becomes even more important if our nation is to thrive. Creating wealth depends on the use of traditional inputs such as natural resources, land, and labor, but most importantly, it requires the discovery and development of new ideas and technology. Today’s science and technological challenges are increasingly complex and require multidisciplinary and often unique solutions that the labs can help provide. While the pace of innovation and the complexity of national challenges have accelerated, the labs have not kept stride. Although private-sector innovation will remain the cornerstone of economic growth, lab scientists and engineers do important work that can be of significant future use to private enterprise. Examples include commercial global positioning system, or GPS, applications and genetics analysis. The problem is that the labs’ tether to the market is weak, often by design. Though the mission of the labs must not be to subsidize private-sector research, efficient means for transferring scientific discovery into the market should exist. But the labs’ bureaucracy remains largely unchanged and does not reflect the nimble characteristics of today’s innovation-driven economy. Inefficiencies, duplicative regulations, and top-down research micromanagement are having a stifling effect on innovation. Furthermore, institutional biases against transferring market-relevant technology out of the labs and into the private sector reduce incentives for technology transfer. The federal government must reform the labs from their 20th century atomic-energy roots to create 21st century engines of innovation. This report aims to lay the groundwork for reform by proposing a more flexible lab-management model that strengthens the labs’ ability to address national needs and produce a consistent flow of innovative ideas and technologies. The underlying philosophy of this report is not to just tinker around the edges but to build policy reforms that re-envision the lab system. The analysis presented by this working group represents a consensus between members of three organizations with diverse ideological perspectives. We may not agree on funding levels, funding priorities, or the specific role of government in technological innovation, and nothing in this report should be construed as support for or opposition to those things. Instead, the purpose of this report is to put forth a set of recommendations that will bring greater efficiency and effectiveness to the DOE lab system, produce more relevant research, and increasingly allow that research to be pulled into the private sector. These recommendations are as relevant to a large, highly funded research agenda as they are to a much more limited one. Our analysis and policy recommendations fall into three major categories, which are summarized below. Transforming lab management from DOE micromanagement to contractor accountability
Unifying lab stewardship, funding, and management stovepipes with innovation goals
Moving technology to market with better incentives and more flexibility
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主题 | Energy and Environment |
URL | https://www.americanprogress.org/issues/green/reports/2013/06/20/67454/turning-the-page-reimagining-the-national-labs-in-the-21st-century-innovation-economy/ |
来源智库 | Center for American Progress (United States) |
资源类型 | 智库出版物 |
条目标识符 | http://119.78.100.153/handle/2XGU8XDN/435525 |
推荐引用方式 GB/T 7714 | Matthew Stepp,Sean Pool,Nick Loris,et al. Turning the Page: Reimagining the National Labs in the 21st Century Innovation Economy. 2013. |
条目包含的文件 | ||||||
文件名称/大小 | 资源类型 | 版本类型 | 开放类型 | 使用许可 | ||
2013-turning-the-pag(6003KB) | 智库出版物 | 限制开放 | CC BY-NC-SA | 浏览 |
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