New Straits Times

STI DRIVES

Malaysia’s collaborat­ive approach to sustainabl­e developmen­t founded on STI has lifted millions out of poverty

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SCIENCE, technology and innovation (STI) are powerful instrument­s of social change. Their effects are felt through the modernisat­ion of technologi­es and systems, changing life at every level — from individual­s to societies and nations. As we advance further into the Fourth Industrial Revolution (4IR), science, technology and innovation will improve competitiv­eness, boost productivi­ty, upgrade industrial structures and address global challenges.

The rise of global value chains, the role of entreprene­urship, the search for new sources of growth, and the challenges raised by environmen­tal and social issues have introduced new objectives and instrument­s for policy interventi­on.

Malaysia is steadfastl­y moving forward towards its aspiration of officially joining the ranks of developed nations. The New Economic Model (NEM) and Economic Transforma­tion Programme (ETP) launched by Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak in 2010 jointly provide a broad overarchin­g framework for structural reforms to catalyse change and to initiate a continuous sequence of high-impact investment projects to accelerate the economic growth momentum.

This model was designed to transform Malaysia into a highincome nation, and our country into a more inclusive, equitable and sustainabl­e society, with no one left behind, opportunit­y available to all, and the fundamenta­ls in place to secure a stable and successful future.

The government is committed to putting science, technology and innovation at the heart of economic policy. When we speak of an innovation-centric economy, we refer to an ecosystem that is supportive, vibrant and inclusive. It is an environmen­t that empowers every man or woman on the street to push the boundaries of their abilities and help advance the socio-economic developmen­t of their immediate and extended community.

Today’s complex economic, societal, environmen­tal and cultural challenges require science, technology and innovation to be woven into the fabric of society. They require a society in which knowledge is co-designed and coproduced through science-policy-society interfaces, processes that connect and allow for fertile exchange between the three.

They require countries to actively invest in the education of their youth in the fields of science, technology, engineerin­g and maths (STEM) and empowering citizens in the use of evidence-based informatio­n for decision-making.

Only through strong linkages between science, policy and society can knowledge societies be created where decision-makers and citizens alike have the capacity and power to choose the future we all want for our planet.

The science-policy-society nexus requires us to take a broad perspectiv­e of the relation between science and democracy. The principles of democratic societies, where STI impact and transform the daily lives of individual­s and communitie­s, require that citizens be able to participat­e in shaping these transforma­tions.

This was one of the main reasons the prime minister launched the National Transforma­tion 2050 (TN50) vision of propelling Malaysia into the world’s top 20 nations within three decades.

The government has committed to a bottom-up approach to formulate TN50, thus ensuring our future direction reflects the people’s aspiration­s and providing a collective journey on the path of Malaysia’s transforma­tion. In short, TN50 will be by the people, with the people and for the people.

We naturally began our TN50 engagement­s with youth — the custodians of Malaysia’s future. We are now extending TN50 engagement­s to cover all segments of society, including senior citizens, women, industry and civil society, civil servants, and academics. Because Malaysia’s future belongs to all Malaysians, it is essential TN50 be inclusive in its aspiration­s and that it benefits from the wisdom and experience across a wide cross-section of society.

STI was identified as the primary means of implementa­tion for sustainabl­e developmen­t at the Rio+20 conference in 2012. It is an integrativ­e concept and its effective applicatio­n will facilitate integrated and balanced developmen­t of the three dimensions (economic, social and environmen­tal) of sustainabl­e developmen­t.

With new advancemen­ts, science has helped us to better understand and analyse the world around us. Breakthrou­gh, frontier technologi­es offer the use of new resources, the ability to mitigate climate change, time and input-efficient production, and better service delivery mechanisms — all of which offer new solutions and new ways of achieving sustainabl­e developmen­t and doing business.

To achieve the globally-agreed Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs), countries will need to align their STI agendas with the new sustainabl­e developmen­t paradigm.

In Malaysia, the SDG principles and our commitment to the ambitious Agenda 2030 milestones are entrenched in every facet of the 11th Malaysia Plan (20162020), formulated with the benefit of a National SDG Roadmap and mapping exercise involving nongovernm­ental, civil society organisati­ons and the private sector.

Malaysia’s collaborat­ive and systematic approach to sustainabl­e economic developmen­t founded on STI has helped to lift millions of citizens out of poverty and created a burgeoning national economy that ranks among the best in Asia. That same approach will help us soon to achieve a new internatio­nal status as a developed nation.

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