New Era

Govt falls short on research

- ■ Lahja Nashuuta -lnashuuta@gmail.com

The government has fallen short of the commitment made by African government­s to spend at least 1% of their gross domestic product on research and developmen­t (R&D), and it is far from attaining the global average of 1.7%.

This is according to the National Research and Experiment­al Developmen­tSurveybyt­heNational Commission on Research, Science and Technology (NCRST) released earlier this week.

NCRST CEO Anicia Peters said government expenditur­e on R&D decreased significan­tly from being the highest at 46% to a mere 3.3%, stressing that “there was less funding towards engineerin­g and technology, medical and health, and human sciences”.

She further pointed out that research funding for transport, telecommun­ications, as well as infrastruc­ture, industrial production and technology is low, while R&D on food and water security is not specified.

Speaking at the same event, higher education minister Itah

Kandjii-Murangi acknowledg­ed the shortfall in funding, stating that there is a need to increase government’s expenditur­e on R&D to steer science and technology to address societal challenges.

Kandji Murangi, said although Namibia has not been able to achieve 1% of the GDP target, the country has demonstrat­ed a political commitment to attaining the target through Vision 2030, as well as the sixth national developmen­t plan.

The survey further revealed that currently, the GDP expenditur­e on research and developmen­t (R&D) accounts stand at 0.7%, of which the government has only contribute­d 0.02% in the 2021-2022 financial year.

Government’s funding towards research illustrate­s a decrease from 0.16% funding in the 2013-14 financial year when the institutio­n carried out a similar survey.

The government is the secondlowe­st contributo­r, with only 3.3%, which is a significan­t decrease from 46% in 2013/2014 when it was the highest R&D spender.

The non-profit sector stubbornly remains the lowest spender with 2.5%.

The survey reveals that the higher education expenditur­e on R&D in the 2021/2022 financial year amounted to N$964 million, equivalent to 75.5%, while the Namibian business expenditur­e accounted for N$288.3 million or 21.7%, and that of government amounted to N$43.6 million.

Meanwhile, the not-forprofit institutio­n’s expenditur­e amounted to N$33.1 million, which is equivalent to 3.3% during the 2022 financial year.

Most of the research funding channelled towards applied research accounted for the largest proportion of R&D expenditur­e in 2021/22 at 52.3%, while experiment­al developmen­t spending significan­tly increased from 26.6% in 2013/14 to 32.1% in 2021/22, and basic research decreased to 15.4% in 2021/22 from 19.5% in 2013/14.

Only 0.2% of the responding institutio­ns did not classify the type of research.

The survey also reveals that the country has few researcher­s in health, science and engineerin­g, and that there is a lack of research institutio­ns.

The significan­t decrease in government funding for R&D is of great concern, the survey suggests.

The study recommends that the government should invest more in R&D and innovation to drive its own national R&D and innovation agenda, as opposed to internatio­nal funders.

“More investment in engineerin­g and technology for R&D investment into the manufactur­ing sectors, green hydrogen, oil and gas, critical raw materials and 4IR/AI will be needed to develop local human capacity and infrastruc­ture. Infrastruc­ture spending for national and accredited R&D facilities should increase to capacitate researcher­s in the country. Industrial production and technology expenditur­e is too low,” the report reads.

The report further said that targeted investment should be made in medicine and health science, as Namibia needs to invest in vaccine manufactur­ing and future epidemic preparedne­ss, while providing universal healthcare across the country.

 ?? ?? Professor Anicia Peters
Professor Anicia Peters

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