The European Union could enjoy a bigger research and innovation budget after 2020 â but universities might lose out to businesses as the emphasis of funding switches, senior EU figures have suggested.
Jyrki Katainen, European Commissioner for jobs, growth, investment and competitiveness, told a conference that he would like to see the proportion of the EUâs budget set aside for research and innovation rise from the current 8 per cent.
Debate in Brussels is intensifying over how to fund the successor to the EUâs current research and innovation package, Horizon 2020. The European Parliament has called for the next framework programme to be worth âŹ120 billion (ÂŁ106 billion), a 50 per cent increase on the current package.
Asked about this figure, Mr Katainen said that he thought it was âa good targetâ while noting that cuts would have to be made elsewhere.
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However, he hinted at a shift away from grants â which fund basic research â to loans and equity investments to stimulate new companies, in an attempt to help the EU catch up with capital markets in the US. For organisations that preferred grants, âthe next budget will most probably be smaller than the existing oneâ, he said.
Some EU structural funds, which tend to go to poorer member states, could be refocused on research and innovation, he added.
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Then there is the impact of Brexit â the loss of the UK will leave a âhole in the budgetâ, he said, meaning that the EU would have to reconsider its funding priorities âfrom scratchâ.
The conference, New World Order: Science, Technology & Trade: Shaping the Next Framework Programme, held in Brussels on 27 June, also heard details of how Horizon 2020âs remaining âŹ30 billion will be spent between 2018 and 2020.
Robert-Jan Smits, director general the European Commissionâs Directorate General for Research and Innovation, said that it would focus on âimpact, impact, impactâ. âWhat have all these investments over the past few years brought?â he asked.
Security, digitising industry and the low-carbon economy would also receive special attention through project calls, he explained.
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And the mooted new European Innovation Council would distribute âŹ2.6 billion during this period, he continued, distributing funds to companies with the advice of venture capitalists and business investors.
Europe had failed to produce disruptive new companies, like Google, Amazon and Uber, that created entirely new markets, he warned. Current funding models in the EU failed to back âcrazy ideasâ, he said, adding that it should be the job of public funding to help such âriskyâ ventures.
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