Viewpoint-06 July 2005 |
Private vs Public Good Research: The Unequal Contest -- Hugh Tyndale-Biscoe |
This "Viewpoint" first appeared in the July 2005 issue of Australasian Science in its conScience section. It is reprinted here with the journal's permission. A PDF version is available from Australasian Science at http://www.control.com.au/Access/266conScience.pdf.
CSIRO’s reliance on substantial income from external sources is preventing it from fulfilling its statutory obligation to do research for the public good, says Hugh Tyndale-Biscoe.
Dr Tyndale-Biscoe has researched and published widely on wildlife biology and control of pest animal species. Photo: Paul Tyndale-Biscoe |
The recent redirection of CSIRO
Sustainable Ecosystems research away from wildlife ecology to agricultural
industry is one manifestation of a deep-seated quandary about CSIRO’s
responsibility to Australians. In his 50-year history of CSIRO, Fields of
Discovery, Brad Collis quotes founding father Sir David Rivett: “It has become
necessary at times to plead for greater opportunity for our people to freely
seek knowledge in a spirit of ultimate faith, rather than in a spirit of
immediate profitseeking”.
Parliament established CSIRO as a
statutory body with broadly defined aims and a great deal of freedom to pursue
them. Its primary functions were “to carry out scientific research to assist
Australian industry, and to further the interests of the Australian
community”.
Over 20 years, federal
governments have changed this by requiring CSIRO to obtain 30% of its finance
in addition to budget allocations. Under its current leadership, the drive for
even greater external income has led CSIRO to mimic a public corporation. Its
senior officers now carry management, rather than scientific, titles and use
the language of business by describing users of its research as “clients”
while some senior and still-productive scientists are discarded as “surplus to
requirements”.
But CSIRO is not a company. It does
not have directors answerable to shareholders, nor can its Board hire or fire
the Chief Executive. Its de facto shareholders – the taxpayers of Australia –
have merely token power over its performance, indirectly through Parliament.
Increasingly CSIRO gets external
money through consultancies for “clients” and by “co-investments”. Both are
short-term. In consultancies, clients pay 100% of CSIRO’s costs (salaries,
research and administration) and get 100% of the research time of
participating scientists and technicians, who then cannot tackle core tasks.
In co-investment, the user provides
some of the costs, usually for research, while CSIRO provides salaries and
administration in-kind. Thus, the coinvestor gets 100% of the time of
scientists and technicians for a 50% investment in the research.
If the co-investor is an Industry
Research and Development Corporation (IRDC) it contributes only 25% of the
costs because IRDC funding is raised on a dollar-for-dollar basis between the
relevant industry and the government. Thus, a co-investing IRDC partner gets
100% of the CSIRO research time for a 25% investment, the balance being
contributed by taxpayers. This is a very substantial leverage for their
contribution, and it is largely hidden from public view.
Because contractual obligations to
external clients and co-investors generally take precedence when determining
priorities, they drastically diminish the opportunities for CSIRO scientists
to undertake long-term research on the highly complex problems besetting this
country. These seldom attract external investors but undoubtedly “further the
interests of the Australian community”.
Thus CSIRO researches timber
production from indigenous forests but not its huge impact on the long-term
survival of the forest biota. This is the nub of the problem: public good
research is what the taxpayers are entitled to get from a statutory body yet
CSIRO predominantly now does research for private benefit, with a heavy
subsidy from taxpayers.
Another disturbing consequence of
the restrictive “corporate” ethos is that senior scientists with specialised
knowledge seldom now speak publicly on matters of national importance. Those
that have done so, including divisional chiefs, often find themselves “surplus
to requirements”.
Three scientists with international expertise in climate, water and biodiversity, as well as several other chiefs, have left CSIRO involuntarily in the past 2 years. It seems that Rivett’s aspiration for CSIRO no longer matters.
Dr Hugh Tyndale-Biscoe is a Fellow of the Australian Academy
of Science and chairs its Fund for Research on the Conservation of
Endangered Native Animals. In 1995 he retired as Deputy Chief of CSIRO
Wildlife and Ecology. From 2000 until 30 June 2005 he was an honourary Fellow
at CSIRO Sustainable Ecosystems.
conScience is a column for Australians to express forthright views on national issues. Views expressed are those of the author.