This document is an excerpt from the EUR-Lex website
Document 52012SC0212
COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT IMPACT ASSESSMENT Accompanying the document COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT, THE COUNCIL, THE EUROPEAN ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL COMMITTEE AND THE COMMITTEE OF REGIONS A Reinforced European Research Area Partnership for Excellence and Growth (Text with EEA relevance)
COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT IMPACT ASSESSMENT Accompanying the document COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT, THE COUNCIL, THE EUROPEAN ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL COMMITTEE AND THE COMMITTEE OF REGIONS A Reinforced European Research Area Partnership for Excellence and Growth (Text with EEA relevance)
COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT IMPACT ASSESSMENT Accompanying the document COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT, THE COUNCIL, THE EUROPEAN ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL COMMITTEE AND THE COMMITTEE OF REGIONS A Reinforced European Research Area Partnership for Excellence and Growth (Text with EEA relevance)
/* SWD/2012/0212 final */
COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT IMPACT ASSESSMENT Accompanying the document COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT, THE COUNCIL, THE EUROPEAN ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL COMMITTEE AND THE COMMITTEE OF REGIONS A Reinforced European Research Area Partnership for Excellence and Growth (Text with EEA relevance) /* SWD/2012/0212 final */
TABLE OF CONTENTS COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT IMPACT
ASSESSMENT......................... 1 1........... Procedural issues and
consultation of interested parties.................................................... 1 1.1........ Policy context................................................................................................................. 1 1.2........ Organisation and timing................................................................................................... 2 1.3........ Consultation of interested
parties and expertise................................................................ 3 2........... Problem definition........................................................................................................... 4 2.1........ The urgent need to improve
research effectiveness in the EU............................................ 4 2.2........ Main problems hampering research
performance in ERA................................................. 7 2.2.1..... Insufficient competition in
national research systems......................................................... 8 2.2.2..... Barriers to pan-European
cooperation and competition remain......................................... 9 2.2.3..... Persisting distortions among
national labour markets for researchers............................... 11 2.2.4..... Limited progress on gender equality and gender content in research............................... 13 2.2.5..... Restricted circulation of and
uneven access to scientific knowledge................................ 14 2.3........ The EU’s right to act,
subsidiarity and EU added-value.................................................. 16 2.4........ Baseline scenario.......................................................................................................... 17 2.4.1..... Different
levels of competition and low co-operation between research funding systems
remain 17 2.4.2..... Limited action on researcher
labour market towards mobility and careers....................... 18 2.4.3..... Unequal opportunities for female
researchers and insufficient attention to gender content in research 18 2.4.4..... Uneven access and circulation of
scientific knowledge remain......................................... 19 3........... Policy Objectives.......................................................................................................... 20 4........... Policy Options.............................................................................................................. 21 5........... Analysing the impacts and
comparing the policy options................................................. 29 5.1........ Assessing the options.................................................................................................... 31 5.2........ Choosing the preferred policy
option............................................................................. 34 5.3........ Risks and mitigating strategies....................................................................................... 36 6........... Monitoring and evaluation............................................................................................. 36 Annex 1: Consultation of interested parties
and expertise used...................................................... 39 Annex 2: Further evidence for the problem
analysis...................................................................... 46 Annex 3: Evaluation of previous and existing
EU, regional and national initiatives........................... 56 Annex 4: Analysis of impacts: methodology and
tools used........................................................... 73 Annex 5: Screening and selection of the
specific measures for the policy options........................... 90 Annex 6: Detailed description of policy
option 2 and 3, comparison of delivering mechanisms and problem tree 101 Annex 7: Possible indicators to be used for
monitoring ERA progress......................................... 119 Annex 8: Glossary and acronyms............................................................................................... 125 Annex 9: Bibliography............................................................................................................... 135 COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT IMPACT ASSESSMENT Accompanying the document COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION
TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT, THE COUNCIL, THE EUROPEAN ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL
COMMITTEE AND THE COMMITTEE OF REGIONS A Reinforced European Research
Area Partnership for Excellence and Growth
(Text with EEA relevance) 1. Procedural
issues and consultation of interested parties 1.1. Policy context The European Research Area (ERA) is a unified
research area open to the world based on the Internal Market, in which
researchers, scientific knowledge and technology circulate freely and through
which the Union and its Member States shall strengthen their scientific and
technological bases as well as their competitiveness and
their capacity to collectively address grand challenges. ERA was
launched with the European Commission's Communication 'Towards a
European Research Area’ in January 2000[1]
and was subsequently endorsed by the EU at the March 2000 Lisbon European
Council. The Lisbon Treaty gives a new impetus and status to ERA, as it
is now one of the key objectives of the Union[2].
Achieving ERA is thus a legal obligation for the EU and the Treaty provides a
new basis for ERA policy. The
contribution of research to innovation and growth is precisely the aim of the
2010 Innovation Union (IU) flagship initiative launched as part
of the Europe 2020 Strategy[3].
The IU Flagship announced for 2012 an ERA framework and supporting measures
to remove obstacles to mobility and cross-border co-operation, to be in force
by the end of 2014. This was endorsed by the European Council of 4 February
2011 (Council of the European Union, 2011 and reiterated by the European
Council of 2012: "Innovation and research are at the heart of the
Europe 2020 strategy. Europe has a strong science base but the ability to
transform research into new innovations targeted to market demands needs to be
improved. (…) efforts must be stepped up with a view to: – completing the
European Research Area by 2014; in this connection the European Council
welcomed the Commission's intention to propose an ERA framework in June 2012; –
improving the mobility and career prospects of researchers; – rapidly
establishing and implementing the inventory of EU-funded R&D and the single
innovation indicator; (…)". In a context of economic crisis, the
completion of the European Research Area focusing on research and
research-based solutions is even more urgent to support economic growth,
scientific excellence and cohesion amongst regions and countries. Action is
needed to overcome the negative effects of national fragmentation in the design
and implementation of research policies and activities on Europe's research
effectiveness. Measures should aim at increasing competition and exploiting
cross-border synergies between national research systems, facilitate researcher
careers as well as mobility, and the free circulation of knowledge, addressing
thus the research component of the broader Innovation agenda of the Commission[4]. This Impact Assessment report accompanies
the Communication from the Commission to the European Parliament, the Council,
the Economic and Social Committee on ‘A Reinforced European Research Area
Partnership for Excellence and Growth’, which presents actions responding to
the need to complete ERA by 2014. This Communication was announced in the
Commission's 2012 Legislative and Work programme (European Commission, 2010a). 1.2. Organisation and timing The Commission's Directorate-General for Research
and Innovation is the lead DG for this initiative. Consultation with other
Directorate-Generals (DGs) was carried out through the ERA inter-service group
(ISG) and additional bilateral meetings. The ERA ISG, chaired by the RTD Deputy
Director-General in charge of Innovation and ERA, included representatives from
the following DGs: SG, SJ, AGRI, BEPA, COMP, DEVCO, EAC, ENV, ELARG, EMPL,
ENER, ENTR, ESTAT, HOME, INFSO, JRC, MARE, MARKT, MOVE, REGIO, SANCO and TRADE.
Most DG RTD Directorates were also represented[5].
The ERA ISG acted as the Steering Group for the ex-ante Impact Assessment and
was convened for the identification of the problems (June 2011), the
identification of policy options (October 2011) and the completion of the
ex-ante Impact Assessment and Communication (February and March 2012 and
consulted on the revised version of the Impact Assessment report in April
2012). The Legal Service was also consulted on several occasions. In addition, bilateral meetings were
organised with representative stakeholders: European Research Council (ERC),
European Free Trade Association (EFTA), European Association of Research and
Technology Organisations (EARTO), European University Association (EUA),
Science Europe and League of European Research Universities (LERU). These
meetings focused on the identification of problems in specific research
sectors, policies and possible ways forward. The European Parliament, the
Committee of the Regions and the European Economic and Social Committee were
also informed of the public consultation and Impact Assessment work. 1.3. Consultation of interested parties and expertise Several activities were carried out to
consult stakeholders to gather the necessary evidence. Relevant activities
included stakeholder consultations via a broad web-based public consultation
(public consultation on the ERA Framework), conferences, numerous meetings with
Member State representatives, experts and academics, high-level panels with
leading experts/academics as well as studies and research projects. A summary
of these activities is presented in Annex 1. The various stakeholder consultations were
crucial for identifying key issues hampering the development of ERA. The public
consultation on the ERA Framework (from 13 September 2011 to 30 November 2011)
provided an opportunity for a wide range of stakeholders to express their views
on priorities for ERA. It gathered a total of 691 responses (590 responses to
the online questionnaire and 101 ad-hoc contributions/position papers) from
researchers (51% of respondents), research performing/funding organisations[6] (17%), citizens (12%) and the
private sector (7%)[7].
The summary of the outcomes is provided in Annex 1. The various stakeholder consultations
revealed common concerns and issues within each group of actors. The key
messages emerging were as follows: For researchers, the key concerns are the low attractiveness of careers, the
limited freedom of career movement and the lack of opportunities for
cross-fertilisation of ideas. Key EU-level stakeholders[8] emphasised that researchers
face insufficiently transparent procedures for appointment, hampered access to
research results and insufficient interoperability of data repositories whilst
grants are not easily portable or accessible to non-residents. For research performing/funding
organisations, more should be done to achieve
excellence in research and better coordinate efforts for tackling grand
challenges in Europe and internationally. Several stakeholder organisations[9] indicated that cross-border
cooperation, increased pan-European competition and further support to suitable
infrastructures and mechanisms for open access publishing and data repositories
were desirable features for ERA. This group of stakeholders indicated the
urgency to better involve them better in ERA policy. For the private sector, there is general concern about the lack of highly-skilled and
well-trained researchers in Europe. Industry also called for enhanced
cooperation between education providers and the business sector. According to
the ERA Framework consultation, businesses believe that the private sector
academia and the business sector do not cooperate sufficiently. Small and
medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) call in particular for enhanced
cooperation/dialogue mechanisms and platforms between research stakeholders. For Member States and Associate
countries, action is needed at EU level to complete
ERA to improve attractiveness of research careers and remove obstacles to
mobility, enhance cross-border operations and support open access. Several
Member States have underlined the need to promote excellence in research and to
focus on global challenges. They have also called for strengthened cooperation
between academia, research institutes and industry, whilst favouring a soft/voluntary
approach based on best practices rather than hard legislative measures. Member
States also pointed out the need to offer better career prospects through
enhanced social security rights and easier grant portability. In addition, the "Opinion on the
development of an ERA Framework"[10]
issued by the European Research Area Committee contributed to the
identification of possible actions. An informal meeting with Directors
General of the 27 EU Member States Ministries took place in April, 2012.
The DGs supported the overall approach and the ERA priorities envisaged,
notably the choice to consider first the use of voluntary actions to complete
ERA. Regarding measures to reinforce the partnership, they requested to take
account the important relationship between national governments and national
research actors, notably funding organisations. 1.4 Opinion
of the Impact Assessment Board Following the opinion of the Impact
Assessment Board on the resubmitted report, this document includes a revised
version of the problem definition, notably the gender aspects, it presents,
when evidence is available, the efforts taken since 2000 on the specific
barriers considered in this Communication. The presentation of the impacts and
comparison of the policy options has been strengthened and includes the
feedback of stakeholders. The proposed monitoring system is now presented in
detail. 2. Problem
definition 2.1. The urgent need to improve research effectiveness in the
EU European research is still among the best
in the world. In many areas, research has enabled European companies to be
leaders or first movers in technology development and be ahead of the game in
many areas, setting the standards and performance levels for others to follow.
For example, Europe has introduced "fly-by-wire" in the commercial
aircraft industry and GSM in mobile telecommunications, promoted the growth of
capabilities in satellite development and launch, invented the compact disc,
and more recently fostered the emergence of the wind energy industry. Moreover,
Europe is still the best producer of scientific publications worldwide and
facing competition from emerging actors, it had lost less of its world share
than the United States. Europe also generates more than 30% of world patent
applications. (see Figure 1 below). Also, EU inward Foreign Direct Investment
(FDI) in R&D is holding up, bucking the trend of a decline in overall
inward FDI[11]. Figure 1: World share of scientific publications
(2000 and 2009) (left) and EPO patent applications by inventor's country of
residence (2007) (right) However, Europe suffers from an innovation
gap with the US, Japan and other competitor economies. The 'Innovation Union
Scoreboard 2011' (European Commission, 2012a) shows
that the US, Japan and South Korea have a performance lead over the EU27[12]. New economic powers such as Brazil, China and India have emerged
and their R&D weight is already growing. This implies that, on the one
hand, Europe is losing ground, in relative terms, in
producing knowledge. Europe's share of publication is declining, not because
Europe is publishing less, but because others are publishing more. Besides, the
world share of the EU in excellent research is lower than that of the US: in
2007, Europe and the US produced respectively 32.4 % and 34.2% of the top-10%
most cited scientific publications worldwide (European Commission, 2011c). On
the other hand, global innovation leaders such as the
US and Japan are particularly ahead of the EU27 on indicators of business
activity. This reflects a lower presence of EU industry
in sectors based on new technological paradigms (such as ICT and
biotechnologies), as Europe has been less able,
compared to the US, to develop competitive new technology-based business[13]. Europe also faces a series of crucial
internal challenges: economic and financial crisis, low growth, ageing
population, and a diverse set of environmental and grand challenges. To tackle
these, Europe 2020 and the Innovation Union flagship initiative has put
innovation at the centre of the EU's economic strategy. To respond to the many
factors of Europe's weak innovation performance[14], the IU flagship sets up a
comprehensive agenda to improve conditions and access to finance for research
and innovation in Europe, to ensure that innovative ideas can be turned into
products and services that create growth and jobs. One major component in the
Innovation Union Flagship which requires action is research. First, Europe invests too little in
research compared to major competitors. In relative terms, the investment is
lower than in the US (1.92% of GDP in Europe - or 201 billion Euros PPP in
2008- vs. 2.79% of GDP in the US (or 283 billion Euros PPP in the same year)
(Eurostat). Recognizing that Europe's future growth relies to a large extent on
research and innovation, the European Council reaffirmed in March 2010 that the
overall R&D investment level should be increased to 3% of EU GDP as part of
improving the conditions for research and development. Second, knowledge production is
concentrated in a relatively small number of Member States as indicated by the
distribution of 10% of the most cited scientific publications and the share of
patents applications by inventor's country application (Annex 2). This partly
reflects the volume of public R&D expenditure in these Member States when
compared with the rest of Europe (the GBAORD of DE, FR, IT, UK represented 64%
of the total EU GBAORD in 2010) as well as the number of researchers in Member
State. Last but not least, Europe is short in the
cutting-edge research that can deliver the breakthroughs required to fuel
science and technology (S&T)-based business development. The EU deficit
with respect to the US in scientific excellence is particularly important in
some fast-moving fields which are precisely those where the US has generated
most S&T-based growth (e.g. Information and Communication Technologies,
Nanotechnology, Biotechnology, Molecular biology, Genetics). The EU deficit with
regard to the US in the field of nanotechnologies is presented in Box 1 below. Box 1: Research
investment and research outputs: comparison between the EU and key third
countries in the area of nanotechnologies The case of nanotechnology is a good illustration of the underperformance of the European research system. In this key enabling technology, which is critical for future international competitiveness, the EU spends more public money annually than other countries. According to several recent estimates (NMP Scoreboard, 2011, Roco et al., 2010, OECD 2009), the European Union spends around 1.5 billion Euros annually (including the 27 Member States' national funding and EC funding), which is considerably more than the USA (1 billion Euros), Japan (0.47 billion Euros) and China (0.1 billion Euros). However, if one looks at highly cited scientific publications in this field, 10% of EU publications are in the top 10% most cited publications, compared to 16.1% for the USA, 5.4% for Japan and 8.1% for China. Another indication of Europe lagging behind is the market introduction of nanotechnology-based products and applications. According to a recent nanotechnology product inventory compiled by the Project on Emerging Nanotechnologies at the Woodrow Wilson International Centre, a total of 53% of identified nanotechnology-based products come from the US, followed by companies in East Asia (24%), Europe (15%), and other world regions (8%). Fragmented public funding in Europe leads to lower scientific and technological outputs per euro invested: the efficiency of EU countries can be seen lagging behind the US and the OECD average. Overall European underperformance and
differences in scientific output and quality amongst Member States entail
missed opportunities notably in terms of growth and jobs. This is due to a
variety of national, local-specific and international factors. Although it is
difficult to disentangle research-specific factors from those outside the
research field (i.e. factors linked to the overall economic structure and
performance of a country, its labour market, the quality of its infrastructure
and education and training systems, etc.) 'structural' factors such as
different national approaches to competition for funding and cross-border
cooperation, as well as to the fragmented labour markets for researchers;
"delocalised" working methods; and policies promoting access to
scientific knowledge and high speed interconnection of research centres with
the availability of shared high performance computing services and unique
collections of research information and data are specific to research policy.
These underlying problems act as 'structural' breaks, as they do not permit the
development of adequate framework conditions for research and innovation at
national and European level – i.e. they constitute barriers or obstacles to the
completion of ERA. In addition, the current highly variable and fragmented way
of structuring research in Europe is not fostering open innovation, essential
to enhance competitiveness and attractiveness of the European economy. A more
co-ordinated approach to reduce this fragmentation between Member State
research systems and removing barriers to competition and cooperation
could act as drivers to improve the effectiveness of research in Member States
and on the European level (and notably in less-advanced Member States).
Reducing fragmentation and increasing effectiveness is even more important in
times of budgetary austerity and when there is a need to optimise the
innovation, economic, social and environmental returns on research investments.
2.2. Main problems hampering research performance in ERA Since 2000, the European Union and Member
States together have progressed towards a European Research Area. Commission
initiatives supported by the Framework Programme include the European Research
Council for basic research, ERA-NETs for the coordination of European, national
and regional research programmes (e.g. E-Rare which co-ordinates
almost half of rare disease research in Europe) and 'Article 185s' which
integrate EU, national and regional efforts into a single European programme
(e.g. the EMRP metrology or science of measurement initiative pools 44% of
EU-wide resources into a single programme). Significant progress has also been
made under Member States led ERA Partnership initiatives - Joint Programming[15]
continues to gain momentum and political commitment, with the 2010 guidelines
on framework conditions for joint programming in research[16] produced by the Member States
providing an excellent basis on which to move to joint implementation; the
'European Partnership for Researchers[17]
has led to improved management of research careers in a growing number of
institutions by, inter alia, promoting take-up of the
Commission-proposed Charter
& Code[18]
- furthermore, national efforts and the Framework Programmes have facilitated
mobility for 30% of EU researchers[19];
The Knowledge Sharing[20]
initiative has helped to ensure that all Member States have policies paying
attention to the dissemination of knowledge. In the area of research
infrastructures, a major step towards a coordinated policy approach was the
establishment of the European Strategy Forum on Research Infrastructures, the
e-Infrastructure Reflection Group and the first ever European Roadmap for
Research Infrastructures in 2006 - subsequently up-dated in 2008 and 2010.
Furthermore, since the entry into force of the Community legal framework for a
European Research Infrastructure Consortium (ERIC[21]) in 2009, 12 European research
infrastructures have been launched[22].
European Commission has also played a major role in supporting and coordinating
the European level e-infrastructure development, especially in the areas of connectivity,
high-performance computing and grid computing resources development. As a
result, 8800 research and education institutions in 40 countries are benefiting
from high-speed connectivity through GEANT with global connections, 24
countries have joined the Partnership for advance Computing in Europe (PRACE),
the European Grid Infrastructure (EGI) supports 221 different scientific
communities to share resources by means of a reliable and sustainable system. However, Member States should take more ownership of the ERA and
translate it into national policies which could contribute to constructing ERA,
building policy coherence across borders and across policy levels. Several
barriers at national level[23]
continue to act as major breaks to the development of adequate R&D
framework conditions. These barriers negatively impact on the effectiveness of
Europe's research and hamper the free movement of researchers, scientific
knowledge and
technology. Some are specific to the research field and
should be addressed through policy intervention. These barriers are analysed in
the sections below. The problem tree is presented in annex 6. 2.2.1. Insufficient competition in national research systems The level of competition amongst researchers, research teams and
institutions is determined in a large part by the way public funding mechanisms
are organised at national level (i.e. how public resources are allocated to
researchers, research teams and institutions). Competitive funding implies that
several research teams compete for project funding. In the EU, the share of
public funding (i.e. government budget appropriations or outlays on research
and development – GBAORD) allocated competitively varies a lot, between 20% and
80% with an average of 40% allocated through open calls for research proposals
(See Annex 2). The remaining share is allocated via 'institutional funding'
(i.e. funding allocated as block funding to institutions), but the share of it
linked to their performance varies greatly. The majority of universities in the
EU still heavily rely on public 'institutional' funding not related to
performance (OECD, 2011). As a consequence, researchers, universities
and research institutions throughout the EU do not face the same level of
competition for accessing public funding. This is particularly problematic as
there is clear evidence in the academic literature that excellence in science
is linked to competition between researchers (Franzoni, Sclelatto and Stephan,
2011). Scientists evaluated through comparable international benchmarks (e.g.
analysing their international publication patterns) achieve higher research
quality[24].
The literature also demonstrates a clear link between a more competitive
funding environment for universities and the productivity of the whole research
system in terms of the number of publications per euro invested (Auranen and
Nieminen, 2010). Competition for funding acts as a strong incentive for
research institutions a) to improve their financial capacities, b) to increase
the visibility of individual research institutions, c) to attract and retain
the best brains and d) to attract more students, access additional funding etc.
(Harris, 2005, p.36). Conversely, limited competition leads to insufficient
specialisation: many European universities spread their research activity too
thinly across many subject areas (Mitsos et al., 2012). Without international
competition, it is difficult for each university or research organisations to
identify those areas in which their teams are (or could be) competitive. Last
but not least, competition ultimately pays off. Innovation leader countries in
Europe[25]
with open and competitive systems tend to exhibit stronger records of
scientific quality, as measured by average citations (Mitsos, et al, 2012). Furthermore, researchers, research teams
and research programmes and proposals are not evaluated with comparable
standards. Member States' evaluation systems are national-specific and do not
use - in most case - comparable standards. This results in the fact that Member
States with similar shares of competitive funding do not necessarily generate
comparable levels of research quality. In some countries peer-review processes
are very conservative, inward-looking or complacent (Harris, 2005, p.36).
Progress is observed in a limited number of national funding agencies which
have introduced evaluation by international peer-reviewers, by using the European
Research Council evaluation for national funding decisions and by jointly
organising trans-national competition between trans-national teams in some
specific fields (e.g. ‘Open Research Area', Nordforsk initiatives and the Lead
Agency Cooperation scheme). Increasing compatibility (even calibration) between
the European Research Council and national research councils is also observed,
as the latter progressively 'accept' the ERC evaluation results as a basis for
awarding national grants to highly-rated researchers who fail to obtain ERC
funding (European Commission, 2010f). However, these initiatives represent a
limited share of total research public funding, therefore their impact on
removing sheltered funding and increasing competition amongst researchers and
research teams is bound to remain limited. 2.2.2. Barriers to pan-European cooperation and competition
remain Pan-European research cooperation has been
concentrated around some major initiatives: the Framework Programmes, and the
European Space Agency (ESA), the European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL),
European Organisation for Nuclear Research. According to estimates by the
European Commission, trans-nationally coordinated public funding in Europe
represented around 12% of national GBAORDs in 2010, of which 7.6% for FP7
activities, 2.5% for the activities carried out by ESA, and 1% for other
transnational performers. This implies that only 0.8% of national GBAORDs is
used for joint programmes identified by Member States, including those
supported or co-funded by the European Commission, such as ERA-Nets, Article
185 activities, etc. Only a minor portion of the budget is allocated to
trans-nationally coordinated bi- or multi-lateral programmes[26] such as DEUFRAKO
(French-German cooperation in transport research) and the number of
initiatives, even if rising steadily, remains too low. Evidence from
cross-border cooperation through the Framework Programmes shows though that it
is possible to improve R&D performance by increasing spill-overs between
sectors and nations, and leverage additional public and private research
investment by coordinating activities amongst Member States. The evidence shows
also that "imposed" contractual requirements of the Framework
Programmes have brought down the average number of steps for connecting two
random entities, from 6 to 2.1-2.5 steps (Di Pietrantonio, 2009). This means a
strong degree of networking and of dissemination and knowledge across Europe.
The evaluation of schemes such as ERA-NET and Articles 185 and 187 initiatives,
facilitated since FP6, shows their strong structuring and economic impacts[27]. The launch of the Joint Programming
process has enabled Member States to start coordinating their research agendas
in areas linked to grand challenges[28]. This mechanism entails the definition, development and
implementation of a common strategic research agenda. Despite the existence of
these initiatives, there are still significant barriers
preventing Member States from cooperating in a more systematic manner. The most important barriers are linked to
the low compatibility and interoperability of national research programmes.
Current features, organising and functioning principles of national research
programmes do not provide sufficient flexibility for national programmes to
cooperate[29].
As a result, it is difficult for researchers to establish cross-border research
projects using national project funding, only some national programme cycles
are synchronised, proposal and project evaluation systems and notably the use
of fair and transparent international peer review selection differ. This problem
is particularly important in the field of grand challenges where research
efforts need to reach a critical mass, and where national research programmes
designed and implemented within national borders do not reach the required
scale and scope for generating the necessary breakthroughs. Moreover, national
programmes are not inclined to align their mainstream research agendas, meaning
that Member States tend to fund the same type of research. This leads to
unnecessary duplication and insufficient scale and scope at EU level. This also
implies insufficient funding left to supporting innovative scientific
approaches (i.e. which are outside the mainstream agenda). Evidence of these
problems has been documented for instance in the field of Cancer Clinical
Practice Guidelines and organic food security (Delanghe, Muldur, Soete, 2009). The low level of cross-border co-operation
in research programmes implies that Europe is not using opportunities for
enhancing the quality and impact of its research. Quantitative evidence of
bibliometric and patent-based patterns show that the average impact (as
measured by citations) of internationally co-authored work in most countries is
significantly higher than purely domestic papers (see Annex 2)[30]. Similarly, inventions
resulting from international cooperation have on average a higher impact than
purely national ones (Guellec and Dernis, 2008). It is therefore not surprising
that the EU has one of its highest scientific impacts in 'space' where research
activities are highly coordinated and integrated across European countries[31]. Two other fields where
cross-border collaboration rates are higher in the EU are 'physics' and 'earth
and environmental sciences' in which respectively 85% and 50% of EU
publications involve authors based in several Member States. In Germany, France
and the UK, these two fields are among those with the highest scientific impact[32]. Barriers remain also in terms of access to
large national research facilities of European interest for non-nationals as
well as to pan-European research infrastructures for scientists working in
non-participating Member States, as this is determined on a variable geometry
basis. In both cases, access is determined on a national basis, linked with
national preference. Difficulties in accessing research infrastructures are frequently
cited as an obstacle to the development of ERA by stakeholders[33]. Member States activities on research
infrastructures are not yet well incorporated into national research
strategies. Large research infrastructures can increase the efficiency of research
efforts, as they offer scale and scope and thus allow results to be delivered
faster and at a lower cost compared to fragmented efforts. Evidence shows that
the ratio between publications of pan-European RIs and budget/staff is much
higher than the ratio achieved by national research facilities (see Annex 2 for
further evidence). The European Strategy Forum on Research Infrastructures
(ESFRI) has been the key driver for the establishment a coordinated mechanism
for assessing the needs and priorities for new European RIs. The ESFRI process
and Roadmap have triggered similar policy development at Member States level,
with a majority of Member States having adopted or preparing such national
roadmaps. EU initiatives have also addressed the issue of legal forms for
European research infrastructure consortia (ERIC) adapted to the needs of new
European infrastructures, responding to requests from EU countries and the
scientific community. So far, two initiatives have been awarded the ERIC status
by the Commission[34]
and 10 more are in the process of being established as ERIC. Despite the
remarkable progress made by ESFRI, the efficient development and maintenance of
research infrastructures of pan-European interest is currently hampered by the
fact that evaluation, monitoring and impact assessment mechanisms are not
sufficiently harmonised across the EU. Political willingness and means to
implement the reforms required are insufficient. 2.2.3. Persisting distortions among national labour markets for
researchers Barriers remain to the implementation of
open, transparent and merit based recruitment. Research shows that countries
without sufficiently open, transparent, merit-based recruitment procedures
coupled with relatively closed and unattractive research systems, high levels
of endogamy and low levels of staffing autonomy are more likely to underperform
in terms of research outcomes. Recruitment practices
are not always transparent, for example, criteria for selection are not always
advertised with the position or the rules for the identification of the members
of the evaluation panel are not always known nor are they comparable across
Member States. In seven Member States researchers' positions openings are not
(or rarely) advertised through the common portal Euraxess Jobs Portal while in
other countries the use of Euraxess varies significantly, creating information
asymmetries for potential candidates. In several Member
States, the institutions lack autonomy to select and hire staff. For example,
in nine Member States, universities and research performing organisations face
tight restrictions over hiring staff (European University Association, 2011).
In four Member States the appointment of some or all senior positions needs to
be confirmed by an external authority (European University Association, 2011).
Inbreeding practices seem to prevail in Mediterranean countries and in the
Eastern Member States (Technopolis, 2010). Hiring their own graduates as
faculty induces lower performance (in terms of publications and prizes) (Aghion
et al., 2008). It can be hypothesised that a certain number of researchers'
positions are not filled in based on merit, although their exact number remains
unknown (i.e. there are around 40,000 researchers vacancies per year, amongst
which 9,600 are professorship positions) (Technopolis, 2010). Up to 70% of
previously mobile researchers cited "finding a suitable position", as
a 'major' obstacle to possible future mobility, explained partly by a lack of
open and transparent recruitment procedures. A similar finding came out of the
public consultation on the ERA framework (78% of respondents considering the
lack of open recruitment as one of the main factors hindering internationally
mobile researchers).As a consequence Europe is not
fully taking advantage of the human capital available, preventing "brain
circulation" and cross-fertilisation of ideas. Working conditions of researchers in Member
States differ and in some cases they are not sufficiently attractive to draw
young people in the research profession, retain leading talent and attract
foreign researchers. Career promotion practices and perspectives vary between
countries: the UK career structure is primarily based on performance while a
mix of seniority and performance predominates in most other countries. This
implies that a researcher in the UK can obtain a full time, autonomous position
in their mid-to-late twenties, whereas in many other Member States researchers
do not obtain the same conditions until their late thirties or forties[35]. In many European countries,
early career researchers have to spend many years on short-term contracts while
most people from the same age group enjoy stable employment conditions in other
sectors. While employment conditions and career patterns for young academics
vary substantially by country, short-term employment up to the age of about 40
and high selectivity is common in a large number of countries (Teichler, 2011).
Also, career structures do not always recognise mobility as a factor of
productivity. The UK evidence shows that researchers who worked abroad are
significantly more productive in terms of articles published than those who
never left the UK. Support to inter-sectoral mobility is often lacking, with
only one in six researchers in academia having experience in the business
sector, and there are significant disparities between Member States (MORE Study,
2010). This is particularly important during doctoral training which is a
problem for knowledge transfer according to European firms[36], as the supply of people who
are qualified and trained in fields relevant to industry needs is insufficient.
In the ERA public consultation only 22% of respondents find that researchers
are well trained for the business labour market. This results in what is the ‘European
exception’: the EU has only 46% of its research labour force in business
compared to 69% in China, 73% in Japan and 80% in the US (Eurostat R&D
statistics). Applying the Principles for Innovative
Doctoral Training will ensure that the new generation of researchers has a set
of skills which allows them to tackle societal challenges and contribute to
innovation. Other EU funding schemes such as the Marie
Curie actions have contributed to increased internationalisation of European
research and 'brain circulation' (The Evaluation Partnership, 2010), but the
number of researchers concerned remains limited when compared with the needs[37]. Conditions for portability of and access to
grants also hamper researcher's mobility and careers vary between Member States.
Researchers usually cannot take with them their national grants (this is the
case in 13 Member States) and research teams cannot always involve partners
from other countries in their research projects using national funding since in
many countries (11 Member States) beneficiaries must be domestic institutions.
Grants are limited to nationals in four Member States. EU initiatives such as the Commission
Recommendation on the 'European Charter for Researchers', the 'Code of Conduct
for the Recruitment of Researchers' (hereunder referred to as the Charter and
Code) and the ‘European Partnership for Researchers’(EPR) (European Commission,
2008a) have triggered several initiatives at national and institutional level.
To support the concrete uptake of the Charter and Code principles, in 2008 the
Commission launched the "Human Resources Strategy for Researchers
incorporating the Charter and Code" and in 2009 established an
"Institutional Human Resources Strategy Group" to provide a platform
for the exchange of best practice among stakeholders from across Europe.
However the implementation of the Charter and Code principles at institutional
level remains slow. As to the EPR, while the Commission and Member States have
delivered results in a number of priority areas and laid the ground for future
action in other areas, progress at national level remains relatively slow and
piecemeal. The lack of a baseline and clearly quantifiable targets in relation
to some areas has resulted in Member States having different approaches[38]. Moreover, the level of
involvement in the above initiatives varies between Member States and between
priority areas. 2.2.4. Limited progress on gender
equality and gender content in research Not all Member States have national
policies to encourage the use of the potential talent of female scientists and
the integration of a gender dimension in research content. This implies that
skilled female scientist's potential is under-utilised; that women are
under-represented and gender balance is lacking in research and innovation
decision-making; and that the lack of gender dimension in research content
possibly undermines quality and relevance of research activities. This
under-utilisation of the available skilled female researchers is a waste of
talent as well as a waste of return on investment, which is particularly
unacceptable when Europe’s future prosperity depends on its human capital. 45%
of PhD graduates are women, but we have only 30% female researchers in Europe
and just 19% in the top grade in academic careers. The number is even smaller
at leadership level: only 13% of heads of institutions in the higher education
sector. There is evidence that mixed research teams contribute to increased
research performance as they benefit from a wider expertise, knowledge sharing,
diverse points of view and a higher level of social intelligence. Given that a
more equal participation of women in science would increase the diversity of
the talent pool, a more diverse workforce and decision making process would have
positive effects on scientific productivity and excellence. Furthermore, the
lack of gender dimension in research content undermines the quality and
relevance of knowledge. Not only would research quality benefit from this, but
moreover, there are high enormous costs and even dangers associated to not
taking into account the gender perspective in the research process would be
avoided. Positive developments can be observed in a
few European countries, where research organisations are encouraged explicitly
through legal provisions to adopt gender action plans. In several other
countries there is a legal basis for the creation of gender action plans and
positive action - although gender action plans are not explicitly an obligatory
instrument to establish gender equality in science (this is the case in five
Member States). Female scientists also tend to be less represented in the
highest grade of research careers (European Commission, 2009b) and this varies
significantly among Member States. For example in two Member States 25% of the
heads of higher education institutions are female, whilst in four of them their
share is below 10% (European Commission, 2009b). The female gender perspective
in research agendas is seldom encouraged by Member States even if a small
number of Member States fund programmes for gender equality and/ or gender in
research content. Explicit gender requirements or evaluation criteria for
funding in research programmes, projects or studies exist in, again, very few
Member States. Without enhancing women's participation and the integration of
the gender dimension in research content, ERA's aims to deliver high levels of
employment, productivity and social cohesion are not fully achievable. A
majority of respondents to the public consultation stated that a higher
involvement of women in science would contribute to European socio-economic
growth as well as impact research performance and research excellence. 2.2.5. Restricted circulation of and uneven access to scientific
knowledge Scientists,
especially in less endowed institutions, have increasing problems to access
scientific knowledge. Journals constitute over 90% of scholars' information
sources (Tenopir et al., 2009, King et al., 2009). Journal subscription prices
as well as the number of peer-reviewed journals are increasing rapidly. Between
1986 and 2008, journal subscription expenditures increased by 374% (Giglia,
2010b). A single institution cannot afford to subscribe to all the relevant
ones, negatively affecting access[39],
use and impact of knowledge (Gargouri et al., 2010). For
more than a half of the respondents, one of the reasons for the absence of
access was that their organisation's library had not purchased a licence for
the content because of budgetary constraints. According to a 2009 UK survey
(Publishing Research Consortium, 2009) a significant share of SMEs (55%) said
that they had recently experienced difficulty accessing a research article
(against 34% in the case of large companies), with cost reported as the key
barrier. This prevents
incorporating recent developments in research or innovation agenda, affecting
their scientific quality and the economic outcome. In April 2008, the Commission issued a
Recommendation[40]
on the management of intellectual property in knowledge transfer activities
together with a Code of Practice for universities and other public research
organisations. This Recommendation provides Member States and stakeholders with
a set of best practices and policies to stimulate knowledge transfer. However,
knowledge transfer between public research institutions and the private sector
to foster innovation remains insufficient. Europe is lagging behind when
compared with the US in terms of performance. Even if the share of public
research funding coming from the private sector was higher in the EU (0.05% of
GDP) than in the US (0.02%) or Japan (0.015%), on average the EU lagged behind
in terms of scientific cooperation measured by co-publications (36.2
publications per million researchers, while in the USA they were 70.2). The
number of staff (e.g. in university knowledge transfer offices) with experience
in industry is significantly lower in Europe. In addition, only 5-6% of the
researchers in the EU have moved back-and-forth between the public and private
sector. Several EU initiatives have addressed the
issue of open access to scientific knowledge and of knowledge transfer. The Council
Conclusions (14865/07) invited the Commission to experiment with open access in
the Framework Programme and Member States to reinforce national strategies on
access to scientific information, thus building on the Commission Communication
on scientific information in the digital age[41]. Since
then, funding and soft measures have been adopted at EU level to support the
development of open access. As a result of FP7, scientific publications
resulting from a set of EU-funded projects are now increasingly available in
open access. Despite their relevance, FP-funded measures concern only a very
limited share of EU’s overall R&D expenditure and their impact remains thus
limited. Member States[42]
are not equally advanced in how they support and address the issue of open
access (European Commission, 2011d). In
addition to open access, effective implementation of ERA for research
excellence requires a strategic approach to promoting the development and take
up of digital research services and the transformation of traditional ways of
doing research into new data-intensive and collaborative research paradigms. Member
States have different usage policies for publicly funded research
e-infrastructures. In some cases high-speed connection networks or
supercomputers are offered only for universities, in others to schools and
hospitals, and in others allow linkages with commercial services providers and industrial
research. Different national policies create obstacles for multi-national
research collaborations, if research consortia have partners of different
types. This is against the principles of Innovation Union. Also, the new millennium has seen an accelerating deployment of information
and communication technologies, and a rising tide of information sweeping
across all scientific areas. Although in a digital age
the majority of knowledge transfer and creation takes place through digital
means, there are several barriers preventing researchers from having seamless
access to research on-line services. This creates major obstacles for
collaboration and resource sharing between organisations across borders. For
instance, researchers wishing to access research related services online, e.g.
publications, research data, or computing services, have to apply and manage
different user accounts depending on the service provider or the administrative
location of the researcher. Europe lacks a common Authentication
(identification) and Authorisation (rights to access services) Infrastructure
(AAI) which provides researchers with seamless access to research services in
digital ERA. In the last years, there has been progress in this area, through
eduGAIN European inter-federation service. Currently,
eduGAIN has 11 members, 4 candidates and 2 pilot
countries[43].
However, several countries have not yet joined service, and there is no clear
data on the number of research institutions in different MS providing the
necessary identification services needed to implement the cross-border access
to digital research services. Development of new modes for research through
different digital research services has been supported through framework
programme funding. In the last years, some Member States have set up national
level strategies or joint collaboration to deal with the issues relating to
digital research services provision and take-up (UK, NL, Nordic countries)[44]. However, this is not enough
to ensure efficient research and innovation through the potential of digital
services for all European researchers in all Member States. Effective
implementation of Digital ERA requires strategic action in all Member States,
with active involvement of all research related stakeholders. 2.3. The EU’s right to act, subsidiarity and EU added-value Article 179[45] of the Treaty on the
Functioning of the European Union (TFEU) lays down the right for the Union to
create the necessary conditions for realising the European Research Area.
Article 182.5 of the TFEU allows the use of the legislative procedure to
establish the measures necessary for the implementation of the European
Research Area. The completion of ERA does not put into question the
sovereignty of Member States. The Treaty clearly states that research is a
policy area of shared competence between Member States and the Union. All the
measures proposed in the ERA framework are compliant with the Treaty provision
(TFEU, Art. 4.3) stating that the exercise of EU competence shall not result in
Member States being prevented from exercising theirs. The options selected
illustrate how European integration and internal reform of research systems
must go hand in hand, respecting the subsidiarity principle. The objectives of
the proposed actions cannot be achieved sufficiently by Member States in the
framework of their national constitutional system (necessity test). Three
options are proposed to tackle the identified problems: (1) Reinforced
partnership for ERA; (2) Sectoral legal measures for ERA; and (3) Development
of an overall legal framework at Community level. Given the persistent barriers
and the limited progress observed 12 years after the launching of ERA, the
Union is best placed to provide directions for Member States and the Union, on
the basis of Article 179 for the first one, and through Article 182.5 for the
two others. European added-value is demonstrated by several reasons.
First, optimised allocation of activities – where necessary - will be attained through
a coordinated approach, improving effectiveness of research systems and
reducing unnecessary duplication of efforts. Second, level playing field and
critical mass are expected to be achieved from the implementation of ERA, thus
allowing creating the conditions for the most productive research teams to work
together and to be competitive internationally. Third, European impetus
maximises the possibility of completing ERA in the short term, given the
persistence of national barriers mentioned above. Fourth, the European Union
level is the best one to assess objectively whether progress has been attained,
whether it is proportionate; and whether there is a need for further action to
improve the situation. In particular, European action will warrant the
implementation of common approaches so that researchers, knowledge and
technologies circulate freely across Europe, thus promoting the opportunities
for effective research systems. It will ensure transnational ‘connectivity’ of
the European research system for every region and country in Europe, thus
helping solving the innovation divide. For example, the development of open
access to scientific publications and research data is very important for
researchers who are based in less endowed universities/research organisations. EU
intervention will help ensuring similar conditions for competition in an
EU-wide space, both in relation to research projects selection and researchers
recruitment. Moreover, EU intervention can facilitate the removal of barriers
to launch large-scale and complex research efforts between Member States to
tackle grand challenges. Setting up common research priorities and agendas
requires a strong interface with i) policy-makers in charge of the policies
addressing those challenges and framing the markets where the innovations need
to take place; and ii) the industry active on these markets. In the context of
the Single Market, such interfaces can be best organised at EU level. Common
solutions developed through cross-border collaboration may lead to common
standards, thus contributing to shaping new markets and providing more
certainty to R&D investment. Alternative solutions exist through the setting up of
inter-governmental agreements; however the administrative and legal processes
which typically have to be followed under such intergovernmental schemes are
sometimes considered as too lengthy, difficult and cumbersome and may not lead
to completion of ERA by 2014. 2.4. Baseline scenario The baseline scenario reflects how the
current situation would evolve without intervention. Solving the problems
presented above require both strong political willingness and the means to
implement the reforms required. However, efficiency in the use of public funds
can be a major driver in times of budgetary constraints. But if some reforms
are undertaken in each Member State, they would probably be insufficient and
carried out in an uncoordinated way, reinforcing fragmentation within Europe.
FP7 will continue to foster cross-border and excellent research, but no
additional funding would accompany reforms at Member State level. 2.4.1. Different levels of
competition and low co-operation between research funding systems remain In the short term, the current activities
will probably not induce progress in terms of promoting competition and co-operation
in national research funding systems nor at cross-border level, as most of the
observed barriers and fragmentation between national systems will remain.
Barriers to competition in national research systems would remain as there is no indication that structural changes may take place in
national funding systems. However, some progress can be
expected in terms of compatible evaluation systems through an extended use of
ERC evaluation mechanisms by some national funding agencies. Limited and uneven
progress is expected in continuing the implementation of joint programming
between Member States. The recently adopted framework conditions for joint
programming will foster Member States common, voluntary policy actions on
public research, but probably at a slow pace. Besides, the degree of concrete
commitment to joint actions will be a function of the budgetary situation in
participating Member States. Under the current circumstances, it is probable
that major research actors will continue driving the process, with little
cooperation with lagging Member States. This may reinforce the innovation
divide. Existing cooperation initiatives between some of Member States research
programmes are expected to continue. Reinforced attention to grand challenges,
increased technological leadership and funding the innovation capability of
firms can be expected through the adoption of the Commission proposal for
Horizon 2020 programme. This programme will run from 2014 to 2020. It has been
developed to increase the contribution of research and innovation to tackle
grand challenges and promote innovation. However, even if the proposal includes
an increased budget (approximately 80 billion Euros) when compared to previous
FPs, this budget will still represent only a small share of the total funding
for research in Europe and insufficient to raise substantially overall
performance and only after 2014. In the field of research infrastructures,
the sustainability of Member State financial commitments for developing and
maintaining research infrastructures may be challenged in the short or medium
term. With a majority of Member States facing budgetary squeezes and postponing
long-term and major investments, the financing of the European Strategy Forum
on Research Infrastructures (ESFRI) Roadmap may be jeopardised. As part of the
ESFRI Roadmap, 48 priority pan-European research infrastructures have been
identified in a number of scientific fields and 10 projects have already
started, whilst additional 17 projects are due to be launched before the end of
2013[46].
Considering that the commitment at the Innovation Union is to implement 60% of
the ESFRI Roadmap projects by 2015, it is expected that the current pace and
efforts will be sufficient to meet the goal if no deviations take place. The baseline situation will hardly respond
to stakeholder's expectations. 82% of the on-line respondents to the
consultation on ERA see developing more synergies between European and national
actions as important, while 79% believe that EU support for transnational
access to research infrastructures of pan-European relevance should be
increased. Strengthening the inter-operability of instruments and of scientific
data at EU level and increasing awareness at EU level of access opportunities
to national research infrastructures are also considered as 'important' and
'very important' by more than 70% of respondents. 2.4.2. Limited action on researcher labour market towards
mobility and careers Distortions in the labour market for
researchers will continue to exist or worsen, notably in a context of budgetary
cuts and economic austerity. In-breeding practices are likely to persist and
may even be exacerbated in Mediterranean countries and East European Member
States as shrinking public R&D expenditure may lead to fewer senior and
permanent research positions. There is little evidence suggesting that Member
States lagging behind will undertake the necessary reforms to ensure that open,
transparent and merit-based recruitment procedures are in place in all universities
and public research institutes. Most likely the share of positions advertised
on Euraxess (currently about 30% of all researchers' positions in Europe) will
increase slowly in the short to medium-term. Researcher mobility will not be
substantially enhanced as restrictions to grant portability and accessibility
are likely to continue in a majority of Member States. Uneven and patchy
implementation of the Charter and Code and the EPR by Member States and
research organisations in the area of recruitment and portability of grants is
expected to continue in the short and medium-term. The number of research
employers and funders in Europe participating in the "Human Resources
Strategy" process is expected to rise at a relatively slow pace[47]. The status quo is not acceptable for
stakeholders. 81% of the respondents to the public consultation on the ERA
Framework consider that working conditions and career prospects of public
sector researchers are less attractive than those of other professionals with
similar qualifications. Up to 75% of respondents believe that the lack of
attractiveness stems from universities and research institutions being
underfunded, limited availability of research positions, low wages and
insufficient cooperation between academia and the private sector. 2.4.3. Unequal opportunities for female researchers and
insufficient attention to gender content in research No significant improvements are expected
with regard to gender equality and the gender dimension in research even if a
broad majority of respondents to the ERA consultation consider that a higher
involvement of women in science will contribute to European socio-economic
growth. Although some slow progress may be achieved in some Member States (and
mostly on an ad-hoc manner), the percentage of female researchers in senior and
management research positions in the EU27 is likely to stagnate or increase in
a marginal and irregular manner. There is no ground for expecting radical
changes in terms of gender dimension in research in the majority of Member
States where no such measures exist. Gender equality will continue to be
promoted through EU programmes (i.e. mainstreaming of gender within the Science
in Society FP7 Programme, Horizon 2020 and the research part of the Structural
Funds) and various activities (i.e. the development of indicators, analyses and
guidelines), however the overall impact on improving gender equality will
remain limited to the beneficiaries of the EU programmes and to the small
number of beneficiary institutions and will therefore be insufficient to
correct the under-representation of women in science. The two-year public
information campaign to be launched in 2012 will aim tackle stereotypes on
gender and attracting and retain more women in scientific careers[48]. However, existing and planned initiatives will not be sufficient
to support long-term structural change at Member States and institutional level
in gender management and research design and implementation. A multiplier effect is required in order to
reach a critical mass of research institutions by strengthening the
collaboration among Member States on the basis of a common approach or
guidelines. 2.4.4. Uneven access and circulation of scientific knowledge
remain Access to publications and data will remain
limited and uneven and researchers in less-advanced Member States or
less-endowed institutions will continue to experience barriers in accessing
knowledge. Policies on open access will continue being implemented unevenly by
research funding organisations in 17 Member States and by universities or
research centres with open access mandates in 22 Member States. Identity federation services will continue
being provided through EduGAIN by 11 member countries, and current candidate
(4) and pilot (2) countries will develop into becoming members. . European
level expansion of the identity federation services and their deployment for
online access to publications and research data as well as computing and
virtual collaboration services is uneven, as it depends on strategies of
national authorities and individual research institutions. Without joint
coordination it is unlikely by 2014 these services will be made widely
available to all researchers across Europe. National support to the implementation of
e-services will remain limited and uneven. Absence of co-operation among the
Member States in the roll-out of new services (building on the available
e-infrastructures, pooling of resources) will hinder their effective use. This
may result in a limited use of the current facilities during off-peak periods
and ultimately an inefficient use of resources. Industrial research partners
will keep facing problems if trying to participate in multinational research
collaboration because of lacking shared acceptable usage policies for common
collaborative research infrastructures. Actions to promote knowledge transfer will
continue to be implemented on a case by case basis, with some Member States
taking the lead and some other lagging behind. The Commission is supporting the
development of knowledge transfer capacity in higher education institutions and
public research organisations, in particular through its 2008 Intellectual
Property Recommendation[49]. 3. Policy
Objectives The European Research Area policy overarching
goal is to increase the performance, excellence and impact of Europe’s Research
and Development system. It will help the EU back to the path of economic growth
by fostering scientific excellence and research underpinning innovation and
increasing the attractiveness of the EU as a research location. The objective
of the Communication is to identify and promote actions which ensure that by
2014 the adequate conditions are in place for improving the effectiveness of
European research systems. Specific objective || Operational objective for 2014 More effective national research systems || Barriers to competition and the use of international peer review evaluation in national research systems are removed Optimal transnational co-operation and competition || Barriers to compatibility and interoperability between national research programmes and to access to pan-European research infrastructures are removed One pilot cross-border synchronised research call, notably on grand challenges, launched using international peer review evaluation and a single pan-European score Harmonised monitoring, evaluation and impact assessment principles and procedures for pan-European research infrastructures are adopted and implemented An open labour market for researchers || Barriers to open, transparent and merit based recruitment in public research systems, cross-border portability of and accessibility to national grants are removed Frameworks supporting the career development of researchers and innovative doctoral training are adopted and implemented Gender equality and gender mainstreaming in research || Barriers to gender equality and the gender dimension in research are removed Optimal circulation, access to and transfer of scientific knowledge || Policies and means for facilitating online access to publicly-funded scientific publications and data are defined and coordinated Policies to foster knowledge transfer, cross-border sharing of e-infrastructure and take up of digital services for research are defined Electronic identity services for researchers enabling transnational access to digital services (collaboration, computing, scientific information) are implemented or planned 4. Policy
Options To complete ERA by 2014 many barriers at
national level have to be removed quickly. This report analyses four policy
options. The first one is Policy Option 1 (Business as usual). The three other
policy options would follow alternative paths to achieve the overall objective
and they all require action from Member States, Research funding and performing
organisations and the Commission. Their implementation would neither entail
increased public R&D spending at Member State level nor increased cross
border funding (only reallocation based on commonly agreed agendas). Policy
Option 2 (Reinforced Partnership for ERA) is based on voluntary action at
Member State level whose progress would be partly linked with the European
Semester. This option also entails reinforced partnership between research
funding and performing organisations (hereunder referred to as research
stakeholders) and the Commission. Policy Option 3 (Sectoral legal measures for
ERA) combines legally-binding measures for ERA with voluntary actions by Member
States, linked as appropriate with the European Semester. It also entails
reinforced partnership between research funding and performing organisations
(hereunder referred to as research stakeholders) and the Commission. Policy
Option 4 (ERA Framework Directive) explores the adoption of a coherent legal
framework of principles and mechanisms. The potential measures included in the
options were identified and screened on the basis of their advantages and
disadvantages. The intervention logic and the full spectrum of measures
envisaged to address each specific objective is presented in Annex 5. Policy option 1: Business as usual (BAU) This option would entail the continuation
of current policies, presented in the Baseline. The major development would be
based on the adoption and implementation in 2014 of Horizon 2020, with its
increased budget supporting research and innovation cross-border activities. Policy option 2: Reinforced partnership
for ERA To deliver ERA by 2014, reforms of the
national research and innovation systems and reinforced partnership - deeper,
wider and more efficient than to date - between Member States, the Commission
and research stakeholder organisations would be at the core of this policy
option. It fully develops the ERA partnership via the implementation of the ‘Ljubljana
Process’[50].
This policy option would entail that Member
States undertake reforms for ERA as called for by the Innovation Union. A
Commission Communication would invite Member States to remove specific barriers
for competition and co-operation as well as for fostering a research friendly
environment. Member State would be invited to include in the National Reform
Programmes[51]
an annex in which they specify the reforms planned by field of action. The
Commission would assess the reforms and publish ERA-Progress reports in September
every year, possibly with ERA recommendations for Member States. In case of
persisting barriers, different options will be considered, including the
legislative options, based on the new provisions in the TFEU. This mechanism is
expected to motivate Member States to undertake the necessary reforms. At the same time, this option foresees the research
stakeholder organisations[52]
would take responsibility for the ERA actions addressed to them within the
limits of their respective autonomies and jurisdictions as set by national
authorities. Relevant research stakeholder organisations would be invited to
sign with the Commissioner a Joint Statement in general terms of their
willingness to work towards completing ERA. They would also set out the
specific ERA actions they would take in terms of timing, deliverables, public
reporting on progress, etc. in a Memorandum of Understanding co-signed with the
Commission or a unilateral declaration, informing their respective national
authorities and the other Partners. The Commission would also propose measures
in different forms (such as Recommendations) to complete ERA. The Commission would
support Member States and stakeholder organisations. It would ensure that
Horizon 2020 helps to consolidate the completion and functioning of ERA from
2014, supporting ERA-compliant actions relating to researcher careers and
mobility, gender action, cross-border cooperation, open access, knowledge
transfer and infrastructures. It would ensure inclusive ERA policy development
by supporting structured dialogue with research stakeholder organisations and
relevant civil society bodies - e.g. in the form of a dedicated stakeholder
platform. The set of measures which will be included
in the Communication are presented below, by specific objective: More effective national research systems: ·
Member States are
invited to introduce or enhance competitive funding through calls for proposals
and institutional assessments as the main modes of allocating public funds to
research and innovation, introducing legislative reforms if necessary; and to
ensure that all public bodies responsible for allocating research funds apply
the core principles of international peer review ·
The Commission will
support through the Smart Specialisation Platform Member States and regions in
using Structural Funds to develop research capacity and smart specialisation
strategies, including support to joint research programmes, in line with
Cohesion Policy objectives; support mutual learning and the exchange of good
practice between Member States on the removal of national legal and other
barriers to ERA for the priorities set out in this Communication; and support
ERA Chairs aimed at fostering structural change in institutions to raise their
research quality to international levels of excellence Optimal transnational co-operation and
competition ·
Member States are
invited to step up efforts to implement joint research agendas addressing grand
challenges, sharing information about activities in agreed priority areas, ensuring
that adequate national funding is committed and strategically aligned at
European level in these areas and that common ex post evaluation is
conducted; ensure mutual recognition of evaluations that conform to
international peer-review standards as a basis for national funding decisions;
remove legal and other barriers to the cross-border interoperability of
national programmes to permit joint financing of actions including cooperation
with non-EU countries where relevant; confirm financial commitments for the
construction and operation of ESFRI, global, national and regional RIs of
pan-European interest, particularly when developing national roadmaps and the
next Structural Fund programmes; and remove legal and other barriers to
cross-border access to RIs ·
Research stakeholder organisations are invited to agree on common funding principles - eligible costs,
reporting requirements, etc. to make national research programmes compatible,
interoperable (cross-border) and simpler for researchers; pilot the use of
synchronised calls with, where possible, single joint international peer review
evaluation of proposals as a basis for funding decisions; and further develop
and deploy the Lead-Agency, Money-Follows-Cooperation Line,
Money-Follows-Researcher and other models for cross-border cooperation ·
The Commission will pursue, stimulate and
participate in Public-Public Partnerships to address grand challenges as set
out in the Communication on Partnering in Research and Innovation to
co-ordinate and leverage Member States' contributions and ensure close coordination
with relevant activities under Horizon 2020; on the basis of the information
supplied by Member States, map activities in agreed priority areas, with a view
to identifying strengths, weaknesses, gaps and duplications; support Member
States and research funding organisations in implementing joint international
peer review evaluations and setting common funding standards - e.g. through an
ERA Mark label recognising best practice in cross-border research operations;
support through Horizon 2020 access to RIs as well as the on-going overall
integration of EU RIs particularly those awarded ERIC status; encourage Member
States to link RI roadmaps to the ESFRI roadmap and smart specialisation
strategies in Structural Funds co-financed research and innovation programmes,
reinforcing the capacity of less favoured regions to host and participate in
RIs of pan-European and international interest; support training programmes for
the management of such RIs; develop in cooperation with ESFRI, e-IRG and other stakeholders
a Charter of Access setting out common standards and harmonized access rules
and conditions for the use of RIs; work with ESFRI to set priorities for
implementing the Roadmap and to provide advice and guidance to Member States on
overcoming legal, financial or technical obstacles to implementation; define
with ESFRI, e-IRG and other stakeholders common evaluation principles,
impact-assessment criteria and monitoring tools which can be applied in
regional, national and European programmes to help combine funds from different
sources; and work with e-IRG to promote the alignment of EU and national approaches
to eRI development and use An open labour market for researchers ·
Member States are
invited to remove legal and other barriers to the application of open,
transparent and merit based recruitment of researchers and which hamper
cross-border access to and portability of national grants; support a national
body to implement the Declaration of Commitment to provide coordinated
personalised information and services to researchers through the pan-European
EURAXESS network and the setting up and running of structured innovative
doctoral training programmes applying the Principles for Innovative Doctoral
Training; and create an enabling framework for implementing the HR Strategy for
Researchers incorporating the Charter & Code. ·
Research stakeholder organisations are invited to advertise all vacancies on the EURAXESS Jobs portal
using the common profiles established in the European Framework for Research Careers;
fill research positions according to open, transparent and merit based
recruitment procedures proportionate to the level of the position in line with
the basic principles of the Charter & Code and including non-EU nationals;
develop strategies to support the career development of researchers in line
with the HR Strategy for Researchers; define and implement principles for
accessibility to and portability of national grants, provide structured
doctoral training based on the Principles for Innovative Doctoral Training; and
develop and implement structured programmes to increase mobility between
industry and academia ·
The Commission will bridge information
gaps to foster mobility and research career development by assessing and
strengthening collaboration and coordination in the EURAXESS network for
researchers to have direct access to personalised assistance, making it the
means of accessing tailor-made assistance; support the setting up of a European
Accreditation Mechanism for Charter & Code-based human resources management
in universities and publicly-funded research institutions and the work of a
'pathfinder group' of countries for the achievement of automatic recognition of
comparable degrees; as well as take initiatives to address social security barriers
for researchers in the EU and further facilitate the entry and stay of third
country national researchers by clarifying in a Communication EU rules on
coordination of social security schemes for groups of workers with a high level
of intra-EU mobility, including researchers, resuming work on a pension
portability Directive setting minimum standards for the acquisition and
preservation of supplementary pension rights, supporting stakeholders in
setting up pan-European supplementary pension fund(s) for researchers and
reviewing Directive 2005/71/EC on a specific procedure for admitting third
country nationals for the purposes of scientific research Gender equality and gender mainstreaming
in research ·
Member States are
invited to create a legal and policy environment and provide incentives to
remove legal and other barriers to the recruitment, retention and career
progression of female researchers while fully complying with EU law on gender
equality, address gender imbalances in decision making processes and strengthen
the gender dimension in research programmes; engage in partnerships with
funding agencies, research organisations and universities to foster cultural
and institutional change on gender - charters, performance agreements, awards
and ensure that at least 40% of the under-represented sex participate in
committees involved in recruitment/career progression and in establishing and
evaluating research programmes ·
Research stakeholder organisations are invited to implement institutional change relating to HR
management, funding, decision-making and research programmes through Gender
Equality Plans which aim to conduct impact assessment / audits of procedures
and practices to identify gender bias, implement innovative strategies to
correct any bias and set targets and monitor progress via indicators ·
The Commission will foster gender
equality and the integration of a gender dimension in Horizon 2020 programmes
and projects from inception, through implementation to evaluation, including
through the use of incentives; and propose in 2013 a Recommendation to Member
States with common guidelines on institutional change to promote gender
equality in universities and research institutions and dedicate specific funds
to reinforce collaboration between Member States Optimal circulation, access to and
transfer of scientific knowledge ·
Member States are
invited to define and coordinate their policies on access to and preservation
of scientific information; ensure that public research contributes to Open
Innovation and foster knowledge transfer between public and private sectors
through national knowledge transfer strategies; harmonise access and usage
policies for research and education-related public e-infrastructures and for
associated digital research services enabling consortia of different types of
public and private partners; and adopt and implement national strategies for
electronic identity for researchers giving them transnational access to digital
research services ·
Research stakeholder organisations are invited to adopt and implement open access measures for
publications and data resulting from publicly funded research; implement and
promote the uptake of electronic identity and digital research services; ensure
optimal interaction and linkages and strategic partnering between academia and
industry and define joint collaborative research agendas to maximize the use of
research results; and improve recognition and professionalization of knowledge
transfer activities and strengthen the role of knowledge transfer offices ·
The Commission will establish open
access to scientific publications as a general principle for all EU funded
projects in Horizon 2020. For research data, develop a flexible approach that
takes into account different scientific areas and business-related interests;
continue to fund infrastructure projects related to open access; adopt a
Communication and Recommendation to Member States on access to and preservation
of scientific information in the digital age; propose a roadmap for
e-infrastructure development to support e-Science through open access to
research tools and resources; support activities to raise stakeholder awareness
of open access and e-Science; promote knowledge transfer activities in Europe
through networking of innovative university-business platforms, including
bottom up, practitioner-led initiatives, and sectoral knowledge transfer
offices; work with stakeholders to develop a set of model consortium agreements
to enhance knowledge transfer; and facilitate a Member State forum for regular
exchange and reporting on national developments on the provision, take-up and
use of digital research services. Annex 6 presents the details of the measure
and the main actors responsible for their delivery. Policy option 3: Sectoral legal measures
for ERA This policy option responds to the request
of the Impact Assessment Board and includes a number of binding legal measures
proposed by the Commission in several sectors (i.e. topic-specific fields) as
required. The rationale for proposing such binding measures is that legislation
more surely guarantees that common principles and governance mechanisms would
be put in place and that barriers indeed would be removed, and that adequate
framework conditions would be in place in all Member States. Legal measures
would ensure uniform implementation of key ERA elements, which may entail
reforms at Member State level. Legal measures would be possible given the new
legal competencies of the Union to achieve ERA introduced by the Lisbon Treaty
(Article 179.1 TFEU in conjunction with Art. 182.5 TFEU), bearing in mind the
shared competence. This set of legislative measures would be
completed by voluntary actions by Member States and stakeholders. They would
cover areas where Member States and stakeholders are best placed to identify
and address key barriers. In these areas, the Commission Communication would
identify as in the previous option both the barriers to be removed as well as
the operational strategies to be adopted. The measures will address the following
objectives and will include the following actions: More effective national research systems: ·
Member States to undertake national reforms to
remove legal, administrative and other types of barriers to competitive funding
allocation ·
The Commission to propose legislative measure on
international peer review evaluation for national funding decisions Optimal transnational co-operation and
competition: ·
Member States to remove legal, administrative
and other types of barriers to cross-border access to national research
infrastructures of European interest; set up jointly with stakeholder
organisations joint calls using common international peer review evaluation
(notably within the Joint Programming process) and a 'Charter for Access' for
research infrastructures ·
The Commission to launch the 'ERA Mark' label
for cross-border research programmes and to propose legislative measures on
common principles for cross-border operations, on common principles for the
monitoring, evaluation and impact assessment of research infrastructures and
funding decisions and on common principles and procedures for the setting up
and management of pan-European research infrastructures An open labour market for researchers: ·
Member States and stakeholder organisations to
set up frameworks and strategies for the career development of researchers,
innovative doctoral training, to advertise vacancies and provide tailored
information to mobile researchers on national single access points/Euraxess ·
The Commission to set up an accreditation mechanisms
for the Charter and Code, to propose legislative measures on common principles
on open, transparent and merit-based recruitment of researchers and on common
principles for portability of grants and for access to national grants and to
adopt relevant support measures (e.g. Communication on social security) and
amendments to key EU legislation (Directive 2005/71/EC) Gender equality and gender mainstreaming
in research: ·
Member States and stakeholder organisations to
integrate the gender dimension into publicly funded research programmes and
implement gender strategies and action plans ·
The Commission to propose a Commission
Recommendation on guidelines for institutional change in universities and other
research organisations (foreseen on 2013) Optimal circulation, access to and
transfer of scientific knowledge: ·
The Commission to propose a Commission
Communication and Recommendation on access to and preservation of scientific
information in the digital age and to provide support measures on digital ERA; legislative
measures on open access to all publicly-funded scientific publications as well
as for research data, when relevant; on specific identity provision and
federation approach for researchers and scholars to be implemented by all MS
and all research organisations and using publicly funded research
infrastructures for research consortia with private and industrial research
organisation partners. As in the previous option, research stakeholder
organisations would be responsible to implement flanking actions within the
context of their specific commitments. Their actions would be reinforced by the
adoption of the principles and mechanisms included in the legal measures. Annex 6 provides an overview of the
legislative and voluntary measures included in policy option 3. Policy Option 4: ERA Framework Directive This policy option would consist of a
comprehensive legal package in the form of a Directive which would contain
legally binding measures in conjunction with the freedom for Member States to
choose the appropriate means to achieve the results required by the Directive.
To express that the Directive intends to be of an overarching nature, covering
the whole research system, it will be referred to as a Framework Directive.
Whilst policy option 3 contains a set of separate legal and non-legal measures,
this policy option would bundle the different legal measures into a single
framework. Legal measures are based on the legal competencies of the Union to
achieve ERA introduced by the Lisbon Treaty (Article 179.1 TFEU in conjunction
with Art. 182.5 TFEU). The objective of the Framework Directive
would be to introduce binding principles as well as specific provisions
facilitating competition and cross-border research, the opening up of the
labour market for researchers and the free circulation of knowledge. This
approach would lead to a situation where common standards and principles are
applied across the EU. Given the diversity of the rules underpinning national
R&D systems, the framework directive approach allows Member States to
choose the most adequate means to obtain the results made obligatory by the
Framework Directive. The Directive would contain principles,
(governance) procedures, and provisions that are binding on Member States as to
the barriers to remove. Technical or operational details would be included in
annexes and could be subject to review by an implementing committee. The provisions would contain the
definition, objective and scope of ERA, identify the main actors, as well as
their rights and obligations. The policy coordination role of the Commission
under Article 181 TFEU would be set in an appropriate governance framework
aiming as consistency between Member States' and EU's policy and action in this
area. By introducing ERA as an instrument for
sectoral integration in the field of R&D, distinct from the Internal
Market, the Treaty legislator has expressed that measures to complete ERA go
over and above those of the Internal Market. In other words, measures to
achieve free circulation of researchers, knowledge and technology are not
confined to those that establish free movement of persons, goods, services and
capital. They can for instance also encompass research policy coordination,
promotion and assistance measures. The framework directive would include the
following provisions: ·
General principles for ERA (legally binding
provisions applying to all Member States) ·
The establishment of ERA as a 'unified research
area based on the internal market which is open to the world, in which researchers,
scientific knowledge and technology circulate freely and though which the Union
and its Member States shall strengthen their scientific and technological bases
as well as their competitiveness'; ·
Policy coordination and reporting: a governance
mechanism to ensure consistency between national R&D policies, and between
those policies and European R&D policy. The monitoring and subsequent
evaluation would be performed by the Commission. Specific provisions regulating ERA: ·
More effective national research systems: the framework directive would require Member States to ensure that
funding, as defined in the Directive, takes place on a competitive basis and
also to use an international peer review evaluation processes (binding
provision) for the allocation of funds to projects; ·
Optimal transnational co-operation and
competition: the framework directive would require
Member States to enhance research co-operation through a) adoption of minimum
standards for the interoperability of research systems, b) carrying out
synchronised calls for research proposals in conjunction with a common
international peer review system; and c) adoption of principles to reinforce
access to pan-European research infrastructures; ·
An open labour market for researchers: the framework directive would require Member States to adopt
strategies and action plans on a) career development of researchers, b)
principles for open recruitment in public research systems, c) principles for
cross-border portability and accessibility of national grants and d) the
setting up of doctoral training linking private and public sector; ·
Gender equality and gender mainstreaming in
research: the framework directive would require
Member States to adopt strategies and action plans on gender. ·
Optimal circulation, access to and transfer
of scientific knowledge: the framework directive
would require Member States to adopt relevant policies and measures for
ensuring open access to scientific publications and scientific data and online
research and identification services and shared usage policies for digital ERA.
The Commission would propose the Framework
Directive at the earliest in 2013. 5. Analysing
the impacts and comparing the policy options The policy options consist of different
mechanisms to remove barriers and promote effectiveness of research systems.
Once and if all ERA related measures are put in place, they are expected to
attain similar indirect impacts (as, for example, on excellence and
performance). Therefore, the main differences in terms of impacts reside in the
timing for delivering the expectations, in the implementation costs associated
and in acceptance by Member States and Stakeholders of each option. But before
presenting the specific assessment of each option, the overall added value of
ERA in terms of indirect economic, social and environmental impacts as well as
the main caveats which may arise will be discussed. Expected economic impact of ERA Public and private sectors in all Member
States would benefit from the efficiency gains of the increased cooperation as
well as competition for funding in national systems. It is expected that more
funding would be allocated to the best performing researchers, that through
more cooperation between Member States better solutions to grand challenges
would be found and that public and private sectors everywhere and notably in
less endowed regions have access to and the advantage of scientific knowledge
and of conditions promoting open innovation. A decreasing share of non-performance based
institutional funding would imply greater focus on financial sustainability of
scientifically strong fields in these institutions. This would entail trying to
recover the full economic costs of research activities. Full economic costing
would require that capital and infrastructure costs associated with each piece
of research commissioned from public research establishments are included in
the final price. This would be a major change and represents a step towards
establishing internal and external market pricing[53]. It could be expected though
that in Member States where institutional funding is not linked to performance,
or where evaluation systems do not follow international standards, universities
and other research performing organisations may resist the removal of barriers.
However, the need for more efficient use of scarce public funding may convince
Member States to pursue the necessary reforms. Besides, the improved context
for the research systems and a reinforced cross border focus on grand
challenges could leverage private investment in research. A reallocation of national funds to
transnationally coordinated funding could benefit the EU's economy and job
market. For example, in the case that the removal of barriers which would
improve the conditions for cross border cooperation and interaction would lead
Member States to gradually reallocate funding to increase the attention given
to transnational activities (i.e. to reach 4% research funding by 2020, from
the current 0.8% share), this would induce a possible extra gain of GDP of 16
billion Euros in 2030 (0.25% additional GDP growth on top of the 0.92%
additional growth expected from Horizon 2020). Higher transnational coordinated
funding would create 323,000 additional jobs. The impact would be much stronger
if the Barcelona target (3% of GDP dedicated to research) were reached by 2020.
The combined effect of the Barcelona target, Horizon 2020 and an increased
share of transnational funding would imply 445 billion Euros extra GDP and 7.2
million more jobs in 2030 (See Annex 4 for a detailed presentation of the
simulations). Measures linked to the development of the
digital ERA would also lead to coordinated demand for the provisions of
interoperable and effective digital research services, which will boost the ICT
sector and ICT innovations in the EU. Study on the economic benefit to high
tech industry involved in CERN's procurement contracts showed that procurement
lead to increase of competence and direct economic benefits in terms of new
products and markets. Furthermore, 75% of the increased sales were in sectors
outside particle physics, thereby showing the value for innovation and
knowledge transfer for other fields[54].
Open access would also generate significant
benefits for most actors and potential savings for many institutions (i.e.
libraries). It is estimated that policies and measures supporting open access
could generate between 2 and 31 billion Euros of net economic benefits for the
UK from increased returns to R&D over a period of 20 years[55]. In Denmark, the savings would
amount to between 4 and 634 Million Euros[56],
whilst for a country such as the Netherlands the savings would amount to
between 13 million and 1 billion Euros be up to over a period of 20 years.
Benefits can also be especially important for research institutions and firms
in less-endowed countries, as they would be able to benefit from a more open
access to knowledge. However, there would be costs incurred by
Member States' administrations and businesses. It is not possible to provide a
reliable estimation of costs as it would depend on the specificities of the
barriers to be removed by each Member State. But some examples could be useful.
Estimates show that for the UK, the total costs at national level for
implementing the Concordat (i.e. the UK version of the Charter and Code) amount
to 882,000 Euros per annum[57]
but they do not include one-off and running/maintenance costs incurred by
research institutions and universities for reforming existing HR policies and
rules, setting up and maintaining adequate human resources structures. As shown
in Annex 4 and given that the cost for filling in a vacancy (research-related
or professor position) varies from €5.000-20,000, it can be assumed that the
cost for filling in a vacancy is equal to one or two month researcher salary.
The adoption of gender strategies, national framework for the career
development of researchers and innovative doctoral training may prove expensive
for less-endowed institutions or institutions located in less-advanced Member
States, but they could benefit from reciprocity. Member States which have
experienced brain drain may oppose the removal of obstacles to grant
portability. There will be costs associated with open access. Houghton, (2009
and 2009a) calculated that the costs for implementing open access would amount
to between 21 and 406 million Euros for Denmark and between 124 and 636 million
Euros for the Netherlands over a period of 20 years (for more details see Annex
4). Regarding the impact of open access on the publishing market, research by
RIN et al (2011) show that in the case of green open access (i.e. authors
publish in any journal and then self-archive a version of the article for free
public use in a repository or on an open access website) and assuming a 10% cut
in subscription volumes of journals, the cost incurred by the publishing
industry would amount to over 447 million Euros in global lost annual revenues
(or approx. 134 million Euros per year in lost global operating profit[58]). Expected
social impacts of ERA Institutions will benefit from better
research staff functioning better. Recent research (Mitsos et al., 2012) has
shown that R&D cooperation creates social benefits to non-participating
organisations and the rest of society. These social benefits result from knowledge
spill-overs to non-participants, increased industrial competitiveness and
increased levels of competition, favourable changes in investment behaviour,
more efficient establishment of technology standards, broad socioeconomic
benefits as a result of structural adjustment and increased economic cohesion
between European regions. Measures on the digital ERA would also support
researchers in smaller and less-advanced Member States and regions, by
facilitating access to research services through online sharing. This would
improve cohesion across the ERA, as researchers would have the opportunity to
work from any region or Member State in the EU and be involved in world-class
research teams. Measures foreseen under the ERA will also have a positive impact
on fundamental rights, in particular as regards the respect for gender
equality, freedom of expression, freedom of arts and sciences etc. For example,
effective online service provision should support gender equality by
facilitating the development of flexible work arrangements (e.g. working
remotely). Ensuring that open, transparent and merit-based recruitment
procedures are in place in universities and public research institutes would
also facilitate the mobility of researchers into and across Europe. However,
resistance can be expected from "protected" researchers, used to
in-breeding and less favourable to mobility. Expected environmental impacts of the
options Several grand challenges have a strong
environmental component which can essentially be tackled by cross-border
cooperation. Removing barriers to compatibility and interoperability of
national research systems as well as the promotion of common transnational
synchronised research agendas and calls would facilitate that Member States
reinforce the attention on environmental issues in a cooperative way avoiding
unnecessary duplication and thus increasing efficiencies. 5.1. Assessing the options Policy Option 1 (Business as usual) Overall assessment: Existing barriers would remain, preventing higher effectiveness in
national systems. The most important benefits would be mainly induced after
2014 when Horizon 2020 would start. Timing for completing ERA: not possible to determine but certainly not by 2014. Costs: This
option would not entail additional costs. Pros:
Limited. Cons: does
neither respond to the Council requests nor to stakeholder expectations. Stakeholder opinion: strongly advocate for further progress towards ERA, therefore this
option would disappoint them. Moreover, it would not respond to the European
Council call. Policy Option 2 (Reinforced partnership
for ERA) Overall assessment: this option would allow quick progress in ERA (Table 1). It is
expected that all Member States would concentrate on removing remaining barriers
and taking action according to the self-assessment of the national situation
and structure in the areas mentioned in the Communication. The monitoring mechanism
would allow assessing progress regularly and possibly identify additional
measures to ensure progress. Research funding and performing organisations
would be able to contribute to completing ERA immediately. This option would
not entail though even progress in all Member States, as each of them would
undertake reform at their own pace, according to their own priorities and
approaches. However, the qualitative assessment of the degree of achievement of
the policy objectives confirms the positive impacts in the short and long term. Timing for completing ERA: 2014 would see concrete actions implemented in terms of barriers
removed and progress towards the specific objectives. Costs: low
additional burden for the implementation of the option. As Member States and stakeholder
organisations would remove barriers at their own rhythm and according to the
identified needs and priorities, the administrative costs should remain low. In
some cases, national laws will have to be repealed or amended. For the
Commission, this option would entail costs to identify the baseline situation
and quickly assess progress by the end of 2013 or early 2014 as well as to
create the ERA Policy Monitoring System and support financially the measures
indicated. Pros: quick
removal of barriers without EU legislation. This policy option would also allow
gathering further evidence on the state of ERA advancement both in 2012 and at
the end of 2013 or early 2014. Cons: the
successful implementation of this policy option relies on Member States and
stakeholders support and commitments to undertake the required reforms at
national and institutional level. Progress may be uneven across Member States
and/or amongst institutions, which may require specific recommendations in the ERA
progress report or legal action if lack of progress is generalised. Stakeholder opinion: the various consultation exercises have shown that stakeholders
and Member States strongly support change in ERA and expect measures to be
taken at EU level. As there is a consensus to employ voluntary measures to
complete ERA, notably amongst Member States, this option would satisfy their
expectations. It would also respond to the European Council call. Policy Option 3: (Sectoral legal
measures for ERA) Overall assessment: this option would entail progress by 2014 only in those areas of
ERA tackled by Member States on a voluntary basis, but possibly important impacts
in the long term if the legislation to be proposed would be adopted and
transposed (Table 1). Time would be needed to collect further evidence for
legislative action, implying that action may be driven by existing data and not
by urgency or importance of the problem in each Member State. Second, in those
cases where data is available, adoption, transposition and negotiation of each
legal action would imply that progress would be attained after 2014. Timing for completing ERA: Legislative actions towards ERA could start to be proposed at the
earliest by 2012 for cases where evidence is available. Implementation would be
delayed at least until 2016[59].
Voluntary action would deliver results by 2014. Costs: This
policy option would entail significant additional administrative and compliance
burden for national public administrations, universities, research funding
organisations and public research institutions. The transposition and implementation
of legal actions at Member State level would generate an administrative burden
for public authorities, as a) the transposition of the Directives would require
Member States to identify the standards for the proposed principle and b) in
some cases, the national regulatory framework would have to be amended or
repealed. Public research institutions, universities and research funding
organisations would also incur compliance costs. These are expected to be
significantly higher than in option 2, as stakeholders will have less
flexibility in how they implement the regulatory requirements. No
administrative or compliance costs would be incurred by businesses. For the
Commission, this option would entail heavy burden and costs linked to data
gathering as well as the design and adoption of the numerous legal actions to
be proposed from 2013 on. Resources would be needed to identify the baseline
situation and for monitoring compliance at a later stage. This option will also
imply that Associated Countries would not contribute to progress in areas
addressed by legislative measures. The possible use of the National Reform
Programmes would provide an incentive to Member States to act in sectors not
regulated. Pros: this
option would lead to a level playing field amongst Member States in those areas
which are subject to EU Directives and Regulations. Cons: under
this policy option, the achievement of the policy objectives by 2014 is
expected to be uneven, as progress would be mainly achieved by voluntary
actions in a limited number of barriers. As this policy option includes a set
of binding and non-binding measures, there is a risk that no action is taken
for barriers tackled by binding measures before adoption. Furthermore, all
legal measures may not be proposed within the same timeframe, thus reducing the
coherence and overall impact of the package. Stakeholder's opinion: some researchers, stakeholder organisations and Member States are
in favour of EU policy intervention if it can yield results in the short term.
Given the time required for adopting and implementing the proposed regulations,
this policy option would not satisfy stakeholders and Member States. Moreover,
a vast majority of Member States is strongly opposed to the use of legislation,
which makes this option very difficult to take through the Council. Policy Option 4 (ERA Framework
Directive) Overall assessment: this option would entail very important progress towards ERA in
the long-term, only if the Framework Directive is adopted (Table 1). This option
requires further gathering and assessing data for all ERA dimensions at the
same time to thoroughly develop principles and mechanisms. The negotiation
process linked with a full set of measures to be proposed at the same time
would be burdensome and long, and may lead to the adoption of the lowest levels
of ambition in some or all of the ERA dimensions in order to ensure acceptance
by all Member States. Timing for completing ERA: Considering the timeframe required for further gathering the
sufficient information to ensure the right definition of principles and
mechanisms and for the adoption, the Framework Directive can be proposed in
2012/13 at the very earliest. The binding provisions included in the Directive
would not be implemented either before the completion of the entire legislative
process. Implementation of concrete measures by Member States would be delayed
until at least after 2016/17 and would be transposed unevenly. Costs: this
policy option leads to additional administrative and compliance costs which
would be incurred by Member States' administrations and public institutions.
The transposition and implementation of the Framework Directive would require
Member States to identify the standards for the principles and possible
measures. In many cases, national legislation would have to be amended or
repealed. However, compared with policy option 3, the administrative burden of
this option should be lower for Member States' administrations as they would
have to transpose and implement one Directive only. Administrative and
compliance costs would be incurred also by research performing and funding
organisations. Compliance costs for institutions may be lower than in option 3,
as Member States may tailor national measures to the local needs and priorities.
For the Commission, this option would entail extremely heavy administrative
burden and costs for identifying the baseline situation and for the design of a
complete set of measures that would be included in the Framework Directive.
Also, the monitoring system would be very heavy and costly. No administrative
or compliance costs would be incurred by businesses. Pros: this
option would lead to a level playing field in all areas covered by the
Framework Directive and transposed by Member States. Cons: Most
Member States actions would be delayed until after the adoption of the
Framework Directive, making it little attractive given the urgency to complete
ERA by 2014. This option would also imply that Associated Countries would not
be formally requested to contribute to progress to complete ERA. Stakeholder opinion: as in Option 3, this policy option would not be supported by stakeholder
and Member States. 5.2. Choosing the preferred policy option A qualitative assessment of the degree of
completion of ERA by operational objective, based on the feasibility of
implementing the changes as explained above, allows the comparison of expected short
term (ST) impacts in 2014 (Table 1). The table also presents the assessment of
impacts in the long term (LT), important for options 3 and 4. The assessment is
linked with the type of measures: voluntary (positive in the short term +, very
positive in the long term ++) versus legislative (none in the short term, extremely
positive in the long term +++). Table 1: Degree of completion of the operational
objectives by policy option. Specific objective || Operational objective for 2014 || PO2 || PO3 || PO4 More effective national research systems || Barriers to competition removed || ST + LT ++ || ST + LT ++ || ST None LT +++ Barriers to use international peer review evaluation in national research systems are removed || ST + LT ++ || ST None LT +++ || ST None LT +++ Optimal transnational co-operation and competition || Barriers to compatibility and interoperability between national research programmes are removed || ST + LT ++ || ST + LT ++ || ST None LT +++ Barriers to access to pan-European research infrastructures are removed || ST + LT ++ || ST Partial LT ++ || ST None LT +++ One pilot cross-border synchronised research call, notably on grand challenges, launched using international peer review evaluation and a single pan-European score || ST + LT ++ || ST + LT ++ || ST None LT +++ Harmonised monitoring, evaluation and impact assessment principles and procedures for pan-European research infrastructures adopted and implemented || ST + LT ++ || ST None LT +++ || ST None LT +++ An open labour market for researchers || Barriers to open, transparent and merit based recruitment in public research systems, cross-border portability and accessibility of national grants are removed || ST + LT ++ || ST Partial LT ++ || ST None LT +++ Frameworks supporting the career development of researchers and innovative doctoral training are adopted and implemented || ST + LT ++ || ST Partial LT ++ || ST None LT +++ Gender equality and gender mainstreaming in research || Barriers to gender equality and the gender dimension in research are removed || ST + LT ++ || ST + LT ++ || ST None LT +++ Optimal circulation, access to and transfer of scientific knowledge || Policies and means for facilitating online access to publicly-funded scientific publications and data are defined and coordinated || ST + LT ++ || ST Partial LT ++ || ST None LT +++ Policies to foster knowledge transfer, cross-border sharing of e-infrastructure and take up of digital services for research are defined || ST + LT ++ || ST Partial LT ++ || ST None LT +++ Electronic identity services for researchers enabling transnational access to digital services (collaboration, computing, scientific information) are implemented or planned || ST + LT ++ || ST Partial LT ++ || ST None LT +++ Notes: ST: Short
term; LT: Long Term. Policy option 2 (Reinforced partnership for
ERA) alone ensures a substantial level of progress towards compliance with the 2014
deadline imposed by the Council (i.e. "to complete ERA by 2014").
This option would also allow the development of an assessment system for
possible future action. Moreover, this option entails (with the exception of
the Business as usual) the lowest level of administrative and compliance costs
for Member States, Commission and stakeholders. Therefore, policy option 2 (Reinforced
partnership for ERA) is the preferred option. 5.3. Risks and mitigating strategies The main risk associated with policy option
2 resides in possible reluctance from Member States to implement reforms. However,
the Communication sets two mechanisms to minimize the risk of inaction. First, the
Communication would invite relevant research stakeholder organisations to sign
with the Commissioner a Joint Statement in general terms of their willingness
to work towards completing ERA. They should also set out the specific ERA
actions they will take in terms of timing, deliverables, public reporting on
progress, etc. in a Memorandum of Understanding co-signed with the Commission
or a unilateral declaration, informing their respective national authorities
and the other Partners. They would thus directly be involved in delivering ERA.
As such, each organisation would become the main agent of change at national
level, as in many cases the implementation of the actions would depend on the
removal of barriers. Second, the monitoring mechanism - presented below - would
implement annual assessments of progress on ERA. It would recommend, if needed,
concrete actions in specific area(s) for each Member State. In case of
insufficient and/or persisting progress, the Commission would propose legal or
other action. 6. Monitoring
and evaluation So far, insufficient efforts have been put
on gathering evidence on the importance of the problems or on progress in achieving
ERA. It is essential to put in place an appropriate and well-timed mechanism to
monitor and assess progress towards the policy objectives in this Communication
as well as to improve transparency towards the scientific community. However,
there is a need to avoid unnecessary burden for Member States. Therefore, the
mechanism needs to be aligned with the assessment of progress in the Innovation
Union and fully synchronised with the European Semester. Additional efforts
will be limited to collecting specific data needed to strengthen monitoring of
ERA progress[60]
and to guide reforms to ensure maximum added-value. Indeed, annual monitoring is foreseen for
the Innovation Union Flagship Initiative, via the State of the Innovation
Union. The achievement of the ERA is one of the commitments, in relation to
some other relevant commitments. The current list of twelve ERA-related
indicators under the Innovation Union Scoreboard (IUS) will continue
to provide information on R&D system performance and impacts although this
information is insufficient to monitor the ERA measures. A good synchronisation
between ERA monitoring and political steering, with the overarching Innovation
Union processes is necessary. At the beginning of the European Semester
the Commission adopts its Annual Growth Survey, which analyses progress
achieved over the past year in implementing the Europe 2020 growth strategy and
presents priorities at EU level for the following 12-18 months. It is the basis
for the overall guidance provided by the Spring European Council to Member
States for adapting the annual National Reform Programmes (NRF) (presented by
MS in April). Based on their assessment, the Commission proposes
Country-specific recommendations in good time for their adoption by the
European Council in June. The ERA monitoring mechanism will be
developed to be seamlessly integrated in these mechanisms. It will be organised
as follows: ·
In 2012, the Commission will identify - on the
basis of official statistics used to their maximum potential, existing data, ad
hoc studies and surveys and voluntary inputs from Member States and
stakeholders - the baseline in each Member State as well as the
state-of-play at stakeholder/institutional level for each action. The baseline
will be discussed during the first meeting of the ERA-Stakeholder Forum
that will be launched by the Commission ·
Member States (e.g. authorities in charge of
R&I) will be asked to present a report on ERA-reform measures in April
2013, as an annex to their national reform programmes. This report should indicate
in sufficient detail on-going activities and actions planned to fulfil their
policy commitments in direct relation to the objectives in this Communication ·
In April-May 2013, the Commission will
analyse both the NRPs, the more detailed description of national ERA-reforms
measures and compare them to the baseline established in 2012. It will
discuss ERA related issues with Member States and will encourage discussions
and mutual learning in the context of European Research Area Committee (ERAC)
and its specific configurations (GPC, SFIC), possibly resulting in an ERAC
opinion to the Council and Commission ·
in September 2013, the Commission will
issue the first ERA-progress report which will assess the
proposed measures by MS in comparison with the Baseline situation. The report
may include, when necessary, ERA recommendations for the Member States.
This will also provide inputs to the overall monitoring of the Innovation Union
Flagship Initiative. This ERA Progress report could be discussed in the December
Competitiveness Council, possibly resulting in Council Conclusions on ERA
progress as input for the next Annual Growth Survey which guides national
reforms by Member States in the context of the European Semester. The progress
report may also be the basis for debate in, and guidance by an ERA minister
conference, involving Associated Countries. It will also be discussed in the
second meeting of the ERA-Stakeholder Forum which will take place in
October-November 2013. The Commission will launch studies/surveys at the end of
2013 to assess progress ·
Member States will be asked to continue
including the ERA-reform measures in an annex to their NRPs delivered by
April 2014 ·
In April-May 2014, the Commission will
analyse the NRPs, the more detailed description of national ERA-reforms and the
assessment of impacts of the reforms issued from the studies and surveys. ERA
related issues will be discussed with Member States during country visits and,
as described, the Commission will continue encouraging discussions and mutual
learning in the context of European Research Area Committee (ERAC) and its
specific configurations (GPC, SFIC) ·
in September 2014, the Commission will
issue the second ERA-progress report which may include, when
necessary ERA recommendations for the Member States. The report will be
discussed within the Stakeholder Forum. It may also contribute to the following
Annual Growth Survey ·
Afterward, Member States will be asked to
continue including the ERA-reform measures in an annex to their NRPs
delivered by April every year ·
In April-May every year, the Commission
will analyse the NRPs, the more detailed description of national ERA-reforms
and the assessment of impacts of the reforms. ERA related issues will be
discussed with Member States during country visits, and as described, the
Commission will encourage discussions and mutual learning in the context of
European Research Area Committee (ERAC) and its specific configurations (GPC,
SFIC), possibly resulting in an advice by ERAC to the Council and Commission.
·
in September every year, as indicated
previously, the Commission will issue an ERA-progress report
which may include, when necessary ERA recommendations for the Member States.
The report will be discussed within the Stakeholder Forum. It may also contribute
to the following Annual Growth Survey. The analysis and conclusions of the ERA-Progress
Report will be presented through the ERA monitoring mechanism, based
on a set of indicators of progress (See Annex 7 for a tentative list of
indicators). It will be developed by the Commission as part of the overall
Research and Innovation Observatory and will be consistent with the monitoring
of the future Horizon 2020 programme and articulated with the Knowledge
Triangle and the Innovation Union flagship initiative. Annex 1: Consultation of interested parties and expertise used Public Consultation on the ERA
Framework: a public online consultation was
organised with a view to gathering Member States and stakeholder views on ERA
and areas of untapped potential for the development of ERA (see below for more
details). Consultation on ERA as part of the public consultation on the Green Paper on a Common
Strategic Framework for EU Research and Innovation Funding (European
Commission, 2011a): this questionnaire included a set of questions on ERA and
stakeholders were invited to express their views on how European science can be
stimulated towards a higher level of excellence. Stakeholder meeting (21 June 2011): the meeting was organised with main research
stakeholders (15 European level organisations) to discuss the preparation of
the public consultation on the ERA framework. The meeting allowed optimising
the public consultation so as to ensure that its objectives and content are
fully understood and endorsed by ERA stakeholders. ERAC stakeholder seminar (13 September
2011): this seminar marked the formal launch of the
public consultation on the ERA Framework. The meeting convened 33 stakeholder
organisations, 26 countries representatives as well as ERA Partnership Group
chairs. The seminar aimed to achieve a better shared understanding and
validation of the main barriers and areas of untapped potential to the
development/completion of ERA, the costs of non-ERA as well as the benefits of
ERA. A final report is available. 2012 ERA Conference (30 January 2012): the objective of the conference was to present a synthesis
of the responses to the consultation questionnaire received. The conference
provided an opportunity for the 400 participants, European-level stakeholders,
ERAC members, chairs of ERA groups and the Commission to engage in a series of
both plenary and theme-specific parallel discussions in view of achieving a
consensual view and understanding on the main barriers and areas of untapped
potential to the development and completion of ERA. Opinion by the European Research Area
Committee (ERAC)[61]: ERAC
has examined in depth the key obstacles for the completion of ERA and adopted a
written opinion on the ERA framework on 9 December 2011. Expert Group - High-Level Economists
Group: a subgroup of the High-Level Economists
Group ‘Innovation for Growth’ has been set up with the mandate to identify the
socio-economic benefits expected from a fully functioning ERA. The report will
be delivered in March 2012. Study on Member States’ R&D
regulatory systems: the Commission organised one
ad-hoc expert group meeting on gathering different national perspectives on the
regulation of research across EU member states. This served as a basis for the
Commission to order a six month study on gathering an overview of the way
research and research systems are regulated in the 27 Member States. The final
report was delivered in December 2011 Research projects and other studies: the report benefited from contributions of the FP7 SSH-funded
DEMETER project and of the FP7 SSH-funded VERA project. Summary of results from the ERA
consultation Research and innovation are at the heart of
the Europe 2020 agenda which aims to get Europe out of its current economic
difficulties and transform it into a smart, sustainable and inclusive society.
For the first time, the Lisbon Treaty empowered the European Union to achieve
the European research area (ERA). Completing ERA will require the support and
effort of all Member States and associated countries and their stakeholders. The public consultation on the ERA
framework, ‘Areas of untapped potential for the development of the European
research area’, aimed at gathering, from stakeholders, views and evidence on
the key obstacles which have to be tackled to achieve a well-functioning ERA.
It was open from 13 September 2011 to 30 November 2011. It generated a
substantial response from those with a stake in European research, the highest
numbers coming from individual researchers and the higher education sector,
followed by public administrations and the business sector. This report synthesises the responses to
the consultation based on the 590 responses received to the online
questionnaire as well as the 102 ad hoc contributions received by the end of
December 2011 submitted mostly as position papers by national and European
research organisations and in the form of official positions of Members
States/associated countries from ministries or national governments, including
a joint input by Member States/associated countries via the ERA Committee. All
Member States are represented through at least one stakeholder contribution. Most important gaps for the
achievement of ERA Overall, there is overwhelming support for
pursuing the development of the European Research Area and for action on all
its dimensions to complete ERA by 2014. Problems and deficiencies in relation
to research careers and mobility emerge as a clear priority even when factoring
out the dominant proportion of responses from individual researchers to the
online questionnaire. Furthermore, the responses from national and European
organisations which represent the interests and views of significant numbers of
research stakeholders as well as the official responses from Member States also
point to cross-border operations, open access and international cooperation as
important priorities. Research careers and mobility Researchers are at the core of the European
S & T system. Having a well-trained and competitive labour force is a
prerequisite for the development of a well-balanced knowledge-based economy.
There is a clear signal that further efforts are required to ensure that the
European and national systems attract and retain a sufficient number of leading
researchers. While 40 % of respondents agree that Europe produces enough
leading researchers, less than 20 % believe that Europe attracts and retains
sufficient numbers, and 14 % underline the low retention rate of the
profession. Moreover, only 22 % believe that researchers are adequately trained
for the business labour market. Therefore, there is a need to attract and
retain more leading researchers and to provide all researchers with better
skills, especially for the business sector as this remains an obstacle to
economic growth. Furthermore, 80 % of respondents believe
that research careers in the public sector are comparatively unattractive
because of the current uncompetitive working conditions and the lack of career
prospects. The reasons for unattractiveness are the underfunding of universities
and research institutions, the limited availability of research positions in
academia, the relatively low wages in academia and the insufficient cooperation
between academia and the private sector. Respondents also report a lack of
recognition of the research profession. The mobility of researchers is one of the
ERA objectives. It contributes to improving research quality and provides more
attractive careers. However, a range of factors hampers internationally mobile
researchers who, in addition, face difficulties to move between sectors. The
lack of portability of publicly funded grants is the most important impediment,
while the lack of open and transparent recruitment procedures is regarded as
one of the main barriers to international mobility. Protectionism/nepotism is
considered to be the main reason followed by the lack of a human resources
strategy in institutions and the lack of awareness of job portals such as
EURAXESS Jobs. Other obstacles relate to the lack of
information on social security and pension rights as well as to the lack of
recognition of diplomas in other countries. As regards moving between sectors,
the move from the private to the public sector is considered to be harder than
from the public to the private sector. Removing the remaining obstacles to the
mobility of researchers seems to be a shared concern amongst all respondents,
who demand EU action in this area. Cross-border operation of research
actors Europe faces a series of major societal and
global challenges where research can play a key role in providing solutions but
which cannot be solved within national borders only. The level of funding
explicitly coordinated between different countries and/or available for
cross-border cooperation remains relatively modest in Europe, both in absolute
terms and compared to funding allocated on a purely national basis. It is necessary to coordinate research at
transnational level to raise research quality, reduce costs and tackle major
challenges. An overwhelming number of respondents feel that joint programming
is one of the most interesting initiatives launched in recent years to enhance
cross-border operations. Joint research programmes are highly valued when the
countries involved engage in long-term commitments. Joint programming initiatives
and alliances between research institutes are considered appropriate mechanisms
for making progress in cross-border research, while a certain level of
duplication is recognised as appropriate since competition contributes to
raising research quality. However, the lack of political commitment is
considered by 68 % of respondents to be the major difficulty for
transnationally coordinated research. Another important issue is the
consistency between priorities in national and joint research programmes. Much more
political will is required for national funding agencies to support joint
research programmes. A dedicated budget allocation for cross-border cooperation
would also be necessary. Furthermore, the complexity of too many
cross-border schemes is counterproductive. Minimum rules for ensuring
interoperability of funding schemes are required to facilitate cross-border
research, such as common principles and standards, rules for grant/funding
applications, evaluation and reporting, as well as synchronisation of calls for
proposals. The openness and transparency of procedures are considered as
essential conditions for implementing joint research programmes. Moreover, many respondents see the
individual researcher as being in the centre of cross-border operations and
support the promotion of long-term mobility grants. In addition, the majority
of respondents support better access to information on initiatives open for
cross-border operation in order to facilitate the implementation of joint
research programmes and to better show the benefits for research actors and
stakeholders, which in turn would facilitate broader and stronger commitment. Research infrastructures Several EU measures have been adopted to
ensure that Europe effectively develops and maintains pan-European research
infrastructures of strategic interest. The setting-up of the European Strategy
Forum on Research Infrastructures (ESFRI) in 2002, the ESFRI roadmaps and the
financial support provided through the EU framework programmes have been crucial
in this respect. Despite these achievements, some issues still need to be
addressed for Europe to keep world-class research infrastructures and face
future challenges. While most respondents believe that public
funding should be increased for the realisation of the next generation of
research infrastructures of pan-European interest, developing more synergies
between European and national actions is considered to be necessary for an
optimal exploitation of existing research infrastructures. Increasing the role
of the EU in helping Member States to reach agreements on the costs of
construction and operation is considered to be one of the priorities to realise
the next generation of infrastructures. The setting-up of regional partner
facilities along with the development of more harmonised rules between public
research funding and Structural Funds is also perceived as important. Many stakeholders highlighted that the
quality of research can be increased by the implementation of an open and
excellence-based access to facilities for all actors of research. 79 % of
respondents consider that EU support for transnational access to research
infrastructures of pan-European relevance should be increased, while 64 % of
respondents support remote access to research facilities through for instance
the development of e-infrastructures. Strengthening the inter-operability of
instruments and of scientific data at EU level is also regarded as important.
Uniform evaluation criteria and practices for research infrastructures will
contribute to raising the research quality within ERA. Knowledge transfer Improving knowledge transfer between
universities, public research organisations and industry is essential for
ensuring that publicly funded research results contribute to economic output
and can effectively support innovation and the development of new services and
products. Likewise, knowledge transfer has an increasing importance for
research, especially in all fields of transdisciplinary and cross-border
research. Strategic and comprehensive approaches and strategies for knowledge
transfer in Europe are not yet common and in many instances there is
insufficient awareness about this topic. A majority of respondents considers that
universities and public research organisations should be given incentives to
develop and implement strong knowledge transfer strategies and structures.
These should complement the development of strategic partnering with the
private sector, including: researchers’ mobility, better alignment of
incentives and interests, and the development of effective collaboration
channels in order to tighten the links between the public sector and the
private sector. Furthermore, respondents consider that researchers should be
better informed about knowledge transfer and that knowledge transfer activities
should be professionalised, thereby allowing knowledge transfer offices to play
a stronger role. Open access All research builds on former work and
depends on scientists’ possibilities to access and share scientific information.
The advent of the Internet and electronic publishing has resulted in
unprecedented possibilities for the dissemination and exchange of information.
However, most scientific information generated by public funding, in whole or
in part, is not available for free. This limits the access, dissemination and
use of research results. ‘Open access’, defined as free access over
the Internet, aims to improve and promote the dissemination of knowledge,
thereby improving the efficiency of scientific discovery and maximising the
return on public investment in R & D. In the consultation, respondents
favoured the idea that publications resulting from publicly funded research
should be given open access and that it should become a principle for EU-funded
activities. Some respondents also emphasised also the importance of
guaranteeing not only access to, but also reuse of, scientific information. In order to improve open access to
scientific publications and data, as supported by 81 % of the respondents,
actions suggested at EU level include increasing stakeholder awareness,
facilitating the exchange of best practices and setting standards for the
repositories and data-sharing practices. Respondents also supported the view that
national open access policies could be better coordinated and suggested a key
role for the European Commission in coordinating national initiatives, and in
monitoring and promoting open access policies to publications and data. International dimension S & T cooperation boosts the quality of
European research and strengthens the economic, industrial and technological
competitiveness of Europe. The EU and its Member States have not yet been able
to combine their weight to address global challenges which lie beyond the scope
and resources of individual Member States or Member States and the EU as such.
It has been difficult for them to act together to contribute to the
establishment of a level playing field vis-à-vis third countries. Europe should
be in a position to engage in effective international cooperation, and in
shaping or leading major international cooperation initiatives, in particular
to tackle global societal challenges. To achieve this, the global attractiveness
of Europe as an S & T location (for researchers, companies and investment)
could be increased by reducing the fragmentation of the European market and by
improving employment and career prospects for researchers, including
third-country researchers, in the EU. Furthermore, improved information-sharing
and coordination between international R & D policies and programmes of the
EU and of the Member States, as well as the development of a common EU–Member
States strategy for international science and technology cooperation and of
coordinated initiatives by the EU and the Member States vis-à-vis third
countries, have been identified as the most important steps which should be
taken by the EU and its Member States to maximise the benefits from
international S & T cooperation. Policy planning, coordination and
implementation should involve the main stakeholders. Many comments from respondents underline
the importance of openness towards third countries with regard to other
ERA-related topics, such as the mobility of researchers, scientific excellence,
global challenges, knowledge transfer and research infrastructures.
International cooperation should be part of all relevant ERA measures and
instruments. Reciprocity should be ensured: there should be similar access for
European researchers to the R & D programmes of third countries as there is
for third-country researchers to European programmes. Gender Although 45% of PhD graduates in the EU are
women, only 31 % of researchers and 18 % of full professors are women. Progress
has been slow towards achieving gender equality (i.e. gender-sensitive human
resources management, gender balance in decision-making and the integration of
the gender dimension in research content) in ERA. A broad majority of respondents consider
that a higher involvement of women in science will contribute to European socioeconomic
growth. They mainly attribute slow progress in achieving gender equality to the
persistence of gender stereotypes on the labour market, the lack of top-level
support in research institutions and slow progress in the modernisation of
research institutions. Therefore, respondents stress that research institutions
need to implement adequate gender equality strategies at the level of their
human resources management and in research programming. Reflecting on how EU policies on gender in
research could be made more effective, stakeholders are in favour of increased
incentives, improved working environments and the inclusion of gender issues in
research programmes, content and outcomes. Ethics Respondents agree on the need to create the
necessary conditions for the main actors to discuss common principles and
common practices that can facilitate the work of researchers and allow a closer
cooperation between the ethics experts at the European level. Ethics review
procedures should be simplified without compromising current standards. Managing and monitoring the ERA
partnerships Following the launch of ERA in 2000, some
notable results were achieved by the open method of coordination, steered by
the EU Scientific and Technical Research Committee (CREST), and by instruments
under successive framework programmes. The Ljubljana process, based on a
partnership approach (launched by research ministers in 2008), has given new
impetus to efforts to build ERA. The ERA vision 2020 (2008), the revamping of
existing thematic ERA groups, the creation of the High Level Group for Joint
Programming (GPC), the Strategic Forum for International S & T Cooperation
(SFIC) and the transformation of CREST into ERAC (European Research Area
Committee) in 2010 have changed the governance structure of ERA. However, as
stated by the Council in its progress report of 2010 on the realisation of ERA:
‘Much progress has been made, but the fact that the same issues as at the start
of ERA in 2000 remain at the forefront of the policy debate shows that there is
still a long time to go.’ A new ERA framework is needed to bring ERA to a more
ambitious level. There is overall support from respondents
for closer cooperation and coordination in policy development and
implementation in order to reduce the research and innovation deficit and
inefficiencies in the EU. The full use of intellectual capability in Europe
will be feasible if all regions and countries are able to engage fully in ERA.
More synergies and increased coordination are necessary between European and
national/regional research agendas and programmes. However, several respondents
emphasised that there was no need to establish new structures, but to build
further on existing structures to support the good functioning of ERA including
for progress monitoring of ERA-related initiatives. Monitoring should
nevertheless involve more stakeholders than Members States only and should not
induce an increased administrative burden. An important message resulting from the
consultation is that almost 80 % of respondents support a greater involvement
of stakeholders in all ERA processes. This would result in more balanced,
efficient and better-accepted policy options agreed at EU level and allow a
more bottom-up approach in the decision-making process. The establishment of a stakeholder
platform is supported by a majority of respondents. A high number of
respondents request more transparency and information about ERA’s available
instruments and initiatives. Another important observation is that 73%
of respondents believe that the completion of ERA requires a strengthened
political commitment both at national and EU levels. 72 % agree on the
inclusion of dedicated EU research policy content in national research policy
programmes, whereas 64 % support the inclusion of ERA-related policy in
national reform programmes. The principles of simplicity, low
administrative burden, scientific autonomy, freedom of research, scientific
integrity and ethical principles are considered as the most important
principles to be retained in an ERA framework. The outcome of the consultation will help
the Commission to decide on those issues which should be addressed as
priorities when preparing in 2012 the ERA framework, which will set out the
focused, proportionate and effective measures to be taken to realise ERA. The
ERA framework will focus on non-funding measures. Annex 2: Further evidence for the problem analysis Differences in overall performance
between the European and American research systems This section
presents the overall performance of the European research system, mostly in
comparison with the performance of the US research system. Science and scientific excellence are
crucial to develop the necessary knowledge and skills for technology-based
innovation. One key driver of the differences is the
fact that the EU has not played a role comparable to the US in the IT
revolution. In the US much more than in the EU, the IT revolution has given
rise to the creation of many R&D intensive firms which have developed and grown
into global leaders. But this "IT story" seems not to be an isolated
case as we see again that the US biotech sector attains a size which is about
the double that of the EU[62].
Also in nanotechnologies, in spite of a higher level of public research expenditures
in the EU than in the US, EU/US comparisons on the volume of business activity
generated (based on indicators such as private R&D investments, number of
patents and market introduction of new products) are clearly not favourable for
the EU[63].
While scientific excellence and quality
cannot be measured as such, the best proxies are bibliometric indicators which
measure the scientific impact of published research results. The number of
citations that a scientific publication receives informs about the value which
the scientific community ascribe to this publication for subsequent scientific
developments: it is therefore an indication of the impact of this publication
on science. Citation data indicates that top-level
science of the EU is less cited than in the US[64]: ·
On average over the period 2000-2009, US
scientific publications received 27% more citations than EU ones in most
fields, with the exception of Energy and Space[65]. ·
In the EU, 11.6% of its researchers'
publications are among the top 10% most cited worldwide[66], which is above the world
average. In the US, 15.3% of its publications are among the top 10% most cited
worldwide, showing a better performance than the EU[67]. Moreover, the share of 10%
most cited scientific publications is unevenly distributed as are the patents (Figure
2below). ·
In the Shanghai ranking of world's universities,
27 of Europe's universities features in the top 100 in 2011 whereas the
corresponding figures for US universities is 55. The dominance of US
universities is even more pronounced when looking at the top 50 (11 EU
universities) and top 10 world's universities (2 EU universities). The EU scores well in 'traditional'
scientific fields, such as Agricultural science, Chemistry, Physics and
Engineering, while it lag the farthest behind the US in fast-developing fields
such ICT, Nanotechnology, Biotechnology, Molecular biology and Genetics[68]. In his paper "Explaining
poor performance of European science: institutions versus policies", A.
Bonaccorsi (2007) developed the following diagnosis: "European science
is weak in the upper tail of quality, in fast moving new fields, and in fields
characterised by divergent growth and new forms of complementarities, many of
which are also responsible for breakthrough technological developments"[69]. Figure 2: Distribution of the 10% most cited scientific publications as
percentage of total national publications (left) and EPO patent applications by
inventor's country of residence (2007) Competitive funding in Europe As shown in Figure 3 below, the share of
competitive funding as a total of public R&D funding (GBAORD) varies from
20 to 80% between Member States. Figure 3: Share of GBAORD allocated through calls for
proposals Source: OECD, based
on preliminary data from the microdata project on public R&D funding of the
Working Party of National Experts in Science and Technology (NESTI), 2009-2010
and Commission estimations for missing observations. Well-coordinated research programmes and
priorities Estimations indicate that around 87% of
public R&D in the EU is programmed, financed, monitored and evaluated at
national level, with too little collaboration or coordination between
countries. In 2011 an EC Communication on Partnering in Research and Innovation[70] was launched aiming to
simplify the existing partnering landscape in research and innovation. The FP7
SSH VERA project indicates that "research programming of universities in
Europe is currently not co-ordinated across borders in a systematic way. With
regard to co-ordination between research institutes, two initiatives exist to
date: the European Energy Research Alliance (EERA) and the European Climate Research
Alliance (ECRA). According to NETWATCH data, there were 7 active networks in
2011 receiving no funding from FP7. They were all self-sustaining networks,
which were actually former ERA-NETs, and which continued without EU support"
(VERA, 2012). Co-operation between research institutions
leads to international co-authorship. As shown in Figure 4 below, international
co-authorship is more cited than domestic co-authorship. Figure 4: Highly cited scientific articles by type
of collaboration, 2006-08 Research infrastructures Pan-European research infrastructures allow
research and scientific results to be delivered faster and at lower costs as
shown below. Table 2: Ration of publications of pan-European
RIs vs. national research entities: the case of ESRF Source: Nature
Publishing Index, Global Top 50 (BETA) As stated by the FP SSH VERA project,
"through FP7, the EU provides mainly catalytic support to an initial
Preparatory Phase (~220 M€) to address legal, governance, financial and
technical issues in order to launch the projects. The EU contracts provide a
framework allowing all necessary stakeholders to cooperate. FP7 funds to
support to the actual Construction Phase is much more limited (90 M€).
Additional financial resources (200 M€) are devoted to the RSFF to make
available loans from the European Investment Bank (EIB). In view of the overall
financial needs (~ 20B€), the contribution of FP7 of ~ 500 M€ is rather
limited. The EU Structural Funds can provide a
substantial support to some research infrastructures. Under the current
Financial Perspectives from 2007 to 2013, 10 B€ are earmarked for
"R&TD infrastructure and centres of competence". This support is
particularly important for the 12 new MS. The projects need to meet
requirements of scientific excellence and impact on the regional economy. For
some ESFRI projects, industrial partners have already been identified and
letters of interest from companies received, demonstrating the potential impact
on the economy (partnership with innovative industries, large companies, SMEs
and start-ups; links with innovative incubators for the creation of spin-offs).
After 2013, as part of Horizon 2020, Research Infrastructures (including
e-infrastructures) are expected to be funded under the priority 'Excellent
Science'" (VERA, 2012). Realising a single market for
researchers The ERA Green Paper (2008) identified
several barriers to the European single market for researchers. These include
the limited extent and lack of harmonised rules and conditions for open
recruitment in public research institutions, the lack of recognition in the
labour market law of the research profession and its specificities, its poor
working conditions and the existence of barriers to easily transferable pension
funds. The FP7 SSH VERA project has identified that "mobility across
sectors or borders is often penalised in terms of career advancement and
consolidation and, in general, the private sector is not sufficiently active in
research. In this context, procedures for facilitating access to the EU for
third country researchers are still cumbersome and lengthy. Doctoral education
in EU is fragmented and lacks critical size at the expense of excellence and
attractiveness These barriers are further reinforced by some demographic and
social trends: on the one hand, women are under-represented in top scientific
positions (see section below); young PhDs emigrate from Europe to the US; many
of the old researchers close to retirement will not be replaced resulting in
loss of competences. These barriers have not been substantially overcome in the
recent years and the Innovation Union flagship initiative has identified
further obstacles. For instance, it has pointed out that the research
profession suffers from a lack of a common understanding of researchers'
competences, which hinders the match of demand and supply and thus the effective
allocation of resources" (VERA, 2012). Recruitment practices in the EU In the large-scale MORE survey of
university-based researchers[71],
previously mobile researchers were asked about 'major' obstacles to possible
future mobility. Up to 70% cited "finding a suitable position", which
is explained partly by a lack of open and transparent recruitment procedures.
This finding was supported by the recent public consultation on the ERA
framework. The lack of open and transparent recruitment procedures was regarded
by more than 59% of respondents (and up to 78% if those who rate it as of
'medium importance' are included) as one of the main factors hindering
internationally mobile researchers. Recruitment procedures at Member State
level are complex and vary significantly across the EU. Recruitment policies
and practices in public institutions are determined by a number of factors,
such as universities’ and research institutions’ autonomy over hiring, career
progression mechanisms and career paths for research-related positions. Regarding staffing autonomy (the capacity
to decide on recruitment procedures, on salaries, on dismissals and on
promotions of senior academic/senior administrative staff), the recent EUA
report[72]
(European University Association 2011) shows that universities in nine EU
Member States (DE, CZ, ES, FR, EL, HU, IE, PT, SK) face tight restrictions over
hiring and cannot freely hire staff. In several Member States (CZ, HU, SK, EL)
the appointment of some or all senior positions need to be confirmed by an
external authority. Italy lies in 24th, Spain 26th and Greece 28th. Recruitment practices in Italy are not
sufficiently open and transparent. For example, selection criteria are published but often remain very
generic. Moreover, recent research[73]
into Italian universities points to a remarkable level of nepotism. This has led to a recent reform law (no. 240 of 2010) whereby
Italian universities i) must advertise any position publicly, at national and
European level; and ii) cannot employ a new researcher or professor even on a
part time or temporary basis in the same University Institute/Department where
his/her relatives (to the 4th degree of relationship) teach and work. In Germany the openness of appointment
procedures is guaranteed by the constitutional principle of the selection of
the best and laws explicitly calling for international publication of many
positions although a study by the German Federal Ministry of Education and
Research (BMBF, 2010) indicates that the majority of staff in universities and
research institutions feel that recruitment in Germany is neither fair nor
transparent. In Greece, institutions are constrained by
(at times multiple) restrictions imposed on all areas of higher education staffing.
The number of posts is limited; appointments are confirmed by an external
authority for academic and carried out through a centralised national system
for administrative personnel. Salaries and dismissals are strictly regulated
due to the civil servant status held by all staff, and the law states detailed
requirements for the promotion process. Under-representation of female
researchers Evidence shows that the potential
represented by female scientists may not be used in an optimal manner. Research[74] shows that female researchers
tend to be under-represented across the EU (average share of 31% of females
amongst the research profession). Whilst the number of female researchers is
almost on a par with the number of male researchers in Member States such as
Lithuania, Latvia and Bulgaria (49%, 47% and 45% respectively), the proportion
of female researchers drops to 21% in Germany and to 18% in Luxembourg and the
Netherlands. Table 3 below provides an overview of the
proportion of female researchers in EU Member States and selected third
countries. Table 3:
Proportion of female researchers, 2006 Source: S&T statistics (Eurostat), Norwegian Institute for Studies in Innovation, Research and Education Exceptions to the reference year: CZ, EE, SK, NO: 2007; BE, DK, DE, IE, EL, LU, NL, PT, SE, IS, JP: 2005; CH: 2004 Data unavailable: UK, IL, Provisional data: NL Data estimated: EU-27, EU-15 (by Eurostat), EU-25 (by DG Research), EE Females also tend to be less represented in
the highest grade of research careers[75] (EU
average proportion of 19%) and amongst management positions (EU average
proportion of 13%) as shown in Table 4 and Table 5 below). Table 4: Proportion of women in grade A academic positions, 2002/2007 Source: WiS database (DG Research); Higher Education Authority for Ireland Exceptions to the reference year (s): 2007 HR: 2008; UK: 2007/2006; DK, FR, CY, LU, AT, IL: 2006; EE, MT: 2004; PT: 2003; IE: 2002-2003; EL: 2000; 2002 NO, UK, NL: 2003; IL: 2001; EL: 1999 Data unavailable: HR, LU, IE: 2002 Break in series: CZ (2005) Provisional data: ES Data estimated: EU-27, EU-25, EU-15 (by DG Research), SI Head count NO: before 2007 biannual data Data for Ireland on Grade A professors does not include the Institutes of Technology Table 5: Proportion of female heads of institutions in the Higher Education Sector (HES), 2007 Source: WiS database (DG Research) Exceptions to the reference year: IT: 2009; BE (Dutch-speaking community), DE, EE, HU, AT, PL, SK, FI, SE, HR, CH, IL: 2008; DK, CY: 2008/2007; RO: 2007/2006 Data unavailable: BE (French-speaking community), IE, EL, ES, FR, MT, PT, SI, UK Data estimated: EU-27 (by DG Research) BE data refer to Dutch-speaking community Openness of high level education systems
to young researchers According to recent data, the average share
of doctoral candidates who are not EU-nationals amounts to 19% across the EU
(PRO INNO Europe, 2011) and there exist significant differences between Member
States with regard to the share of doctoral candidates who are not nationals of
that Member State. In the UK and France, the share amounts to 48% and 41%
respectively, compared with 1% in Latvia and Lithuania, 3% in Romania and 8% in
Italy. Table 6 below shows the share of second
stage of tertiary education students (doctoral candidates and other training
course leading to advanced research qualification) in the EU who come from
third countries and other European countries. Table 6: Second stage of tertiary education students (ISCED6) in EU Member States and share of non-national doctoral students, 2009 Source: DG Research and Innovation Data: Eurostat Notes: n/a: data not available Countries which are more open (i.e. higher
share of doctoral candidates coming from other European countries or third
countries) also tend, on average, to perform better in terms of R&D. The
2011 Innovation Union Scoreboard shows that countries such as Sweden, Denmark,
Germany and Finland are innovation leaders. Some of these innovation leaders
are also amongst the most open research systems. Table 7: EU Member States’ innovation performance,
2011 Source: European Commission, Innovation Union Scoreboard 2010 Notes: 1) Average performance is measured using a composite indicator building on data for 24 indicators going from a lowest possible performance of 0 to a maximum possible performance of 1. Average performance in 2010 reflects performance in 2008/2009 due to a lag in data availability 2) The performance of Innovation leaders is 20% or more above that of the EU27; of Innovation followers it is less than 20% above but more than 10% below that of the EU27; of Moderate innovators it is less than 10% below but more than 50% below that of the EU27; and for Modest innovators it is below 50% that of the EU27. Annex 3: Evaluation of previous and existing EU, regional and
national initiatives The European Research Area – Policy
making and progress so far The European research project “VERA”-
Forward visions on the European research Area (FP7, Social Sciences and
Humanities)” coordinated by Fraunhofer Institute, has recently produced the ERA
Fabric Map, which gives a snapshot of the ERA today. The following section is
inspired on this report. The ERA making The ERA concept was launched at the Lisbon
European Council in March 2000 and was given new impetus in 2007 with the
European Commission's Green Paper on ERA and with the launch by the Council of
the Ljubljana Process to improve the political governance of ERA in 2008. A
series of initiatives were proposed by the Commission in 2008 to further the
ERA in five key areas, namely: (a) working conditions and mobility of
researchers; (b) the joint design and operation of research programmes; (c) the
creation of world-class European research infrastructures; (d) the transfer of
knowledge and cooperation between public research and industry and (e)
international cooperation in science and technology. Since the adoption of the
Lisbon Treaty in 2009, ERA is an explicit objective of the European Union.
Announced in the Europe 2020 strategy, the seven flagship initiatives launched
since 2010 contribute to ERA. The European Council stated in February 2011, and
reiterated in March 2012, that the ERA must be completed by 2014. Several official advisory bodies and fora
for discussion contribute to delineate ERA[76]: • The European Research Area
Committee (ERAC), so-called CREST before the renewal of its mandate, is the
advisory body assisting the Council of the European Union and the European
Commission in the field of research and technological development. A number of
candidate and associated countries participate as observers in ERAC[77]. ERAC has several dedicated
configurations: the High Level Group for Joint Programming; the Strategic Forum
for International Cooperation (SFIC); and the Knowledge Transfer Group. • The Steering Group on Human
Resources and Mobility (SGHRM) recognised by the Council in 2008 to be the
appropriate forum for promoting and monitoring the implementation of the
European Partnership for Researchers. • The European Research
Advisory Board (ERAB).established by the Commission in 2007 is a consultative
body responsible for advising the EU on the realisation of the ERA. • The European Strategy Forum
on Research Infrastructures (ESFRI) aims to support a coherent and
strategy-led approach to policy-making on research infrastructures in Europe. • The Science and Technology
Options Assessment (STOA) unit advises the European Parliament on research
related issues. Moreover, there are numerous advisory
councils and groups on specific thematic themes relating to research policy.
These include advisory councils, advisory groups for the 7th Framework
Programme (FP7) and standing committees on thematic issues. There are also
permanent expert groups on women in science and ethics. Progress so far Member States play a crucial role in
realising the ERA. In terms of progress so far, Chioncel and Cuntz (2012) have
found that ·
The ERA dimensions People and Infrastructures
are more important than others from national perspective. This is possible due
to financial incentives at EU levels, in particular the one on infrastructures,
i.e. this likely leading into path-dependency and overweighting of specific ERA
dimensions. ·
ERA progress and integration takes place at
different speed, particularly relevant in the areas of promoting excellent
research institutions and well-coordinated research programmes and priorities. ·
Knowledge circulation dimension is an area of
potential policy failure for countries with lower innovation performance. By
tapping further into these policy fields as rent-seeking EU funds, Member
States may face increased systemic failure due to limited absorptive capacities
of their businesses and continue developing science base on national levels. Initiatives aiming at coordinating
national funding The main initiatives taken at EU level and
their results and impacts are analysed in the sections below. ERA-NET scheme[78] The ERA-NET scheme was launched, as a
novelty, in 2002 under FP6 to support the coordination and collaboration of
national research programmes. It aimed at facilitating the exchange of views
and good practices, the strategic planning and the design of joint research
programmes as well as the implementation of joint activities, in particular
joint calls. Under FP7, the ERA-NET scheme was reinforced by introducing a new
module, ‘ERA-NET Plus’, which allows the ‘topping-up’ of joint trans-national
funding with European Union funding. Between 2002 and 2010, the EU invested
341 million Euros in more than 100 ERA-NET actions:
ERA-NET proved to be an immediate success, resulting in 101 different ERA-NET
initiatives by the end of 2010. Nine ERA-NET Plus actions have been funded
since 2007. The total funding ERA-NETs have received under FP6 is 185 million
Euros. The ERA-NET scheme under FP7 has been funded with 156 million Euros for
the period 2007-2010 (ERA-NET Plus: 68 million Euros). Until 2010, a total of 51 countries
participate in ERA-NETs, including all EU Member
States, Associated Countries to the EU Framework Programme for Research and
Technological Development and Third Countries. France and Germany are the
leading participants, but there is also significant involvement of a group of
other countries: Austria, Finland, The Netherlands and Belgium. The most active
associate countries are Turkey, Norway, Switzerland and Israel. ERA-NETs have launched more than 190
calls, resulting in more than 2,000 transnational projects funded since 2004: a total of 194 joint calls have been implemented from 2004-2010
and more than 30 calls were done in 2011. The average funding per project is
725.000 Euros, with more than 2,000 projects funded in the period 2004-2010.
The consortia size of projects funded by ERA-NETs is substantially smaller than
in the FP (≈ 3-6) with a very high SME participation in many areas (some >
50%). Annual volume of coordinated research
close to 300 million Euros: the public funding of
transnational research by ERA-NET and ERA-NET Plus actions has been growing
steadily since the first calls in 2004 and currently adds up to 290 million
Euros per year. The total public funding of research implemented by ERA-NETs
and ERA-NET Plus since its beginning until 2010 amounts to more than 1.400
Million Euros. The biggest contributors are Industrial Technologies and SMEs
(more than 500 million Euros) and Environment, Knowledge Based Bio-Economy and
Health (around 200 million each Euros). Substantial leverage effects on research
coordination funding: The leverage effect of the
Framework Programme funding is close to 5 Euros for ERA-NETs and 2.5 Euros for
ERA-NET Plus. More than 15 Euros of the initial FP6 ERA-NETs have achieved a
leverage effect of 10 Euros and more (1 Euro Framework-programme funding
resulting in 10 Euros coordinated research funding). Virtual common pot and mixed mode supporting transnational programme collaboration: virtual common
pot and mixed mode have proven to be the preferred funding mode for
transnational programme collaboration in the context of the ERA-NET scheme. The
virtual common pot is applied in almost 80% of all call budgets. ERA-NET Plus
actions rely mainly on the mixed mode (84% of all ERA-NET Plus call budgets).
The real common pot is scarcely used (4%) and is limited to social sciences and
humanities, fundamental research or public procurement actions. ERA-NET Plus supporting critical mass,
evaluation standards and financial integration: the
ERA-NET Plus instrument results in substantially larger average call budgets of
25 million Euros compared to 7 million Euros for the ERA-NET calls and supports
achieving critical mass. In addition, they establish international peer review
as an evaluation standard, as well as successfully increasing financial
integration to ensure proposal selection exclusively based on excellence. Positive impact on structuring the ERA
and national programmes and their collaboration,
but limited success in creating multiannual joint programmes with critical
mass: in addition to the calls and the transnational research opportunities
they create, the ERA-NETs deliver a wealth of intangible results. Participants
confirm the ERA-NET scheme results in new opportunities to enable transnational
R&D activities (reported by 85.5% of all participants), reduces duplication
between national programmes (37.5%), increases the thematic focus in existing
(38%) or new programmes (34%), stimulates good practices and innovations in
programme designs (>50%) and positively influences national programme
budgets in the selected theme of the ERA-NET (46%). It has proved to be a
valuable mutual learning process that contributes to an overall improvement of
the research system in Europe. Article 185 initiatives[79] Article 185 of the TFEU enables the EU to
participate in joint research programmes undertaken by several Member States,
as well as to participate in the dedicated implementation structures. The aim
is to strongly support the integration of national research activities beyond
coordination, and to achieve critical mass. The EU provides financial support
out of the Framework Programme. The basic selection criteria are: ·
Involvement of a sufficient number of Member
States to obtain a significant structuring effect and critical mass; ·
Topic of great interest to the EU and fitting in
with the thematic priorities of the Framework Programme; ·
The principle of co-funding by the Member States
and the EU, and principle of additionality are respected; significant European
added value; ·
Article 185 is the only way the project could be
implemented. With Article 185 initiatives, the European
Union goes beyond simply coordinating existing research programmes. It requires
scientific integration through common definition and implementation of S&T
activities; management integration in a single implementation structure; and
financial integration through a clear multi-annual commitment of the participating
Member States. A first Article 185 initiative, the European
and Developing Countries Clinical Trials Partnership (EDCTP), was launched in
June 2003. Under FP7, four initiatives, Ambient Assisted Living (ALL),
EUROSTARS (for SME research), the European Metrology Research and Development
Programme EMRP have followed and a Joint Baltic Sea Research Programme (BONUS)
are currently being implemented. The FP6 EDCTP initiative has a total volume
of 400 million Euros with 50% EU contribution. The focus is on clinical trials,
capacity building, training and mobility and less on research. From 2004 to
2010 a total of 326 projects have been funded with 312 million Euros (EU
contribution 132 million Euros, 42%). The three FP7 initiatives have implemented
from 2008 until 2010 calls with a total public funding of 530 million Euros, of
which the EU contribution amounts to 191 million Euros (36%). For the total
duration of these three initiatives a total public funding of 1.1 billion Euros
is planned, of which the EU contribution would amount to 450 million Euros (not
including Bonus, which will start its implementation in 2012 with an EU
contribution of 50 million Euros). In total 441 projects have been funded with
an average public funding for the Eurostars projects comparable to the average
ERA-NET project (680.000 Euros) and substantially higher average amounts for
ALL (2,3 million Euros) and EMRP (6,8 million Euros). AAL and EUROSTARS have concluded their
interim evaluation in 2011. Both evaluations have shown that the use of Art.
185 TFEU has created substantial leverage effect and real European added value
for the respective area of research by integrating national programmes and
pooling resources. Both initiatives as well as EMRP clearly demonstrate the functioning
of a partly virtual common pot. All individual initiatives have specific
arrangements to assure that Member States honour their financial commitments.
Lessons learned show that operational arrangements are improving constantly and
from the Commission point of view the instrument seems very cost efficient. Joint Programming The Joint Programming process launched in
2008, allows committed Member States to jointly address major societal
challenges through national public funding, with the eventual support of EU
instruments. Within the concept of Joint Programming, Member States shall
coordinate national research activities, pool resources, benefit from
complementarities and develop common research agendas, in order to face the
grand societal challenges – all in variable geometry and therefore on a
voluntary basis. Joint Programming intends to tackle challenges that cannot be
solved solely on the national level and allows Member States to participate in
joint initiatives that seem useful for them. The Council of the European Union welcomed
the concept and the objectives of Joint Programming in its respective
Conclusions adopted on 2 December 2008, and called ‘for the implementation of
that process led by the Member States to step up their cooperation in the
R&D area in order to better confront major societal challenges of European
or worldwide scale, where public research plays a key role’. The council called
furthermore for a Joint Programming pilot initiative in the area of
neurodegenerative diseases with its respective conclusions ‘Concerning a common
commitment by the Member States to combat neurodegenerative diseases,
particularly Alzheimer's disease’. A pilot JPI
on Neurodegenerative Diseases (including Alzheimer's) was launched by Council
Conclusions in December 2009. A first wave of 3 JPIs was launched
in October 2010 on Agriculture, Food Security and Climate Change; Cultural
Heritage and Global Change, a new challenge for Europe; and A Healthy Diet for
a Healthy Life. A second wave of six JPIs was identified by the GPC in 2010 and
launched by the Council in December 2011: More Years, Better Lives - Potential
& Challenges of Demographic Change; The Microbial Challenge - An emerging
threat to human health; Healthy and Productive Seas and Oceans; Water
Challenges for a Changing World; Urban Europe - Global Urban Challenges, Joint
European Solutions; and Connecting Climate Knowledge for Europe (CliK'EU). The administrative, normative and regulatory
factors considered essential for effective implementation of Joint Programming
in Research are jointly referred to as ‘Framework Conditions’. They include the
development of common accepted approaches for: peer review procedures; forward
looking (foresight) activities; evaluation of joint programmes; funding of
cross-border research; dissemination of research findings; management of
intellectual property. A first version of Guidelines on Framework Conditions
for Joint Programming was endorsed (November 2010 Council Conclusions). A number of issues remain critical in the
current move from definition to implementation of JPIs: ·
To date, Member States' commitments of human and
financial resources remain weak due to difficulties in pooling resources; Joint
Programming will fail if Member States do not make concrete, long-term
commitments; ·
Application of the Voluntary Guidelines on
Framework Conditions is still at an early stage; ·
Progress in completing the definition of
Strategic Research Agendas has been slow; ·
The process of building trust between the
partners is still at an early stage; ·
In many cases, the areas being addressed by JPIs
are outside the direct remit of Research Ministries. Inadequate prioritisation
of societal challenges by the Ministries directly responsible for addressing
them at Member State level risks hindering the successful implementation of
JPIs. Impacts of some actions coordinating
national funding in relation to policy-driven themes Pooling resources on a European scale and catalysing new national initiatives: example of the Ambient
Assisted Living (AAL) programme The Ambient Assisted Living (AAL) programme The Ambient Assisted Living (AAL) programme engages 20 Member States and three Associated Countries. The programme has been successful in addressing the pan-European challenge of ageing and in coordinating national policies in the area. It has minimised the duplication of efforts and has led to the creation of new national initiatives in countries like Germany, France, Spain, Denmark and Hungary through the dissemination of results and experience at the European level. In the first three calls of the joint programme, Member States contributed around 100 million Euros funding while the EU contributed 70 million Euros. The mid-term evaluation has found that the AAL Programme ‘is an important instrument for integration of national efforts and the creation of synergies, especially as regards scientific and management integration’. The Panel concluded that AAL ‘provides real added value at European level and can serve as a model for balancing international governance with national needs, by increasing critical mass and reducing duplication.’ The Panel also found that the AAL JP ‘is already delivering a clear European added value in the achieved balance between European efforts and national needs and inputs, and in the development of good practices.’ It noted that ‘national financial contributions have increased substantially above the minimally required commitment, a major success of the programme.’ Reducing fragmentation and duplication of national research efforts while increasing scientific
excellence through higher competition between researchers: example of the
Article 185 initiative on Metrology (EMRP) Article 185 initiative on Metrology (EMRP) The science of measurement - metrology - is important for scientific research, industry and our everyday lives, as the demand for measurements with high accuracies and low uncertainties continues to increase. The European Metrology Research Programme (EMRP) enables European metrology institutes, industrial organisations and academia to collaborate on joint research projects within specified fields. These collaborative efforts will accelerate innovation in areas where shared resources and decision-making processes are desirable due to economic factors and the distribution of expertise across different countries and sectors. The Article 185 initiative EMRP is implemented by EURAMET, organised by 22 National Metrology Institutes (NMIs), supported by the European Union and has a value of over 400 million Euros. It dramatically reduces the duplication of research and allows efficient use of resources by pooling 44% of overall metrology resources in one initiative. The joint research projects are selected in a competitive process with excellence as the sole selection criterion Generating high leverage effects on coordinated research efforts and private investments: example of
MANUNET MANUNET Manufacturing generates approximately 22% of the EU gross national product (GNP), while manufacturing-related activities represent an estimated 75% of the EU gross domestic product (GDP) and 70% of employment. Typically, manufacturing takes place in geographical centres with strong localised specialisations. MANUNET was therefore created as an ERA-NET to extract greater value from the money spent in national and regional programmes across Europe. The leverage effect of the EU support is substantial (>25): supported under FP6 with 2.7 million Euros EU funding it has generated more than 125 research projects with SME participation of around 70% that are funded out of national and regional programmes with 73 million, mobilising an overall budget for research of more than 135 million Euros. By the end of 2009 the funded projects already report the creation of 47 new jobs, 16 patent applications, 45 new products and more than 70 new processes as immediate results of the collaboration. Achieving critical mass by pooling expertise and funding for common priorities:
example of E-Rare E-Rare There are at least 6,000 rare diseases, which, although individually rare (by definition they affect less than one person in every 2,000), taken together affect some 20 million European citizens. Their rarity itself constitutes a real obstacle to research. The thin distribution of patients makes it hard to gather enough subjects for proper studies. Further research on rare diseases is therefore badly needed but is hampered by lack of resources at several levels. Therefore rare diseases are a prime example of a research area that could strongly profit from coordination on a transnational scale. The ERA-NET E-Rare action has developed a common European programme on rare disease research. Together with the rare diseases related calls in FP7, the three joint calls of 10 million Euros of E-Rare effectively coordinate 30 to 40% of all rare disease research in the ERA with a high EU added value demonstrating synergy between Member State and the EU. Providing effective responses to major
challenges for Europe: example of Joint Programming
Initiative (JPI) ‘Neurodegenerative diseases/Alzheimer's’ JPI ‘Neurodegenerative diseases/Alzheimer's’ One of Europe's major societal challenges is the ageing of the European population and related increasing number of cases in neurodegenerative diseases, especially Alzheimer's. Against this background, the Council called in 2008 for a Joint Programming pilot in the area of neurodegenerative diseases. 23 Member States and Associated Countries engaged voluntarily and on a variable geometry basis to tackle neurodegenerative diseases and Alzheimer’s in particular in the definition, development and implementation of common strategic research agenda. It entails putting national resources together, selecting or developing the most appropriate instrument(s) and collectively monitoring and reviewing progress. Two first pilot calls with a total volume of 14 million Euros have been launched in 2011. Moreover, several other initiatives are
fostering co-operation throughout Europe. ·
The Strategic Energy Technology plan
started in 2007 and aims to accelerate development of low carbon energy
technologies and streamline national research programmes in strategic
technology areas at EU level. ·
Europe INNOVA/PRO INNO Europe (25 pilot projects since 2008, targeted at
Eco-innovation/innovation in services and clusters) focuses on joint policy
learning and development of better innovation support. ·
Existing EU-level Public-Private Partnership
(PPP) instruments (European Commission, 2011b): Joint Technology Initiatives (5
since 2007) aim to strengthen European industrial leadership in well-defined
areas. European Industrial Initiatives (EIIs) under the SET Plan (7 EIIs since
2010) address the demonstration/market rollout bottleneck in the innovation
chain of low carbon energy technologies. Recovery Plan PPPs (3 since 2008)
focus on maintaining and strengthening industry sectors hit by the economic
crisis. Future Internet PPP (since 2011) aims to ensure future Internet
development at the service of society. COLIPA (since 2009) helps industry
comply with EU legislation. SESAR aims to modernise European air traffic
management. ·
European Innovation Partnerships (EIPs - 2 up until now) aim to "act across the entire Research
and Innovation cycle to ensure that ideas can be turned into successful
products or services to tackle societal challenges whilst also generating
growth and jobs". Knowledge and Innovation Communities (KICs - 3 up until
now) are structured partnerships integrating education, research and business
actors to address major societal challenges (European Commission, 2011b).
Additional EIPs and KICs are in the pipeline. ·
In addition there are currently 11 INCO-NETs,
aiming to support bilateral dialogue with Third Countries in the context of FP7
(European Commission, 2011f)[80]. Initiatives
on research infrastructures ESFRI Forum Set up in 2002, ESFRI aims at steering and
enhancing EU Member States' capacity on RIs policy-making, whilst improving the
use and development of facilities of pan-European interest. ESFRI acts as an
informal and advisory body[81].
ESFRI develops joint visions and common strategies including regularly updated
Roadmaps, reports and criteria for planning and implementing new pan-European
RIs. The two key objectives of ESFRI are: ·
To steer up and enhance EU Member States'
capacity on RIs policy-making (general objective) by supporting a coherent and
strategy-led approach to policy making on RIs in Europe (specific objective);
and ·
To enhance the use and development of facilities
of pan-European interest (general objective) by facilitating multilateral
initiatives leading to a better use and development of RIs (specific
objective). The setting up of ESFRI has filled a policy
vacuum in the RI sector and the initiative is considered to be a valuable tool
for addressing the weaknesses of the European RI sector. Investment in RIs of
pan-European or international interest cannot be borne by a single country. The
enhancement and development of such RIs requires a coordinated effort and as
such appropriate platforms for Member States where priorities, needs and
actions to be implemented are jointly agreed and defined. Although the ESFRI
process does not cancel the relevance of national RI policies (i.e. notably the
development of RIs which are less of European interest), it provides a policy
framework at European level where Member States can streamline decision-making
and implementation processes. Regarding the development of policy tools
for the RI sector, the joint development and continuous update of a European
Roadmap for RIs - the ESFRI Roadmap - has provided an overview of the needs for
RIs in Europe (i.e. first expected output). First published in 2006 and updated
in 2008 and 2010, the ESFRI Roadmap has been able to support coordinated
mechanisms for assessing the needs and priorities for new European RIs across
Member States and scientific disciplines. The ESFRI Roadmap has also triggered
similar policy development at Member States level, with a majority of Member
States having adopted (18 Member States[82])
or preparing such national roadmaps (seven Member States). Available data also
suggest that whilst the existence of ESFRI as a forum has facilitated enhanced
cooperation between Member States, the development of a comprehensive set of
criteria for evaluating and monitoring RIs (e.g. the harmonisation of
evaluation procedures in particular for ageing facilities) and facilitated
decision-making by Member States and by the Commission (expected results) are
still a long way to go. As recognised by ESFRI, the governance framework for
RIs at European level is currently missing[83].
Regarding the use and development of RIs of
pan-European interest and as a result of the ESFRI Roadmap, 50 priority
projects have been identified in a number of scientific fields[84] and 10 projects have already
started (33% of planned projects, i.e. 44), whilst an additional 17 projects
are due to be launched before the end of 2013. Funding measures within the
framework of FP7 and its predecessor programmes have played a key role in
supporting such a process. Considering that the expected result was to
implement 60% of the Roadmap projects by 2015, it is questionable whether the
current pace and efforts are sufficient to meet the expected results. Otherwise
said, the implementation of the ESFRI projects remains a concern. The uncertainties
linked with long-term commitments required to establish and operate key
infrastructures still generate long delays. It is acknowledged by stakeholders[85] that the funding of RIs is a
primary concern particularly in a context of economic austerity. Table 8 below provides the list of projects
included in the ESFRI Roadmap. Table 8: List of ESFRI projects Source: European
Commission, DG Research and Innovation Notes: (1) from
ESFRI Delegates only; (2) From participation to Preparatory Phase Projects; (3)
Single (decided or proposed), Distributed, from the project contact persons and
confirmed by ESFRI Delegates; (4) Indicates the existing or expected legal
status (e.g. ERIC, MoU) and confirmed by the ESFRI Delegates CA: Consortium
Agreement; (5) From ESFRI Delegates only - indicates that resources have been
officially reserved for the project; (6) From the concerned Institution and
confirmed by the ESFRI Delegates. Blue colour denotes projects under
implementation, green colour denotes projects expected to be implemented by the
end of 2012, purple colour denotes project in progress and orange colour
denotes international partnership & global projects Coordinated
development and pan-European sharing of e-Infrastructure The box below presents examples of
e-infrastructures development where the Commission has been supporting and
coordinating the national investments in order to develop digital research
services than can be provided and accessed cross-border by different research
actors and organisations. Example of GEANT The GÉANT network is the fast and reliable
pan-European communications infrastructure serving Europe’s research and
education community. Co-funded by European National Research & Education
Networks (NRENs) and the EC, the GÉANT network and project is entering its
third generation, along with associated development activities. GÉANT's core
objective is to deliver real value and benefit to society by enabling research communities
across Europe, and the world, to transform the way they collaborate on
ground-breaking research. Coordinating Member States investment and integrating
MS research networks, GÉANT connects 40 million users in over 8,000
institutions across 40 countries. Example of EGI The European Grid Infrastructure (EGI)
delivers integrated computing services to European researchers, driving
innovation and enabling new solutions to answer the big questions of tomorrow.
EGI’s mission is to allow researchers of all fields to make the most out of the
latest computing technologies for the benefit of their research. EGI is a
federation of over 350 resource centres and coordinated by EGI.eu, a
not-for-profit foundation created to manage the infrastructure on behalf of its
participants: National Grid Initiatives (NGIs) and European Intergovernmental
Research Organisations (EIROs). EGI.eu is governed by a Council of 35
participant countries and institutions. Initiatives addressing the labour
market for researchers, gender equality and the gender dimension in research Initiatives at EU level At EU-level, funding, support measures and
policy coordination measures have been adopted with a view to increasing the
diversity of European research teams. Relevant initiatives include: ·
Funding measures
under the FPs: Marie Curie Actions and mainstreaming of gender; ·
Policy coordination measures/soft law: 2005 Commission Recommendation on the European Charter for
Researchers and on a Code of Conduct for the Recruitment of Researchers[86], the ‘European Partnership for
Researchers’[87]
(EPR) and the 1999 Commission Communication on ‘Women and Science: Mobilising
Women to enrich European Research’; ·
Support measures:
Euraxess website and public information campaign attract more women to
scientific careers; The evaluation of these initiatives is
presented below. Funding
measures The Marie Curie Actions is expected to support some 50,000 researchers[88] under FP7[89]. Based on a bottom-up approach
with no pre-defined themes, the Marie Curie Actions have supported excellence
of research and the internationalisation of research in Europe[90]. In particular, it is
estimated that the Marie Curie actions have achieved several positive impacts[91], such as increased impact on
science (i.e. the quality and quantity of research outputs are rated highly)
and increased internationalisation of research, international 'brain
circulation' and growing number of researchers engaging with world-class teams. Support to gender equality in
science has been provided through initiatives such as the mainstreaming of
gender within the EU Framework Programmes and the research part of the
Structural Funds (e.g. gender research, promotion of ambassadors’ schemes,
training, mentoring and networking activities), the development of indicators, analyses
and guidelines (e.g. ‘She Figures’ publications[92], ‘Meta-analysis of gender and
science research’[93]
and PRAGES project[94]).
However, the long-term sustainability of some of the gender projects funded
under FP5 and FP6 remains unclear[95],
whilst the interim evaluation of FP7[96]
further stressed the importance of continuing activities aiming at increasing
female representation in research, notably in leading positions. Policy coordination and soft law
measures Adopted in 2005, the Commission
Recommendation on the 'European Charter for Researchers' and a 'Code
of Conduct for the Recruitment of Researchers' (hereunder referred to as
the Charter and Code) lays down the rights and duties of researchers, their
employers and funding providers and outlines principles for the recruitment and
selection of researchers. Despite some good progress (i.e. implementation of
the "Human Resources Strategy for Researchers" process to support the
take-up of the Charter and Code by institutions), it remains difficult to
assess the extent to which research institutions across the EU have implemented
the Charter and Code. Moreover, the lack of a true accreditation mechanism[97] linked to the Charter and Code
(i.e. which would be based on ex-ante and regular evaluation/monitoring and sanction
mechanisms) has substantially limited the effectiveness of this initiative. Within the framework of the European
Partnership for Researchers (EPR) launched in the wake of the 2008
Commission Communication 'Better careers and more mobility; a European
Partnership for Researchers'[98],
Member States formally committed to adopting the necessary reforms at national
level (open method of coordination) in key priority areas such as open,
transparent and merit-based recruitment and portability of grants. The EPR has
triggered an important number of activities and initiatives at national level
and it is encouraging that a majority of Member States have been willing to
engage in the partnership. However the EPR is still at an incipient stage and
it is too early to provide robust conclusions in relation to the results and
long-term impacts of the initiative. Due to the structural nature of
planned/on-going reforms supported within the EPR (e.g. measures for increasing
autonomy of universities and research institutions over hiring), the results
and long term impacts of the EPR will only be visible in the long term. At the
same time, it becomes increasingly clear that barriers may limit the
effectiveness of the EPR. The lack of clearly defined objectives and criteria[99] in relation to the priority
areas has resulted in Member States having different approaches[100] (and hence standards) to
'open, transparent, competition-based recruitment'. Moreover, indicators for
monitoring progress have not been developed from the outset of the initiative[101], which may negatively impact
on the implementation of the EPR by Member States. Also, it should be noted
that the level of involvement varies amongst priority areas (i.e. Member States
have been less active in adopting measures facilitating the advertisement of
publicly-funded research positions) and amongst Member States. Regarding gender equality in research, the 1999
Commission Communication on ‘Women and Science: Mobilising Women to enrich
European Research’[102]
highlighted the importance of increasing the number of women involved in the EU
Framework Programmes, whilst fostering experience sharing on gender in science
amongst Member States with a view to identifying relevant measures to be
implemented. Although the Commission Communication contributed to mainstreaming
gender into the EU FPs, it is also reckoned[103]
that the need to support long-term structural change (i.e. changes at
institutional level) in gender management has not been sufficiently addressed. Other support measures Several support measures aiming at
increasing ‘brain circulation’ and female participation in science have been
adopted. Launched in 2003, the EURAXESS website has provided researchers
with information on research job and funding opportunities, working conditions
and networking opportunities. Over 30,000 research-related positions were
published on the EURAXESS website in 2011 (up from 4,000 in 2008), whilst the
EURAXESS networks link up approximately over 6,000 European researchers working
outside the EU[104].
Whilst EURAXESS has become an important tool for providing support services to
researchers (e.g. growing number of users’ inquiries[105]), evidence[106] shows that researchers need
more customised information. Gender-related support measures also
include the launch of a two-year public information
campaign in 2012. With a budget of approximately 2 million Euros, the aim
of the campaign is to tackle stereotypes on gender and attract and retain more
women in scientific careers. The key targets are young people, as well as women
researchers at an early stage of their career. Initiatives at Member State and
regional level Although Member States have been active in
adopting measures addressing the issue of recruitment and portability of
grants, there exist substantial differences in the way public researchers are
recruited and the extent to which grants are portable cross the EU. Regard to the recruitment of researchers,
it is reported that in nine EU Member States (DE, CZ, ES, FR, EL, HU, IE, PT,
SK) universities and research performing organisations face tight restrictions
over hiring and cannot freely hire staff[107].
In several Member States (CZ, HU, SK, EL) the appointment of some or all senior
positions needs to be confirmed by an external authority[108]. A number of Member States
have recognised that (some of) their open recruitment procedures were
inadequate. Spain, Estonia, Denmark, Austria and Poland have all introduced
recent legislation to ensure that universities advertise their job vacancies
internationally[109].
Planned and on-going reforms aiming at increasing the flexibility of career
paths and related appointment have also been reported in France, Spain and
Italy. Box below provides selected examples of
initiatives at Member State level addressing the issue of recruitment. Selected examples of measures at Member State level
addressing the issue of recruitment and employment of researchers in public
institutions Austria: according to an amendment to the University Act, universities have to post (research) job vacancies internationally or at least EU-wide. Considering that universities are autonomous, it is not possible to further specify by law the form or tool of advertisement, but EURAXESS Jobs is explicitly mentioned in the legal commentary to the amendment as a possible cost-free tool to post jobs internationally. Denmark: following a new law in 2008, professorships and associate professorships must be advertised internationally, except under special circumstances of an academic nature. One of the stated aims is to increase competition and provide Danish universities with the best possible talent. The Ministerial Order was adjusted to give greater autonomy to universities who can deviate from certain rules, for example regarding short-term appointments. France: the ‘Higher Education and Research Careers Plan for 2009-2011’[110] is a comprehensive strategy for strengthening the management of human resources in higher education and research careers. It is expected that the plan will modernise key aspects of the research career advancement system (i.e. advancement based on performance and independent and transparent evaluation processes). Estonia: universities are obliged to publish jobs internationally, on EURAXESS Jobs and in English. Estonian public universities have signed a new Agreement on ‘Good Practice on the Internationalisation of Estonia’s Higher Education Institutions’. This agreement includes guidelines on the employment of foreign research staff. Poland: a new national law imposes an obligation on higher education institutions to publish job adverts on the EURAXESS Jobs Platform. As a result, the number of vacancies for research positions posted on EURAXESS Jobs rose from 100 in 2010 to approx. 1,000 in 2011. Spain: published in 2011, a new law on science, technology and innovation as well as several relevant reforms require institutions to advertise positions openly. In a bid to attract foreign research talent, it also introduces derogations to the requirement of Spanish/EU nationality when applying for public roles, and allows the use of English in the selection process. UK: the ‘Concordat to Support the Career Development of Researchers: An Agreement between the Funders and Employers of Researchers in the UK’ (2008)[111] is a voluntary code of practice aiming at supporting the career development of researchers. The promotion of diversity and equality in all aspects of the recruitment and career management of researchers is a key principle of the Concordat. Although the initiative is still relatively new, the Concordat has triggered significant changes at institutional level in relation to research careers management. Source: ERA Steering Group on Human Resources and Mobility (2009-2010), ERAWATCH (2011), Technopolis (2011) Regarding portability of grants and access to
national grants, significant differences exist amongst Member States. According
to the 2011 EPR Monitoring Questionnaire[112],
only a small number of Member States (AT, DK, EE, UK) have reported that their
national funding mechanisms provide for portability of grants, whilst grants
are not portable outside the country in ten Member States (BE, CY, CZ, EL, HU,
IE, MT, PL, SI, ES) or are portable to a certain extent (FI, NL, DE). In
several Member States access to national grants and fellowships may be hampered
for non-residents. According to the 2011 EPR Monitoring Questionnaire[113], (prior) residence in the
country is necessary for accessing national grants (AT, PT). Researchers can
access national grants provided that funding is linked to the Member State’s
research system or serves the interest of the national research system (BE, CZ,
DE, EE, ES, EL, FI, NL, PL, UK), whilst non-nationals cannot access national
grants in two Member States (HU, MT). Although several regional initiatives such
as the 'Money follows Researcher' and the 'Money follows Cooperation
Line' schemes have been adopted, their impact remains relatively limited
across the EU. Originally implemented in three countries (Germany, Austria and
Switzerland), the 'Money follows Researcher' scheme allows researchers
relocating from one country to another to take their research funding with them
(27 research funding and performing organisations have now signed up to the
scheme)[114].
The 'Money follows Cooperation Line' scheme, also initially implemented by the
national funding organisations from Germany, Austria and Switzerland entails
the opening of national funding programmes for applicants from other countries
by permitting them to apply jointly with the partners from the country of the
research funding organisation (other research funding organisations have now
adopted the mechanism and use it without restriction to specific countries). Initiatives to support the
development of open access to scientific publications and research data At EU level, both funding and soft measures have been adopted to support the
development of open access. As a result of the Open Access Pilot in FP7 and ERC
scientific guidelines for open access (ERC, 2007), scientific publications
resulting from a set of EU-funded projects are now increasingly available in
open access[115].
Support to coordinated initiatives on the interoperability of repositories has
been provided through the Open Access Infrastructure for Research in Europe
(OpenAIRE) project funded under FP7[116].
Despite their relevance, FP-funded measures concern only a very limited share
of EU’s overall R&D expenditure and their impact remains thus limited. The
use of open access for projects supported by the Framework Programme has been
based on the 2007 Council Conclusions on scientific information in the digital
age (Council of the European Union, 2007) and the 2007 Communication from the
Commission on scientific information in the digital age (European Commission,
2007b). The Council Conclusions invited Member States to reinforce national
strategies on access to and preservation of scientific information, and to
enhance policy co-ordination. The Commission Communication provided a set of
actions to be undertaken by Member States. However, the successful
implementation of the Commission Communication and Council Conclusions remains
mixed[117].
The Commission is also planning to table a Communication and Recommendation to
Member States in 2012. The Communication will promote and implement open access
within EU research programmes, whilst the Recommendation will suggest a
concrete set of actions to be implemented by Member States (the Impact
Assessment of the Recommendation is under preparation). Member States are not equally advanced in how they support and address the issue
of open access, as indicated by the 2011 questionnaire to ERAC (European
Commission, 2011d). Approximately half of Member States have implemented
relevant policies (mainly non-legislative measures). In many Member States,
open access activities are coordinated by funding bodies, universities and/or
libraries. As of 2011, open access policies were implemented by research
funding organisations in 17 Member States, whilst universities or research
centres have open access mandates in 22 Member States. At the same time, only
eight Member States had laws or legal provisions requiring open access to
publicly funded research data. Policies on open access to research data are
less developed than policies on scientific publications. Several Member States
have developed high level strategies for the long-term preservation of data,
however these strategies have not always been efficiently put into practice.
Several coordination initiatives have been developed at sectoral or regional
level (e.g. ‘Knowledge Exchange’, Berlin Declaration, European Organisation for
Nuclear Research (CERN) Sponsoring Consortium for Open Access Publishing in
Particle Physics, International Coalition of Library Consortia[118]). However, their overall
impact remains limited. Moreover, the FP7 SSH VERA project
indicates that "an important obstacle to an effective circulation of
knowledge is the fragmented patent system. Patenting remains excessively
complicated and costly in Europe, and fragmented litigation fails to provide
sufficient legal certainty" (VERA, 2012). Annex 4: Analysis of impacts: methodology and tools used This annex presents
the methodology used for the estimation of the expected impacts on growth and
employment and results from studies on the performance of gender diversity in
research. The model Nemesis and the scenarios
simulated The aggregate macro-economic impacts of
funding allocation to research can be assessed by making use of a mathematical
model based on known, inferred, and assumed parameters. Over the past few
years, the use of mathematical models for the ex-ante evaluation of policy
effects increased significantly within the Commission, and also at national
level. For the ERA Framework ex-ante impact assessment, use was made of the
model Nemesis. Nemesis is a macro-econometric model built
by a Commission-funded consortium of European research institutes under the
5th, 6th and 7th Framework Programmes. It is a modular system for each European
country. European countries are represented individually by one main economic
module linked to three specific modules: energy and environment, agriculture,
land use, which are interactively linked with the main economic module for
these sub-modules. An additional sub-model, the regional one disaggregates the
national level towards a regional one. The model is mainly econometric, but some
mechanisms are calibrated using the results of well proven econometric
literature: it is the case for endogenous technical change. The econometric
character of the model allows its adaptation to past conditions observed in the
economy but it also allows the inclusion of alternative mechanisms of
innovation, which for instance are not constrained by strict optimization
conditions. Technical progress in Nemesis is
implemented (endogeneised) through a variable "knowledge" (KNOW) who,
on the one side, is determined by the stock of R & D and knowledge
spill-overs and, on the other hand, determines innovation which in turn,
affects economic performance. "Knowledge" depends primarily on
the stock of R & D sector, stock up as a capital stock (the accumulation of
R & D) to which a rate of obsolescence is applied (due to the gradual
fading of knowledge.). It is further enriched by all the externalities of
knowledge of all other domestic and foreign sectors. Knowledge spill-overs
issued by other sectors depend on their stocks of R & D, through the
technological flow matrices. These matrices identify the proportion of
knowledge which has an area where innovation has occurred in any other sector.
"Knowledge" also follows the stock of R & D in foreign sector and
the stock of R & D public. Figure 4 summarises the approach to the
construction of the variable "knowledge". Figure 5: Stock of knowledge (KNOW) The evolution of the stock of knowledge is
reflected in process innovations and product innovations: A process innovation increases total factor
productivity and, through them, increases the supply of products and decreases
the unit cost of production, and thus the price. This price reduction induces
an increase in demand, in an amount that depends on the price elasticity of
demand. Only a price elasticity greater than or equal to unity allows a higher
demand higher than the increase in supply. However, estimates of these
elasticities at industrial level show that they are generally less than one.
Therefore, the impact of innovation on the supply is more important than its
impact on demand. Process innovation tends to reduce the use of production
factors. Product innovation improves product
quality. To understand the effects on demand, we can distinguish the effects of
innovation on the demand volume (at constant quality) of those on demand volume
efficiency (which takes into account the increase in quality). Improving
product quality leads to a reduction in the price of efficiency unit (i.e. each
product sees its relative quality decline when compared to a higher quality
product and so its price would decrease). This results in an increased demand
for efficiency units. Volume production then increases if the increase in
demand for the new efficiency is greater than the increase in efficiency due to
innovation. While innovation in a product leads to
increased employment of factors of production, a process innovation tends to
reduce the use of production factors. In general, the positive effect of
product innovations compensates the negative effect of process innovations, so
that the increase in R & D leads to an increase in GDP and employment
factors simultaneously. To reflect the effects of ex ante
innovation on GDP, we detail the formal process which, starting from an
accumulation of knowledge leads to an increase in GDP: As a result of process innovations, the
accumulation of knowledge (KNOW) generates an increase in total factor
productivity (TFP): This results in an increased demand: As a result of product innovations, the
accumulation of knowledge (KNOW) leads to improved quality (QUAL): This results in an increased demand: The increase in output (Y) corresponds
ex-ante to the increases in demand induced by process innovations and products.
GDP growth therefore depends on the growth of knowledge in the form: with . Most econometric studies available do not
measure the elasticity of GDP to the stock of knowledge b, but the
elasticity of GDP to the stock of R & D (Mohnen (1990), Mairesse and
Sassenou (1991), Grilliches (1992), Nadiri (1993), Cameron (1998), Guellec and
van Pottelsberghe (2001), Bagnoli (2002). They only consider partially the
multiple externalities from R & D. They estimate that the elasticity is
between 0.05 and 0.2. The estimated productivity of R & D is stronger when
the econometric study is conducted from a series of instantaneous
cross-sectional (inter-enterprise) that when conducted with time series. This
is due, among others, to the fact that innovative company grab market shares
from its competitors in the same sector. Moreover, many studies agree that
productivity depends on the technological advancement of the industry. It is
assumed that b is the weighted sum of a constant b 0 and a function of the intensity of R & D in each sector (RD /
Y) using the following equation: The chosen parameters lead to a change of
0.075 b in 2002 to 0.124 in 2030. The endogeneity of technical progress in Nemesis
allows the study of innovation policies, such as subsidies to R & D, and
their effects on the research effort and European economic performance. The model, adapted to “structural”
policies, includes 30 sectors for the core economic model, which could be
detailed through the inclusion of linked modules. These details are very
important: (i) at first, because the implementation of structural policies
(energy, environment, agriculture, R&D, innovation) is made at a detailed
level; (ii) secondly, because the macroeconomic tracks of the model is the
combination of purely macroeconomic (“top-down”) forces - for instance the
wealth effects - and “bottom up” forces resulting from strong interactions
between very heterogeneous sectors in terms of dynamics, but also in terms of
composition (capital, labour, energy, etc). These interactions are not only
presented in the NEMESIS model by goods and services exchanges, but they are
also extended to knowledge spillovers. Leverage effect The leverage effect or “crowding-in” effect
describes the multiplier effect of 1 Euro of research and innovation
expenditures. Econometric works provide some results but mainly at a European
level or a macro national one, more rarely at a sector level. This leverage
effect is depending on several conditions which determine the expectations on
the level and uncertainty of R&D returns. A main concern is about the
comparison of the leverage effects of different sources of subsidies for
instance regional, national or European. At a European level, investments in
research and innovation appear to induce higher leverage effects that the
national or the regional ones because of the network effects and of the
transfer of best practices, justifying the higher returns which explain the
difference. Many of the new initiatives on joint technology initiatives and
research policies, as the European Research Area creation, aim at increasing
this leverage effect. The Risk-Sharing Finance Facility (RSFF)
uses debt-based finance, to complement the FP7 funding. Research related risk
is shared between the EU and the European Investment Bank (EIB). The first
evaluations of RSFF (see Soete, 2010) show since its creation in 2007 and until
2009 a very important leverage effect: 0.5 billion Euros of FP7 have induced,
with the EIB support of 0.5 billion Euros, more than 16 billion Euros of
expenditures in R&D. Exercises on FP assessment must take into account this
RSFF outcome even if it concerns only a small part of FP7, and more generally
make a sensibility analysis of results to the leverage adopted. In the analysis of the impacts of the
framework programme, a conservative leverage effect used are of 0.5 for public
R&D investments (40% of the 7 billion funds) and 0.9 for the private
sector. On average, these assumptions imply a leverage effect of 0.74, which
means that one Euro of EU investment from the 2012 FP7 budget leads to 1.74
Euro of research and innovation expenditures, of which 0.58 financed by the
private sector. This 0.74 leverage effect is compatible with the results of the
econometric literature which indicates a leverage effect for the private sector
between 0.7 and 1.7 A second important matter is the “knowledge
spillovers”. Impacts of innovation in the model depend not only on R&D
expenditures of the sector, but also on the knowledge spillovers coming from
others sectors, other countries and public research centres. This implies that
innovation in a sector can also happen without R&D expenditures in the
sector. In NEMESIS, it is then the knowledge variable of the sector that
produces innovation. The works and the literature on the
knowledge spillovers are now fairly important. Starting with an adaptation of
the Johnson matrix (Johnson, 2002) on technological flows based on patent data
for the inter-sector spillovers and on trade flows for the external spillovers
(which is a “proxy” variable). In the future, the model will update the
hypothesis on the basis of contributions of the UNU-MERIT in the framework of
the DEMETER project. The case of General Purpose Technologies (GPT), used by
almost all the sectors, for instance the information and communication
technologies, which are a main carrier for knowledge externalities, will be
explicitly treated. The last mechanism is the economic performance (productivity)
of knowledge that was calibrated in the NEMESIS model using the econometric
works based on R&D performance. Nemesis has been used by the Commission for
the ex-ante impact assessment of FP7 and of Horizon 2020 and for assessing the
macro-economic impacts of achieving the 3 percent objective, by the OECD, by a
number of French government institutions, etc. In the impact assessment of
Horizon2020, the national crowding-in coefficient used was 0.7 (1 Euro of
public funding attracts 0.7 Euros from the private sector), and 1.1 for EU
funding of 1.1funding. For the purpose of this impact assessment the
crowding-in factor (0.9) reflects the impacts of both joint calls, and the impact
of international peer review evaluation for funding decisions. Moreover, pan-European
research induces higher multiplicative impacts on the economy. In the impact
assessment of Horizon2020 the multiplicative impacts of EU funding were
estimated to be 15% better in those from national funding. For the purpose of
this report, it was estimated that pan-European funding would induce a
multiplier effect of 6% higher than the national one, also reflecting a
possible higher openness to all Member States. For the ERA Framework impact assessment
exercise, DG Research & Innovation developed in collaboration with the
DEMETER consortium running Nemesis a number of scenarios including the
proposal: Business as usual, non-ERA and ERA in partnership. The DEMETER
consortium produced for each of these scenarios results on GDP, exports,
imports, and employment through 2030 compared to the business-as-usual
scenario. The table below presents the description of
the options simulated for this report. In terms of EU and total national R%D
funding, allocation and performance, the simulations use the same hypothesis as
in the impact assessment of Horizon2020 (European Commission, 2011f). In the
current simulations, the main difference consists in the share of national
funding allocated to pan-European activities (basic and applied research),
without increasing total national budget. In terms of performance, the
coefficient attributed to pan-European funding is intermediate between the
national and European ones used and justified in the Impact Assessment of
Horizon 2020, as it is not possible to calculate better coefficients due to the
lack of data on pan-European funding. Table 9: Description of the options simulated with NEMESIS || BAU || Funding reallocated to transnational cooperation FP funding real growth rate 2013-2020 || 2013:8.31 2014: 10.7 2020: 15.3 || 2013:8.31 2014: 10.7 2020: 15.5 FP funding real growth rate 2021-2030 || Increase further every year by 450 million and adjust for inflation (2%) || Increase further every year by 450 million and adjust for inflation (2%) Share of latest available national R&D intensity competitive funding allocated to transnational bottom-up research within the ERA framework (%) || 0 || Increases gradually to 2% by 2020 Share of latest available national R&D intensity competitive funding allocated to transnational top-down research within the ERA framework (%) || 3.3% in 2013 gradually reaches 3.4% in 2020 || 3.3% in 2013 gradually reaches 5.3% in 2020 ERA Framework funding crowding-in factor private || 0.9 || 0.9 ERA Framework funding crowding-in factor public || 0.3 || 0.3 Multiplier for R&D resulting from ERA framework funding || 6% better than national funding || 6% better than national funding Allocation of FP funding to EU Member States || Based on innovation performance || Based on innovation performance Allocation of FP funding to basic and applied research || 40% basic, 60% applied || 40% basic, 60% applied Allocation of FP applied research funding to sectors within Member States || Grandfathering || Grandfathering FP funding crowding-in factor for the private sector (net additional funding generated) || 1.1 || 1.1 FP funding crowding-in factor for the public sector || 0.5 || 0.5 National funding crowding-in factor for the private sector (net additional funding generated) Non-ERA activities || 0.7 || 0.7 National funding crowding-in factor for the public sector Non-ERA activities || 0 || 0 Multiplier for R&D resulting from EC funding || 15 percent better than national || 15 percent better than national Multiplier for R&D resulting from national funding || National || National Intersectorial spillovers || + || + International spillovers || + || + Figure 6 and Figure 7 below present the
results of the simulations on GDP and employment by option, when compared with
maintaining the current plurality of programmes for R&D and Innovation. Figure 6: Additional GDP to be generated by reallocating funding to
transnational activities when compared with maintaining the current plurality
of programmes for R&D and Innovation (left) and additional GDP growth
generated by ERA in combination with Horizon 2020, compared with the impacts on
GDP of Horizon 2020 and of the non-Europe option presented in the Horizon 2020
Impact Assessment (SEC(2011) 1427 final) (right) Figure 7: Additional jobs created when compared with maintaining the current
plurality of programmes for R&D and Innovation (left) and additional jobs
generated by ERA in combination with Horizon 2020, compared with the impacts on
GDP of Horizon 2020 and of the non-Europe option presented in the Horizon 2020
Impact Assessment (SEC(2011) 1427 final) (right) Analysis of costs linked to open,
transparent and merit-based recruitment Key assumptions Number of vacancies affected across the
EU Precise, reliable, comparable data on the
extent of open recruitment in the EU are virtually non-existent, e.g., no data
for example on the number of open research positions per year, nor the number
of internally advertised vacancies per country. However, a 2010 Study by Technopolis
(Technopolis, 2010) estimated that out of the total number of researchers in
the European Higher Education sector (1.3 million HC in 2007 (OECD)), one may
calculate a share of 15% for professors, and 85% of academic related jobs[119]. If we assume an annual
turnover rate of 7%, about 96.000 positions need to be filled each year. Out of
these, 10% may be positions for professors, while the majority of 90% will be
for academic related positions. Affected by a possible lack of open recruitment
are thus around 96.000 positions. One can estimate that the 10% of
professorship positions, 9.600 jobs annually, are subject to open recruitment.
One can then add another share for internally recruited researchers. If we
calculate with 30% to be internally recruited, this would add another 30.000
positions annually within Europe. The professor positions are however the ones,
for which in many EU countries regulations exist requiring public
advertisement. Thus about 30.000 to maximum 40.000 positions are at
stake possibly lacking open recruitment. Cost for filling in a vacancy As in any recruitment process, transaction
costs occur on both sides: the hiring organisation and the individual. As a
result, economic reasoning may define to some extent, which positions are required
to be publicly advertised and which could also be internally advertised prior
to a potential public advertisement. While publishing posts assures greatest
access to the available pool of qualified candidates, it often requires
allocation of resources for outreach and advertising and may lengthen the
recruitment process. There are first the search costs of the hiring
organisation. Time consuming internal discussions about the job profile, ads in
daily newspapers or journals, administrative follow-up, setting-up and
functioning of a search committee/selection panel, these all are cost factors
linked to the search. They can be substantially augmented when potential
candidates are invited for an interview and their travelling reimbursed. The costs for recruiting a single employee
vary from country to country, region to region, even city to city. They vary
between function groups as well as professions. Thus according to estimates
that are provided by recruiting agencies, the costs can vary between €2,000
and €50,000. Agencies are more often used when either higher positions are
offered or specialists are required. In all other cases, companies’ internal
human resource departments are the central unit dealing with recruitment issues
(Technopolis, 2010) Direct recruitment costs include the
following items: ·
Advertising ·
Agency and search firm fees ·
Costs associated with setting up a panel (use of
valuable human resources, appointing a foreigner on the panel) ·
Human resources to deal with potential large
number of applicants, provide feedback, deal with appeals ·
Travel costs incurred by both recruiters and
applicants ·
Relocation costs Technopolis (2010) calculated for the
annually 9,600 university professors to be recruited average recruitment costs
of €20.000 (most of this is time spent on search, reading and assessing
of documents, attending dedicated faculty meetings and selection boards, etc.)
and €5.000 for the formerly internally recruited personnel. Much of this
amount is already spent on the subject given that many universities do publish
most or all of their jobs and follow recruitment and selection processes. Thus
the real net extra is an unknown fraction of this amount. By and large and given that the cost for
filling in a vacancy (research-related or professor position) varies from
€5.000-20,000, it can be assumed that the cost for filling in a vacancy is
equal to one or two month researcher salary. The heterogeneity of the situation in each
Member States presents a challenge. For countries such as the UK with a
relatively open and transparent recruitment system, there may be (virtually) no
additional costs required but for other countries at the other extreme, such as
Italy, Greece, Romania, Bulgaria the costs of applying principles of open, transparent
recruitment may require additional costs close to the average figures mentioned
above, e.g., in institutions lacking a proper human resources strategy or with
an underfunded/understaffed human resources department. There are equally transaction costs on the
side of the candidate, for example, of his or her search costs, but also
mobility and social costs – the candidate may have to move, quit family and
friends and encounter thus social costs. Analysis of gender impacts Several studies indicate that increased
female participation leads to increased research and innovation performance
through: –
benefitting from a wider talent pool of human
resources –
diversified teams of researchers enhance the
robustness of the decisions due to wider expertise, knowledge sharing and
diverse points of view The following exercises quantified the
contribution of female participation on performance and economic impacts: –
McKinsey & Company
(2007) found that those with
the highest level of gender diversity in top management positions outperformed
their sector competitors in terms of return on equity by 10%, in earnings
before interest and taxes by 48%, and in 1.7 times higher stock price growth
during the period 2005-2007). –
McKinsey & Company
(2007) shows that the increase
in female employment has been an important driver of European economic growth
over the last 10 years. Closing the gap between female and male employment
rates would boost US GDP by as much as 9% and the Eurozone GDP by as much as
13% –
Sáinz Ibáñez, Milagros, Beatriz López, and Ana
González Ramos (2010) shows that ICT research groups in
public institutions in Spain with more than 20% women have better academic
performance results in terms of a higher number of (a) international
competitive research projects, (b) articles published in international
journals, and (c) publications with a higher impact factor –
Turner, (Air Liquide, EDF, Shell and
Schlumberger) (2006; 2009) shows that a 10% increase of
gender diversity at R&D teams in private companies level would lead to an
increase of 0.7% in individual performance. Similarly, on the group level, more
gender diverse teams scored better on the performance scale: an increase from
27% to 50% of gender diversity in teams would raise the probability of on-time
delivery of priority deliverables by 8.5% and raise the probability that real
costs will be smaller than anticipated costs by 15. More gender diverse teams
improve individual and collective R&D performance. –
Østergaard, Timmermans, and Kristinsson (2011) found that gender diversity among 1648 Danish firms had the second
strongest relationship with a firm's likelihood to innovate after educational
diversity –
As Cavalcanti and Tavares (2007) contend, a
greater gender pay gap discourages women from participating fully in the labour
market, with negative consequences for growth per capita. According to their
model, if the US were to have the same level of gender pay inequality as Egypt,
its output per capita would be 42.68% below its actual level. Analysis of costs and benefits of open
access: a comparison between Denmark, Netherlands and the UK Description of the Model 1.1. Main characteristics: A spread
sheet model to estimate the impacts of increases in ‘accessibility’ and
‘efficiency’ on returns to R&D over 20 years in a 20 by 20 matrix, with
three data inputs: (i) R&D expenditure, (ii) annual costs associated with
the publishing model, and (iii) annual savings resulting from the publishing
model (in the net cost scenarios only). 1.2. Assumptions and parameters Key parameters include: (i) the rate of social
return to R&D, (ii) the rate of depreciation of the underlying stock of
knowledge, (iii) the discount rate applied to costs and benefits to estimate
net present value, (iv) the rate of growth of R&D expenditure, (v) the rate
of growth of costs associated with the alternative publishing scenario being
explored, (vi) the average lag between publication or self-archiving and
returns to R&D in years, and (vii) the average lag between R&D
expenditure and publication in years. 1.3. Transition versus ‘steady-state’
alternative: Because of the lag between research expenditure and the
realisation of economic and social returns to that research, the impact on
returns to R&D is lagged (by 10 years in the transitional scenario) and the
value of those returns discounted accordingly. This reflects that fact that a
shift to open access publishing or self-archiving would be prospective and not
retrospective, and the economic value of impacts of enhanced accessibility and
efficiency would not be reflected in returns to R&D until those returns are
realised. An alternative approach would be to model a hypothetical alternative
‘steady-state’ system for alternative publishing models in which the benefits
of historical increases in accessibility and efficiency enter the model in year
one. This would reflect the situation in an alternative system, after the
transition had worked through and was no longer affecting returns to R&D.
The model used herein focuses on the transition and explores alternative models
through a series of scenarios over a 20 year transitional period. However, the
possible impacts in a hypothetical ‘steady-state’ alternative system are
explored indicatively by introducing the estimated annual increase in returns
into year one. This effectively removes the lag, but is no more than indicative
because it does not include the recurring gains from historical expenditures
occurring before year one. 1.4. National versus worldwide
scenario: the study also distinguishes between a realisation of open access
policies primarily on the national level or on the global level, where
additional benefits can be reaped. However, this exercise has been undertaken
for DK and NL only, not for the UK. Cost-benefit analysis in Denmark, the
Netherlands and the UK 2.1. Cost-benefit analysis Denmark -- || Costs || Savings || Return || Benefit/Cost ratio Scenario 1: national Open Access (OA) only (unilateral) Transitional Model Gold OA[120] || 3024 || 4724 || 1504 || 2.1 Transitional Model Green OA[121] || 160 || 31 || 1504 || 9.6 Steady State Model Gold OA || 3024 || 4724 || 16824 || 7.1 Steady State Model Green OA || 160 || 31 || 16824 || 105.2 Scenario 2: Worldwide OA Transitional Model Gold OA || 3024 || 9337 || 1504 || 3.6 Transitional Model Green OA || 160 || 2741 || 1504 || 26.5 Steady State Model Gold OA || 3024 || 9337 || 16824 || 8.7 Steady State Model Green OA || 160 || 2741 || 16824 || 122.1 Comments and
source: Houghton (2009a)[122] Adapted from Net costs
scenario Denmark, taking figures for all gold and green OA activities (not just
implementation in Higher Education). Figures in DKK millions Interpretation: As in the previous case study, these cost-benefit comparisons
suggest that the additional returns to R&D resulting from enhanced
accessibility and efficiency alone would be sufficient to cover the costs of
parallel open access self-archiving without subscription cancellations (i.e.
‘Green open access'). When estimated savings are added to generate net costs
there is a substantial increase in the benefit/cost ratios, and for both open
access publishing and self-archiving alternatives (i.e. ‘Gold open access’ and
‘Green open access’) the benefits exceed the costs, even in transition.
Indicative modelling of post-transition ‘steady-state’ alternative systems
suggests that, once established, alternative open access publishing and/or
self-archiving systems would produce substantially greater net benefits. For
example, during a transitional period it is estimated that, in an open access
world: ·
The combined cost savings and benefits from
increased returns to R&D resulting from open access publishing all journal
articles produced in Denmark’s universities using an ‘author-pays’ system would
be around 3 times the costs; ·
The combined cost savings and benefits from open
access self-archiving in parallel with subscription publishing (i.e. ‘Green
open access’) would be around 27 times the costs; ·
The combined cost savings and benefits from an
alternative open access self-archiving system with overlay production and
review services (i.e. ‘overlay journals’) would be around 4 times the costs Indicative modelling of post-transition
‘steady-state’ alternative systems returns benefits of around 7 to 10 times
costs for open access publishing and self-archiving with overlay services, more
than 100 times the costs for the ‘Green open access’ self-archiving. Cost-benefit analysis Netherlands -- || Costs || Savings || Return || Benefit/Cost ratio Scenario 1: national Open Access only (unilateral) Transitional Model Gold OA[123] || 636 || 1010 || 358 || 2.1 Transitional Model Green OA[124] || 124 || 13 || 358 || 3.0 Steady State Model Gold OA || 636 || 1010 || 3737 || 7.5 Steady State Model Green OA || 124 || 13 || 3737 || 30.3 Scenario 2: Worldwide OA Transitional Model Gold OA || 636 || 1987 || 358 || 3.7 Transitional Model Green OA || 124 || 631 || 358 || 8.0 Steady State Model Gold OA || 636 || 1987 || 3737 || 9.0 Steady State Model Green OA || 124 || 631 || 3737 || 35.3 Comments/Source: Houghton (2009b)[125] Adapted from Net costs
scenario the Netherlands, taking figures for all gold and green OA activities
(not just implementation in Higher Education). Figures in EUR millions Interpretation: Similar to the results for DK and NL the comparisons for the UK
suggest that the additional returns to R&D resulting from enhanced
accessibility and efficiency alone would be sufficient to cover the costs of
parallel open access self-archiving without subscription cancellations (i.e.
‘Green open access’). When estimated savings are added to generate net costs
there is a substantial increase in the benefit/cost ratios, and for both open
access publishing and self-archiving alternatives (i.e. ‘Gold open access’ and
‘Green open access’) the benefits exceed the costs, even in transition.
Indicative modelling of post-transition ‘steady-state’ alternative systems
suggests that, once established, alternative open access publishing and/or
self-archiving systems would produce substantially greater net benefits. For
example, during a transitional period it is estimated that, in an open access
world: ·
The combined cost savings and benefits from
increased returns to R&D resulting from open access publishing all journal
articles produced in Netherlands universities would be around 3 times the costs ·
The combined cost savings and benefits from open
access self-archiving in parallel with subscription publishing (i.e. ‘Green
open access') would be around 7 times the costs; ·
The combined cost savings and benefits from open
access self-archiving with overlay production and review services (i.e.
‘overlay journals’) around 4 times the costs. Indicative modelling of post-transition
‘steady-state’ alternative systems returns benefits of around 7 to 8 times costs
for open access publishing and overlay services models and around 30 times the
costs for the open access self-archiving. Cost benefit analysis United Kingdom -- || Costs || Savings || Return || Benefit/Cost ratio Scenario 1: national Open Access only (unilateral) Transitional Model Gold OA[126] || 2079 || 2575 || 2353 || 2.4 Transitional Model Green OA[127] || 237 || 2697 || 2353 || 21.3 Steady State Model Gold OA || 2079 || 2575 || 26318 || 13.9 Steady State Model Green OA || 237 || 2697 || 26318 || 122.2 Scenario 2: Worldwide OA: not provided Comments/Source: Houghton et. al (2009c)[128] Adapted from Net costs
scenario the UK, taking figures for all gold and green OA activities (not just
implementation in Higher Education). Figures in GBP millions. Interpretation: These comparisons suggest that the additional returns to R&D
resulting from enhanced accessibility and efficiency alone may be sufficient to
cover the costs of parallel open access self-archiving (i.e. Green open
access). When estimated savings are added to generate net costs there is a
substantial increase in the benefit/cost ratios and for both open access
publishing and self-archiving the benefits exceed the costs (even in
transition). Indicative modelling of post-transition ‘steady-state’ alternative
systems suggests that once established alternative open access publishing
and/or self-archiving systems would produce substantially greater benefits,
such that: ·
For the UK nationally, in an alternative open
access journal publishing system the benefits might be 14 times the costs ·
And in an alternative open access self-archiving
system with commercial overlay production and review services the benefits
might be more than 120 times the costs. Conclusion[129] The cost-benefits of the open access or
‘author-pays’ publishing model are very similar across the three countries. In
terms of estimated cost-benefits over a transitional period of 20 years, open
access publishing all articles produced in universities in 2007 would have
produced benefits of around 2 to 3 times the costs in all cases, but showed
benefits of 5 to 6 times costs in the simulated alternative ‘steady state’
model for unilateral national open access, and benefits of around 7 times the
costs in an open access world. The most obvious difference between the
national results relates to the self-archiving and repositories models, which
while promising substantial net benefits in all countries, do not look quite as
good in the Netherlands as they do in the UK, and nothing like as good as they
do in Denmark. This is due to the implied number of repositories, each with
operational overheads. Notwithstanding this difference, the
modelling suggests that more open access alternatives are likely to be more
cost-effective mechanisms for scholarly publishing in a wide range of countries
(large and small), with ‘Gold open access’ or author-pays publishing, the
deconstructed or overlay journals model of self-archiving with overlay
production and review services, and ‘Green open access’ self-archiving in
parallel with subscription publishing progressively more cost-effective. Impacts of open access on the publishing
market The impact of open access on the publishing
market has been documented in several studies and articles, however to date no
definitive conclusion or consensus has emerged. It is worth noting that open
access via the gold route or the green route may entail different impacts on
the publishing market as follows: ·
Gold open access entails a shift from
"subscriber pays" to "author pays" model which does not
imply fundamental changes to the current business models ·
Self-archiving or green open access entails a
potential for disruption of business model but embargo periods have been
foreseen to make sure publishers can recoup their investment. The publishing market: key features[130] Publishers’ behaviour in the market will be
determined by their objectives. The objectives of any one publisher will not be
one-dimensional and in some cases there are likely to be a number of complex,
even mutually exclusive, reasons for engaging in the publishing market. Furthermore
there are many different kinds of publisher, some of which publish large
numbers of journals, each of which may contribute in different ways to the
fulfilment of the publisher’s objectives. Publishers of academic journals fall
into three broad groups ·
Commercial publishers' ·
University presses; ·
Learned societies. It is not straightforward, therefore, to
characterise the objectives of, say, a particular commercial publisher, which
may, for example be publishing journals which it owns alongside those owned by
a learned society, where the price and distribution policy of the latter are
determined largely by the society. The commercial publisher wishes to fulfil
its own objectives, but, in this example, must, at the same time, enable its
society customers to fulfil their needs too. At the opposite end of the
spectrum, a learned society may be involved in publishing solely to disseminate
the work of its specialist area to a relatively small group of subscribers, or
may have a very large subscription base, publishing a broadly based journal of
high quality, from which it earns substantial revenue enabling it to give
bursaries, put on conferences and workshops, establish small research grants
and promote its discipline to the public at large. Sources of revenue for journal
publishers[131] Journal publishers often rely on revenue
from a number and variety of sources, including: ·
Subscription revenues from individual or
institutional subscribers, by title and by ‘Big Deal’ package; ·
Individual article, reprint and pay-per-view
revenues from individual or institutional users; ·
Content licensing from third-parties for access
to content; ·
Advertising revenues from organisations seeking
to sell to the journal’s readers, which can be quite substantial in areas where
there are large professional readerships (e.g. medicine); ·
Author-fees in the form of page charges or fees
for submission and/or publication charged to authors directly or to their
institutions and/or funders; ·
Membership fees from society membership (e.g.
membership fees that include a ‘free’ journal); and ·
Sponsorship and support in the form of financial
support for the operation of the journal. Impacts of open access on the publishing
market and on jobs Some studies have noted the potential for
availability of articles on open access archives and repositories to have a
negative impact on subscriptions. RIN et al. (2011)[132] take a 10% loss of
subscriptions as an underlying assumption for its green open access scenario.
However, to date no definitive evidence of the impact of open access on the
publishing market has been produced in the academic literature. It is worth
noting that arXiv has had no obvious impact on subscriptions to physics
journals despite extensive coverage and years of operation (Pinfield 2007),32
and the relationship between arXiv and journals in the areas concerned may be
positive, rather than negative (Swan 2005). The same has been said of Nature
Precedings (Hannay and Spencer 2008).[133]
Publishers appear to have adjusted to the twelve-month embargo period required
by the US National Institutes of Health (NIH) without a significant loss of
subscriptions. In spite of the uptake of Open Access publishing, including more
than 200 Open Access mandates worldwide, the profit and margins of scientific
publishers have remained healthy over recent years.[134] Given the fact that publisher's use a
variety of income streams as well as the different categories of publishers
(see above) no reliable predictions on positive or negative impact on jobs can
be made. Additionally, potential job gains through non-for profit open access
publishers and increased competition – hence the potential entry of new players
in the market – would also need to be factored in. Due to this complex
situation an estimation of the impact on jobs cannot be provided. Other impacts on publishers[135] Open access publishing (especially
author-pays) may well make revenue more predictable and stable, as it scales
more easily to research output than have library budgets, growing with research
expenditure and providing a revenue stream that is growing. This would reduce
the level of risk and should, over time, be reflected in a reduced user cost of
capital for open access publishers. Open access publishers are less likely to
need branded proprietary access systems, reducing the need for each publisher
to develop expensive proprietary access systems, and reducing expenditure on IT
skills and equipment while increasing the use of hosting services. Open access journals are more visible and
more useful, and are more likely to attract submissions and advertising
revenue, thereby increasing potential revenue growth opportunities. Hybrid
journals may also become more visible through offering open/author choice and
grow subscriptions and subscription revenue as a result Learned societies and associations may
raise their profile, and that of their discipline, by publishing open access
journals and/or hosting open access content (e.g. disciplinary open access
repositories). This might contribute to membership growth and revenue growth.
Learned societies and associations may also develop new revenue streams through
the provision of overlay services to the open access content (e.g. peer review,
specialist portals, etc.). Annex 5: Screening and selection of the specific measures for the
policy options 1. Competitive and open national
research systems Pre-screening and selection of potential
measures to address the problem Several potential measures were considered
and screened in order to identify the pros and cons of each of them: ·
Member States' reforms for reducing barriers to allocating funding on a competitive basis
with international peer review systems Assessment of pros and cons: the advantage of this measure is that it leaves up to Member States
to determine the most relevant reforms to be put in place given the national
context. This is all the more important as existing evidence shows that there
is no 'optimal' share of project-based funding vs. institutional funding. On
the other hand, the voluntary nature of this measure means that research
stakeholders or Member States not supporting the measure may not adopt the
necessary reforms. This measure was retained in policy option 2 and 3. ·
Legislative measure at EU level on the use of peer review evaluation based on international
standards for all national project-based funding. Assessment of pros and cons: the advantage of this measure is that all projects across the EU
will be subject to common international peer review systems. However, since
several Member States have already such peer review evaluation systems in
place, a regulatory measure at EU level would entail unnecessary burden on
these national systems (i.e. they will have to change existing evaluation
systems) without additional benefits. This measure was included in policy
option 3 and 4. ·
Peer review evaluation system at EU level for
national projects: all national bottom-up projects
would be assessed through an EU peer review evaluation system based on
international standards. A unique score would be allocated to each project.
This system could de facto constitute an extension of the remit of the
ERC to all national projects. Assessment of pros and cons: the advantage of this measure is that all projects across the EU
will be assessed using a unique evaluation mechanism. This would allow the
comparability of projects between countries, as each project would be allocated
a unique EU-wide score. This measure may act as a powerful incentive for
national research teams and researchers to improve the quality of their proposals.
However, this measure may encounter strong opposition amongst research
stakeholders wishing to maintain the status quo (sheltered funding). It would
entail heavy financial burden for the Commission. This measure was not retained
for the policy options. 2. Enhanced co-operation in research
between Member States through systems interoperability, synchronised calls and
common international peer review system Pre-screening and selection of potential
measures to address the problem Several potential measures were considered
and screened in order to identify the pros and cons of each of them: ·
Support to Member States' reforms to remove legal, administrative or other types of obstacles remain
to the adoption of minimum rules for the interoperability of research
programmes involved in cross-border operations, including joint actions, and
for common international peer review Assessment of pros and cons: the advantage of this measure is that it leaves up to Member States
to determine the most relevant reforms to be put in place given the national
context. This is all the more important as the type of barriers varies amongst
Member States and within Member States (i.e. different national programmes may
have different barriers). On the other hand, the voluntary nature of this
measure means that research stakeholders or Member States not supporting the
measure may not adopt the necessary reforms. This measure was included in
policy option 2 and 3. ·
Support to Member States and stakeholder
organisations for launching pilot call(s) within
the framework of Joint Programming or other existing transnational cooperation
mechanism, with the support of the Commission for synchronising the calls and
for the international peer review evaluation of proposals Assessment of pros and cons: the measure provides an adequate level of flexibility as Member
States identify the most relevant type of pilot calls and structures for
implementing them. Another advantage of this measure is that new calls are
implemented through existing mechanisms (e.g. Joint Programming) which are
well-known by Member States and the research community. This should increase
the likelihood of successful implementation. On the other hand, there is a risk
of slow take-up by Member States and research actors given the voluntary nature
of the measure. This measure was included in policy option 2 and 3. ·
Stakeholder organisations identify and agree
on modalities and modus operandi for the
organisation of joint calls based on common international peer review Assessment of pros and cons: the clear advantage of this option is that stakeholders can identify
and set up modalities which are tailored to the characteristics of domestic
research systems. No potential limit was identified for this measure. This
measure was included in policy option 2. ·
Support measure for the implementation of the voluntary guidelines on Joint Programming. This measure
would entail regular peer reviews amongst Member States and a monitoring system
by the Commission Assessment of pros and cons: a clear advantage of this measure is that it would support Member
States in implementing the guidelines on Joint Programming, thus leading to
increased interoperability of national research programmes in the long term.
However, a significant limit of this measure is that increased interoperability
between research programmes will most likely not be achieved by 2014, as this
would require at least a couple of years. This measure was therefore not
retained for the policy options. ·
Member States co-ordinate policies on research infrastructures and adopt measures allowing the
opening of existing and new European research infrastructures to the entire
user community Assessment of pros and cons: this measure should lead to increased access to research infrastructures
of pan-European interest. This option also allows Member to adopt a flexible
approach, which is in line with the current mechanisms within the ESFRI Forum.
This measure was included in policy options 2 and 3. ·
Identification and setting up of harmonised
monitoring, evaluation and impact assessment principles and procedures for
pan-European research infrastructures Assessment of pros and cons: a clear advantage of this measure is that it builds on and expands
on-going activities carried out by ESFRI members. Harmonised principles and
procedures should support improved foresight and monitoring of both national
and pan-European research infrastructures, whilst facilitating decision-making
within ESFRI. A potential limit of this measure is that some Member States may
not fully support the use of the proposed principles and procedures, as this
remains a voluntary measure. This measure was included in policy option 2. ·
EU legislative measure requiring Member
States to increase cross-border cooperation through
the adoption of minimum standards for research programme interoperability, the
setting up of synchronised calls and a common international peer review system
and the adoption of principles to reinforce access to pan-European research
infrastructures and their evaluation and monitoring. Assessment of pros and cons: such a measure would significantly facilitate cross-border
cooperation, as standards and conditions (related to national research
programmes, evaluation mechanisms) would be harmonised across Member States.
However, the implementation of this measure can prove expensive. Moreover, the
adoption mechanism can take too long to deliver by 2014 and probably including
only principles of a limited degree of ambition. This measure was included in
policy option 3 and 4. 3. An open labour market for
researchers 3.1. Application of principles for open
recruitment in public research systems Pre-screening and selection of potential
measures to address the problem Several potential measures were considered
and screened in order to identify the pros and cons of each of them: ·
Legislative measure at EU level: binding measures requiring Member States to adopt open, transparent
and merit-based recruitment for research positions in the public sector. Assessment of pros and cons: the advantage of a regulatory measure is that less-advanced Member
States would have to implement open recruitment. However, such a measure may
prove difficult to implement given the diversity of national research systems
and given the lack of precise data on the types of barriers which exist at
Member State level. Moreover, recruitment and hiring policies are often linked
to the level of autonomy of universities and research organisations in Member
States. Moreover, the appointment of some senior or permanent positions is
centrally determined in several Member States. The effective implementation of
a legislative measure would entail reforms at Member State level. This measure
was included in policy option 3 and 4. ·
Removal of legal, administrative and other
types of barriers: Member States adopt
relevant regulatory measures for ensuring that research organisations can
implement open, transparent and merit-based recruitment for public research
positions. Assessment of pros and cons: given the diversity of national research systems, this option
allows Member States to identify the key barriers preventing the open
recruitment of researchers. This type of measure is particularly relevant given
that existing barriers are local/context specific and hence need to be
addressed within the national context. The potential limit of this measure is
that removing existing barriers may require regulatory changes (e.g. autonomy
of universities, changes to appointment rules and processes, civil service
law), which may delay the successful implementation of the measure This measure
was included in policy option 2. ·
Stakeholder organisations to adopt principles
for open, transparent and merit-based recruitment in the public research
sector. Assessment of
pros and cons: the advantage of this measure is that universities and
research organisations would be able to draw on a larger pool of candidates,
thus selecting the best profiles. This measure would also ensure equal
opportunities - particularly for women and young researchers - at all stages of
the selection process. Staffing autonomy and the possibility to recruit the
best candidates should ultimately lead to increased scientific performance
within institutions. The limit of this measure is that some institutions may
not be able to implement open recruitment given the existence of barriers
(legal, administrative) at national level. Moreover, the implementation of all
principles and rules linked to open recruitment may prove expensive for
less-endowed institutions. This measure was included in policy option 2. ·
Reinforced implementation of open recruitment
within the framework of the European Partnership for Researchers (EPR): as part of the EPR and based on the open method of coordination, a
common definition (including criteria) of open recruitment would be agreed
amongst Member States. Specific targets and actions to be implemented would be
then defined for each Member State linked to a regular monitoring mechanism. Assessment of
pros and cons: the setting up of this measure should be relatively smooth
and straightforward as Member States are already cooperating within the EPR.
However, it may prove difficult to ensure that all Member States fully commit
and engage in an equal manner (Member States' involvement has been uneven
within the EPR). This measure also entails lengthy procedures and consultation
mechanisms amongst Member States which would not allow for quick and visible
progress by 2014. Hence, this measure was not included in the policy options. 3.2. Integrated strategies to support
the career development of researchers Pre-screening and selection of potential
measures to address the problem Several potential measures were considered
and screened in order to identify the pros and cons of each of them: ·
Member States develop national frameworks to support the career development of researchers Assessment of pros and cons: the advantage of this option is that Member States determine the
most adequate measures to be put in place given the local/national context. However,
a potential limit of this measure is that setting up national framework may be
a lengthy process as this often entails consultation processes and
consensus-building with key research actors. This measure was retained in
policy option 2 and 3. ·
Stakeholders organisations develop
institutional strategies to support the career
development of researchers in line with the "Human Resources Strategy for
Researchers" Assessment of pros and cons: the advantage of this option is that stakeholder organisations can
identify local needs and set up tailored strategies to address the career
development of researchers. The potential limit of this measure is that the
implementation of such strategies may prove costly for less-endowed
institutions or stakeholders located in less-advanced Member States or regions.
This measure was retained in policy option 2 and 3. ·
Exchange of best practice and peer review Assessment of pros and cons: this measure would benefit less-advanced Member States by providing
them with the required expertise and capacity building. The limit of this
measure is that there is a risk of limited action and follow-up at national or
institutional level, i.e. practices are exchanged but not implemented. As the
exchange of best practice is already on-going and similar types of activities
have already taken within the FPs, this measure was considered in the Baseline.
3.3. Innovative doctoral training
linking private and public sectors Pre-screening and selection of potential
measures to address the problem Several potential measures were considered
and screened in order to identify the pros and cons of each of them: ·
Member States support the setting up of "innovative"
doctoral training programmes Assessment of pros and cons: Member States already fund a variety of national doctoral
programmes. The advantage of this measure is that funding of national doctoral
programmes will be linked to the Principles for Innovative Doctoral Training.
No cons were identified for this measure. This measure was retained in policy
option 2 and 3. ·
Stakeholder organisations implement the
"Principles For Innovative Doctoral Training" Assessment of pros and cons: the advantage of this measure is that stakeholder organisations are
the key actors responsible for implementing the principles for innovative
doctoral training. This means that research organisations and universities can
reform and tailor the principles given existing needs. A potential limit of
this measure is that the implementation of the principles may prove expensive for
less-endowed institutions. This measure was retained in policy option 2 and 3. ·
Exchange of best practice and international
peer review mechanisms amongst Member States Assessment of pros and cons: the setting up of this measure should be relatively smooth and
straightforward as Member States are already cooperating within the EPR on this
topic. However, it may prove difficult to ensure that all Member States fully
commit and engage in an equal manner (Member States' involvement has been
uneven within the EPR). This measure also entails lengthy procedures and
consultation mechanisms amongst Member States which would not allow for quick
and visible progress by 2014. This measure was not retained for the policy
options. 3.4. Application of principles for cross-border
portability and accessibility of national grants Pre-screening and selection of potential
measures to address the problem Several potential measures were considered
and screened in order to identify the pros and cons of each of them: ·
Legislative measure at EU level: binding measures requiring Member States to adopt cross-border
portability and accessibility of identified national grants Assessment of pros and cons: the advantage of a regulatory measure is that it would create a
level playing field between funders of research and would enable tighter
cooperation between them. However, an EU-wide regulatory approach would be
difficult to implement as funding systems and their underlying principles
differ between Member States and may lead to brain-drain in less endowed Member
States if it is undertaken without some precautions. As little is known
regarding existing barriers at Member State level, there is currently not a
strong case for regulatory intervention. This measure was included in policy option
3 and 4. ·
Removal of legal, administrative and other
types of barriers: Member States adopt
relevant regulatory measures on cross-border portability and accessibility of
identified national grants Assessment of pros and cons: given the diversity of national research systems, this option
allows Member States to identify the key barriers preventing portability of and
accessibility to grants. This type of measure allows each Member State to
calibrate its policy action according to the national/local situation. A
challenge linked to this measure lies with the (potentially lengthy)
identification of those grants which will be subject to portability at Member
State level. This measure was included in policy option 2. ·
Stakeholders to adopt principles for the cross-border
portability and accessibility of identified national grants. Assessment of
pros and cons: the advantage of this measure is that it will allow
stakeholders to identify which grants they want to make accessible and portable
and which ones they do not. The potential limit of this measure is that some
institutions may not be able to implement cross-border portability and
accessibility of identified national grants given the existence of barriers
(legal, administrative) at national level. This measure was included in policy
option 2. ·
Reinforced implementation of grant
portability within the EPR: as part of the EPR and
based on the open method of coordination, each Member State would identify
those national grants which should be subject to portability and accessibility.
Specific actions to be implemented would be then defined for each Member State
linked to a regular monitoring mechanism. Assessment of pros and cons: the setting up of this measure should be relatively smooth and
straightforward as Member States are already cooperating within the EPR[136]. However, it may prove
difficult to ensure that all Member States fully commit and engage in an equal
manner (Member States' involvement has been uneven within the EPR). This
measure also entails lengthy procedures and consultation mechanisms amongst
Member States. Hence, this measure was not included in the policy options. ·
EU-wide promotion and take-up mechanism for the 'Money follows Researcher' (MfR) scheme: stakeholders, in
cooperation with the Commission, adopt promotion and support measures for the
further take-up of the MfR scheme. Assessment of
pros and cons: a clear advantage of this measure is that it could further
build on and reinforce the existing MfR scheme agreed by an important number of
institutions across Europe. However, the initiative does not address the issue
of opening up national schemes to non-nationals or non-residents. The
elaboration of principles and guidelines is foreseen to take a considerable
amount of. For this reason, this measure was not included in the policy
options. 4. Gender strategies and action plans
Pre-screening and selection of potential
measures to address the problem Several potential measures were considered
and screened in order to identify the pros and cons of each of them: ·
Legislative measure at EU level: binding measures to ensure that Member States adopt and implement
gender strategies and action plans in the field of research. Assessment of pros and cons: the advantage of a regulatory measure is that less-advanced Member
States would have to adopt work-life balance measures. However, such a
legislative measure could constitute an administrative and/or compliance burden
for those Member States which are already well advanced. Moreover, the current
state-of-play varies significantly amongst Member States and work-life balance
policies are often an integral part of social and employment policies. The
identification of the relevant provisions and measures to be put in place
should be left with the Member States. In addition, the implementation of
legislative measures may take a long time, notably if this requires
transposition at Member State level. This measure was included in policy option
4. ·
Gender strategies and action plans: set of voluntary measures which are part of a broader strategy.
Action plans and strategies can be adopted and implemented at national and
institutional level. Assessment of pros and cons: given the diversity of Member States' situation, gender action
plans and strategies allow national authorities and institutions to identify
the most relevant measures to be implemented, this ensuring that measures are
tailored to the local context and needs. The relative advantage of this measure
is that institutions fully engage in the process by setting up their own plans
and strategies. One of the limits of this measure is that the implementation of
action plans and strategies at institutional level can only succeed if existing
measures and incentives are effectively implemented in the field of research
(i.e. adequate work-life balance policies). This measure was included in policy
option 2 and 3. ·
Exchange of best practice and peer reviews: setting up of EU-level coordinated activities allowing for the
exchange of best practice and peer reviewed amongst Member States. Assessment of
pros and cons: this type of activities would benefit less-advanced Member
States by providing them with the required expertise and capacity building. The
limit of this measure is that there is a risk of limited action and follow-up
at national or institutional level, i.e. practices are exchanged but not
implemented. As similar types of activities have already been taken within the
FPs, this measure was not included in the policy options. ·
Research funding provisions and conditions related to research implementation: calls for
proposals and project funding could include provisions allowing for flexible
working arrangements to accommodate career breaks. Project funding could also
include provisions requiring the gender dimension to be included and assessed. Assessment of
pros and cons: this measure would allow Member States and research funders
to include gender-related conditions in their funding decisions. The advantage
of this measure is that Member States and research funders are free to
determine the type of funding that would be subject to these conditions taking
into account the local context and needs. Such provisions can be integrated
into wider gender action plans and strategies (see above) or legislative
measures. No cons were identified for this measure. This measure was included
in policy option 2 and 3 as part of the measures and instruments included in
the gender action plans and strategies. ·
Awareness raising and information measures Assessment of pros and cons: awareness and information campaigns are an effective tool for
changing perceptions and attracting more women into science. The impact of
awareness raising measures is often visible in the long term and is effective
provided that related support measures and conditions are also in place (i.e.
work-life balance policies). This activity is already part of the baseline
scenario, therefor it was not included in the policy options. ·
Trainings for researchers on gender aware
research Assessment of pros and cons: the advantage of this measure is that bespoke training is provided
to those performing research, which means that those researchers will be more
likely to include the gender dimension in research. Trainings provide
researchers with hands-on experience and are likely to have a greater impact
than awareness and information campaigns. No significant cons were identified
for this measure. This measure was included in policy option 2 and 3 as part of
the measures and instruments included in the gender action plans and
strategies. 5. Free circulation of scientific
knowledge and technologies Pre-screening and selection of potential
measures to address the problem Several potential measures were considered
and screened in order to identify the pros and cons of each of them: ·
Adoption and coordination of open access
policies at Member State and institutional level (stakeholder
organisations) laying down common standards for repositories, access
conditions, incentives for researchers and research performing organisations and
open access requirements linked to funding Assessment of pros and cons: the advantage of this measure is that it leaves up to Member States
to determine the most relevant reforms to be put in place given the national
context. This is all the more important as the development of open access
policies and their level of implementation varies significantly amongst Member
States. A potential limit of this measure is that Member States' commitment may
vary given the voluntary nature of this measure. This measure was included in
policy option 2. ·
Legislative measure at EU level for the implementation of open access to all publicly-funded
publications and relevant research data. Assessment of pros and cons: the advantage of this measure is that full open access to
publications would be achieved, provided that Member States fully transpose and
implement the Directive. Such a measure would ensure a level playing field with
regard to access to publications and data, which is particularly important for
researchers located in less-advanced regions or less-endowed institutions.
However, the adoption and transposition of a Directive will take at least 3
years in an optimistic scenario which will leave stakeholders in a wait-and-see
mode for a considerable amount of time. Furthermore, the implementation of this
Directive may entail unnecessary administrative burden on those Member States
which are already well-advanced (i.e. regulatory changes would be required to
in order to align the national framework with the requirements included in the
Directive). This measure was included in policy option 3 and 4. ·
Setting up of an EU-wide open access network for policy-makers and practitioners for exchanging best practices
and peer reviews Assessment of pros and cons: this measure provides Member States with a maximum level of
flexibility for identifying existing gaps and potential measures to be put in
place given the local context. The exchange of best practices can also help
capacity-building in less-advanced Member States. However, a major limit of
this initiative is that the adoption and implementation of open access policies
by participating Member States may only occur over a period of several years,
with no visible results in 2014. This measure was hence not included in the policy
options. 5.2. Policies and measures to support
the development, take up and cross-border access to digital services for data,
connectivity, computing and research collaboration Pre-screening and selection of potential
measures to address the problem Several potential measures were considered
and screened in order to identify the pros and cons of each of them: ·
Legislative measure at EU level to enforce take up of specific digital services for
identification, repositories and research processes. Assessment of pros and cons: The benefit of this approach would be that it would guarantee
availability of digital research services for all researchers. However, it
would require setting specific requirements for technologies and standards to
be used, with additional costs in implementation and delays in take-up. In the
rapidly changing technological sphere this might lead into taking up of systems
which are old-fashioned when implemented. This measure was included in policy
option 3 and 4. ·
Member States' network for the development and take-up of identification services,
e-infrastructures provision and development for research. Assessment of pros and cons: With this measure, national research and education networking
providers (NRENs) would proceed with supporting digital research services
provision but have problems in getting the research organisations into
integrating their researcher authentication systems into the federated
framework or agreeing to provide external services to their researchers. This
slows down the progress of cross-border access and collaboration, giving uneven
access to researchers as their possibilities of participation depend on the
home university/research organisation or home country. The development of
digital services for research depends on the national priorities, which would
result into uneven progress on European level, and slow progress in enabling
cross-border collaboration with consortia including public and private research
organisations. This measure was discarded. ·
Adoption of digital services policies for
research and education-related public at Member State and institutional level Assessment of pros and cons: this measure would ensure joint progress and work towards setting up
identity, connectivity, data repository, computing and research collaboration
services for cross-border access in all countries and their institutions, but
would allow flexibility in the implementation through different technological
implementations and provision models. Common roadmap for e-infrastructures
development and coordinated European progress on Digital ERA would support also
the smaller MS and organisations to access research services through online
sharing and access of resources across borders. This would improve the cohesion
of ERA and scientific excellence in all Member States. Systematic coordination
of dialogue between MS would require some specific costs, but some aspects of
it are already being implemented with some Member States and the costs overall
would be not be major. Stakeholder support to this solution is expected based
on the results of expert groups and engagement in existing groups, such as High
Level Group of scientific data, GEANT expert group, e-Infrastructures
reflection Groups (e-IRG), e-Infrastructures Policy Forum (e-IPF). This measure
was included in policy option 2. 5.3 Policies and measures supporting
knowledge transfer between academia and industry Pre-screening and selection of potential
measures to address the problem Several potential measures were considered
and screened in order to identify the pros and cons of each of them: ·
Measures by Member States and stakeholder
organisations supporting the mobility of
researchers across sectors, and strengthening the role of knowledge transfer
offices. Assessment of pros and cons: A concerted policy action at EU level will be able to promote what
is not possible to attain by national action only while a voluntary agreement
may be considered as an acceptable and manageable course of action that allows
for flexibility in relation to the diversity of policies within the Member
States. It would build on the well-established Recommendation on Intellectual
Property Management (2008), and achievements already attained in this area and
at the same time will provide the basis for renewed political impetus. The down
side would be the potential for generating significant opposition if it is
perceived as just an additional bureaucratic burden, hampering the academics'
main research mission. This option has been included in policy option 2 and 3. ·
Legislative measure at EU level on knowledge transfer objectives for researchers, e.g.
minimum requirements in researchers' employment contracts and knowledge
transfer and intellectual property transfer rules. Assessment of pros and cons: this measure would increase the transfer of results to the private
sector of publicly funded research by mandating the need for researchers to
engage in knowledge transfer activities and also to be mobile across sectors.
However, this measure has received very little support in the Open Consultation
on ERA (2011) due to its perceived forcefulness and potential lack of
effectiveness. Moreover, the inclusion of KT elements in employment contracts
demands adaptation of employment law conditions which signifies a departure
from the R&D context of the legal basis for ERA. This option was included
in policy option 4. Annex 6: Detailed description of policy option 2 and 3, comparison
of delivering mechanisms and problem tree This annex describes in detail the specific
measures included in policy option 2 and 3. A summary table (Table 12) provides
an overview of the different delivery mechanisms for option 2, 3 and 4. At the
end of the session, the intervention logic is presented. Description of policy option 2 The specific measures included in policy
option 2 are described below and listed by specific objective. Table 10 below
provides an overview of all measures and the main actors responsible for
delivery. More effective national research systems: Member States are invited to: ·
Introduce or enhance competitive funding through
calls for proposals and institutional assessments as the main modes of
allocating public funds to research and innovation, introducing legislative
reforms if necessary ·
Ensure that all public bodies responsible for
allocating research funds apply the core principles of international peer
review The Commission will: ·
Support through the Smart Specialisation
Platform Member States and regions in using Structural Funds to develop
research capacity and smart specialisation strategies, including support to
joint research programmes, in line with Cohesion Policy objectives ·
Support mutual learning and the exchange of good
practice between Member States on the removal of national legal and other
barriers to ERA for the priorities set out in this Communication ·
Support ERA Chairs aimed at fostering structural
change in institutions to raise their research quality to international levels
of excellence Optimal transnational co-operation
and competition Member States are invited to: ·
Step up efforts to implement joint research
agendas addressing grand challenges, sharing information about activities in
agreed priority areas, ensuring that adequate national funding is committed and
strategically aligned at European level in these areas and that common ex post
evaluation is conducted ·
Ensure mutual recognition of evaluations that
conform to international peer-review standards as a basis for national funding
decisions ·
Remove legal and other barriers to the
cross-border interoperability of national programmes to permit joint financing
of actions including cooperation with non-EU countries where relevant ·
Confirm financial commitments for the construction
and operation of ESFRI, global, national and regional RIs of pan-European
interest, particularly when developing national roadmaps and the next
Structural Fund programmes ·
Remove legal and other barriers to cross-border
access to RIs Research stakeholder organisations are
invited to: ·
Agree on common funding principles - eligible
costs, reporting requirements, etc. to make national research programmes
compatible, interoperable (cross-border) and simpler for researchers ·
Pilot the use of synchronised calls with, where
possible, single joint international peer review evaluation of proposals as a
basis for funding decisions ·
Further develop and deploy the Lead-Agency,
Money-Follows-Cooperation Line, Money-Follows-Researcher and other models for
cross-border cooperation The Commission will: ·
Pursue, stimulate and participate in
Public-Public Partnerships to address grand challenges as set out in the
Communication on Partnering in Research and Innovation[137] to co-ordinate and leverage
Member States' contributions and ensure close coordination with relevant
activities under Horizon 2020 ·
On the basis of the information supplied by
Member States, map activities in agreed priority areas, with a view to
identifying strengths, weaknesses, gaps and duplications ·
Support Member States and research funding
organisations in implementing joint international peer review evaluations and
setting common funding standards - e.g. through an ERA Mark label recognising
best practice in cross-border research operations ·
Support through Horizon 2020 access to RIs as
well as the on-going overall integration of EU RIs particularly those awarded
ERIC status ·
Encourage Member States to link RI roadmaps to
the ESFRI roadmap and smart specialisation strategies in Structural Funds
co-financed research and innovation programmes, reinforcing the capacity of
less favoured regions to host and participate in RIs of pan-European and
international interest ·
Support training programmes for the management
of such RIs ·
Develop in cooperation with ESFRI, e-IRG and
other stakeholders a Charter of Access setting out common standards and
harmonized access rules and conditions for the use of RIs ·
Work with ESFRI to set priorities for
implementing the Roadmap and to provide advice and guidance to Member States on
overcoming legal, financial or technical obstacles to implementation ·
Define with ESFRI, e-IRG and other stakeholders
common evaluation principles, impact-assessment criteria and monitoring tools
which can be applied in regional, national and European programmes to help
combine funds from different sources ·
Work with e-IRG to promote the alignment of EU
and national approaches to eRI development and use An open labour market for
researchers Member States are invited to: ·
Remove legal and other barriers to the
application of open, transparent and merit based recruitment of researchers ·
Remove legal and other barriers which hamper
cross-border access to and portability of national grants ·
Support a national body to implement the
Declaration of Commitment to provide coordinated personalised information and
services to researchers through the pan-European EURAXES network ·
Support the setting up and running of structured
innovative doctoral training programmes applying the Principles for Innovative
Doctoral Training ·
Create an enabling framework for the
implementation of the HR Strategy for Researchers incorporating the Charter
& Code Research stakeholder organisations are
invited to: ·
Advertise all vacancies on the EURAXESS Jobs
portal using the common profiles established in the European Framework for
Research Careers ·
Fill research positions according to open,
transparent and merit based recruitment procedures proportionate to the level
of the position in line with the basic principles of the Charter & Code and
including non-EU nationals ·
Develop strategies to support the career
development of researchers in line with the HR Strategy for Researchers ·
Define and implement principles for
accessibility to and portability of national grants ·
Provide structured doctoral training based on
the Principles for Innovative Doctoral Training ·
Develop and implement structured programmes to
increase mobility between industry and academia The Commission will: ·
Bridge information gaps to foster mobility and
research career development by assessing and strengthening collaboration and
coordination in the EURAXESS network for researchers to have direct access to
personalised assistance, making it the means of accessing tailor-made
assistance ·
Support the setting up of a European Accreditation
Mechanism for Charter & Code-based human resources management in
universities and publicly-funded research institutions ·
Support the work of a 'pathfinder group' of
countries for the achievement of automatic recognition of comparable degrees ·
Take initiatives to address social security
barriers for researchers in the EU and further facilitate the entry and stay of
third country national researchers by: ·
Clarifying in a Communication EU rules on
coordination of social security schemes for groups of workers with a high level
of intra-EU mobility, including researchers ·
Resuming work on a pension portability Directive
setting minimum standards for the acquisition and preservation of supplementary
pension rights ·
Supporting stakeholders in setting up pan-European
supplementary pension fund(s) for researchers ·
Reviewing Directive 2005/71/EC on a specific
procedure for admitting third country nationals for the purposes of scientific
research. Gender equality and gender
mainstreaming in research Member States are invited to: ·
Create a legal and policy environment and
provide incentives to: ·
remove legal and other barriers to the
recruitment, retention and career progression of female researchers while fully
complying with EU law on gender equality ·
address gender imbalances in decision making
processes ·
strengthen the gender dimension in research
programmes ·
Engage in partnerships with funding agencies,
research organisations and universities to foster cultural and institutional
change on gender - charters, performance agreements, awards ·
Ensure that at least 40% of the
under-represented sex participate in committees involved in recruitment/career
progression and in establishing and evaluating research programmes Research stakeholder organisations are
invited to: ·
Implement institutional change relating to HR
management, funding, decision-making and research programmes through Gender
Equality Plans which aim to: ·
Conduct impact assessment / audits of procedures
and practices to identify gender bias ·
Implement innovative strategies to correct any
bias ·
Set targets and monitor progress via indicators The Commission will: ·
Foster gender equality and the integration of a
gender dimension in Horizon 2020 programmes and projects from inception,
through implementation to evaluation, including through the use of incentives ·
Propose in 2013 a Recommendation to Member
States with common guidelines on institutional change to promote gender
equality in universities and research institutions and dedicate specific funds
to reinforce collaboration between Member States Optimal circulation, access to and
transfer of scientific knowledge Member States are invited to: ·
Define and coordinate their policies on access
to and preservation of scientific information ·
Ensure that public research contributes to Open
Innovation and foster knowledge transfer between public and private sectors
through national knowledge transfer strategies ·
Harmonise access and usage policies for research
and education-related public e-infrastructures and for associated digital
research services enabling consortia of different types of public and private
partners ·
Adopt and implement national strategies for
electronic identity for researchers giving them transnational access to digital
research services Research stakeholder organisations are
invited to: ·
Adopt and implement open access measures for
publications and data resulting from publicly funded research ·
Implement and promote the uptake of electronic
identity and digital research services ·
Ensure optimal interaction and linkages and
strategic partnering between academia and industry and define joint
collaborative research agendas to maximize the use of research results ·
Improve recognition and professionalization of
knowledge transfer activities and strengthen the role of knowledge transfer
offices The Commission will: ·
Establish open access to scientific publications
as a general principle for all EU funded projects in Horizon 2020. For research
data, develop a flexible approach that takes into account different scientific
areas and business-related interests ·
Continue to fund infrastructure projects related
to open access ·
Adopt a Communication and Recommendation to
Member States on access to and preservation of scientific information in the
digital age ·
Propose a roadmap for e-infrastructure
development to support e-Science through open access to research tools and
resources ·
Support activities to raise stakeholder
awareness of open access and e-Science ·
Promote knowledge transfer activities in Europe
through networking of innovative university-business platforms, including
bottom up, practitioner-led initiatives, and sectoral knowledge transfer
offices ·
Work with stakeholders to develop a set of model
consortium agreements to enhance knowledge transfer ·
Facilitate a Member State forum for regular
exchange and reporting on national developments on the provision, take-up and
use of digital research services Table 10 below provides an overview of the
measures and the main actors responsible for delivery. Table 10:
Overview of measures included in policy option 2 and main actors responsible
for delivery (MS: Member States, SHO: stakeholder organisations; EC: European
Commission) || Main actors responsible for delivery Measures || MS || SHO || EC More effective national research systems Introduce or enhance competitive funding through calls for proposals and institutional assessments as the main modes of allocating public funds to research and innovation, introducing legislative reforms if necessary || x || || Ensure that all public bodies responsible for allocating research funds apply the core principles of international peer review || x || || Support through the Smart Specialisation Platform Member States and regions in using Structural Funds to develop research capacity and smart specialisation strategies, including support to joint research programmes, in line with Cohesion Policy objectives || x || || x Support mutual learning and the exchange of good practice between Member States on the removal of national legal and other barriers to ERA for the priorities set out in this Communication || x || || x Support ERA Chairs aimed at fostering structural change in institutions to raise their research quality to international levels of excellence || || || x Optimal transnational co-operation and competition Step up efforts to implement joint research agendas addressing grand challenges, sharing information about activities in agreed priority areas, ensuring that adequate national funding is committed and strategically aligned at European level in these areas and that common ex post evaluation is conducted || x || || Ensure mutual recognition of evaluations that conform to international peer-review standards as a basis for national funding decisions || x || || Remove legal and other barriers to the cross-border interoperability of national programmes to permit joint financing of actions including cooperation with non-EU countries where relevant || x || || Confirm financial commitments for the construction and operation of ESFRI, global, national and regional RIs of pan-European interest, particularly when developing national roadmaps and the next Structural Fund programmes || x || || Remove legal and other barriers to cross-border access to RIs || x || || Agree on common funding principles - eligible costs, reporting requirements, etc. to make national research programmes compatible, interoperable (cross-border) and simpler for researchers || x || x || Pilot the use of synchronised calls with, where possible, single joint international peer review evaluation of proposals as a basis for funding decisions || || x || Further develop and deploy the Lead-Agency, Money-Follows-Cooperation Line, Money-Follows-Researcher and other models for cross-border cooperation || || x || Pursue, stimulate and participate in Public-Public Partnerships to address grand challenges as set out in the Communication on Partnering in Research and Innovation to co-ordinate and leverage Member States' contributions and ensure close coordination with relevant activities under Horizon 2020 || x || x || x On the basis of the information supplied by Member States, map activities in agreed priority areas, with a view to identifying strengths, weaknesses, gaps and duplications || x || || x Support Member States and research funding organisations in implementing joint international peer review evaluations and setting common funding standards - e.g. through an ERA Mark label recognising best practice in cross-border research operations || x || || x Support through Horizon 2020 access to RIs as well as the on-going overall integration of EU RIs particularly those awarded ERIC status || x || || x Encourage Member States to link RI roadmaps to the ESFRI roadmap and smart specialisation strategies in Structural Funds co-financed research and innovation programmes, reinforcing the capacity of less favoured regions to host and participate in RIs of pan-European and international interest || x || || x Support training programmes for the management of such RIs || x || || x Develop in cooperation with ESFRI, e-IRG and other stakeholders a Charter of Access setting out common standards and harmonized access rules and conditions for the use of RIs || || || x Work with ESFRI to set priorities for implementing the Roadmap and to provide advice and guidance to Member States on overcoming legal, financial or technical obstacles to implementation || x || || x Define with ESFRI, e-IRG and other stakeholders common evaluation principles, impact-assessment criteria and monitoring tools which can be applied in regional, national and European programmes to help combine funds from different sources || x || || x Work with e-IRG to promote the alignment of EU and national approaches to eRI development and use || x || || x An open labour market for researchers Remove legal and other barriers to the application of open, transparent and merit based recruitment of researchers || x || || Remove legal and other barriers which hamper cross-border access to and portability of national grants || x || || Support a national body to implement the Declaration of Commitment to provide coordinated personalised information and services to researchers through the pan-European EURAXESS network || x || || x Support the setting up and running of structured innovative doctoral training programmes applying the Principles for Innovative Doctoral Training || x || || Create an enabling framework for the implementation of the HR Strategy for Researchers incorporating the Charter & Code || x || || Advertise all vacancies on the EURAXESS Jobs portal using the common profiles established in the European Framework for Research Careers || || x || x Fill research positions according to open, transparent and merit based recruitment procedures proportionate to the level of the position in line with the basic principles of the Charter & Code and including non-EU nationals || || x || Develop strategies to support the career development of researchers in line with the HR Strategy for Researchers || || x || Define and implement principles for accessibility to and portability of national grants || || x || Provide structured doctoral training based on the Principles for Innovative Doctoral Training || || x || Develop and implement structured programmes to increase mobility between industry and academia || || x || Bridge information gaps to foster mobility and research career development by assessing and strengthening collaboration and coordination in the EURAXESS network for researchers to have direct access to personalised assistance, making it the means of accessing tailor-made assistance || x || || x Support the setting up of a European Accreditation Mechanism for Charter & Code-based human resources management in universities and publicly-funded research institutions || x || x || x Support the work of a 'pathfinder group' of countries for the achievement of automatic recognition of comparable degrees || x || || x Take initiatives to address social security barriers for researchers in the EU and further facilitate the entry and stay of third country national researchers by: – Clarifying in a Communication EU rules on coordination of social security schemes for groups of workers with a high level of intra-EU mobility, including researchers – Resuming work on a pension portability Directive setting minimum standards for the acquisition and preservation of supplementary pension rights – Supporting stakeholders in setting up pan-European supplementary pension fund(s) for researcher – Reviewing Directive 2005/71/EC on a specific procedure for admitting third country nationals for the purposes of scientific research || || || x Gender equality and gender mainstreaming in research Create the appropriate legal and policy environment and provide incentives in order to: – remove legal and other barriers to the recruitment, retention and career progression of female researchers while fully complying with EU law on gender equality – address gender imbalances in decision making processes – strengthen the gender dimension in research programmes || x || || Engage in partnerships with funding agencies, research organisations and universities to foster cultural and institutional change on gender - charters, performance agreements, awards || x || || Ensure that at least 40% of the under-represented sex participate in committees involved in recruitment/career progression and in establishing and evaluating research programmes || x || || Implement institutional change relating to HR management, funding, decision-making and research programmes through Gender Equality Plans which aim to: – Conduct impact assessment / audits of procedures and practices to identify gender bias – Implement innovative strategies to correct any bias – Set targets and monitor progress via indicators || || x || Foster gender equality and the integration of a gender dimension in Horizon 2020 programmes and projects from inception, through implementation to evaluation, including through the use of incentives || || || x Propose in 2013 a Recommendation to Member States with common guidelines on institutional change to promote gender equality in universities and research institutions and dedicate specific funds to reinforce collaboration between Member States || || || x Optimal circulation, access to and transfer of scientific knowledge Define and coordinate their policies on access to and preservation of scientific information || x || || Ensure that public research contributes to Open Innovation and foster knowledge transfer between public and private sectors through national knowledge transfer strategies || x || || Harmonise access and usage policies for research and education-related public e-infrastructures and for associated digital research services enabling consortia of different types of public and private partners || x || || Adopt and implement national strategies for electronic identity for researchers giving them transnational access to digital research services || x || || Adopt and implement open access measures for publications and data resulting from publicly funded research || || x || Implement and promote the uptake of electronic identity and digital research services || X || x || Ensure optimal interaction and linkages and strategic partnering between academia and industry and define joint collaborative research agendas to maximize the use of research results || || x || Improve recognition and professionalization of knowledge transfer activities and strengthen the role of knowledge transfer offices || || x || Establish open access to scientific publications as a general principle for all EU funded projects in Horizon 2020. For research data, develop a flexible approach that takes into account different scientific areas and business-related interests || || || x Continue to fund infrastructure projects related to open access || || || x Adopt a Communication and Recommendation to Member States on access to and preservation of scientific information in the digital age || X || || x Propose a roadmap for e-infrastructure development to support e-Science through open access to research tools and resources || x || || x Support activities to raise stakeholder awareness of open access and e-Science || || x || x Promote knowledge transfer activities in Europe through networking of innovative university-business platforms, including bottom up, practitioner-led initiatives, and sectoral knowledge transfer offices || || x || x Work with stakeholders to develop a set of model consortium agreements to enhance knowledge transfer || || x || x Facilitate a Member State forum for regular exchange and reporting on national developments on the provision, take-up and use of digital research services || x || || x Description of policy option 3 Table 11 below provides the list of
measures included in policy option 3 and the nature of obligation imposed on
Member States and stakeholder organisations (i.e. legal vs. voluntary). Table 11: Summary of measures included in policy
option 3 (MS: Member States, SHO: stakeholder organisations; EC: European
Commission) Measures || Legally binding on MS || Voluntary measures on MS and/or SHO || EC More effective national research systems Removal of barriers to competitive funding allocation || || x || International peer review evaluation for national funding decisions || x || || Optimal transnational co-operation and competition Common principles for cross-border operations || x || || Organisation of and support to joint calls using common international peer review evaluation (incl. within Joint Programming) || || x || x Removal of barriers to cross-border access to national research infrastructures of European interest || || x || Launch of the "ERA Mark" label for best practice in cross-border research operations || || || x Extend the mandate of ESFRI for implementation and prioritisation of ESFRI Roadmap projects || || x || Develop an ESFRI "Charter for Access" on principles for access to research infrastructures || || x || x Common principles and procedures for the setting up and management of pan-European research infrastructures || x || || Common principles for the monitoring, evaluation and impact assessment of research infrastructures and funding decisions || x || || An open labour market for researchers || Common principles on open, transparent and merit-based recruitment of researchers || x || || Common principles for portability of grants and for access to national grants || x || || Institutional strategies for the career development of researchers || || x || Implementation of frameworks and strategies on innovative doctoral training || || x || Advertisement of vacancies and provision of information on national single points/Euraxess || || x || x Accreditation mechanisms for the Charter and Code || || || x Adoption of relevant support measures (e.g. Communication on social security) and amendments to key EU legislation (e.g. Directive 2005/71/EC) || x || x || x Gender equality and gender mainstreaming in research Integrate gender dimension into publicly funded research programmes (both upstream and downstream) || x || x || Support to and implementation of gender action plans || || x || Recommendation on guidelines on institutional changes in universities and other research institutions (foreseen in 2013) || || || x Optimal circulation, access to and transfer of scientific knowledge Open access to all publicly-funded scientific publications as well as for research data, when relevant || x || x || x Specific identity provision and federation approach for researchers and scholars || x || x || Measures for the use of publicly funded research infrastructures for research consortia with private and industrial research organisation partners || x || || Communication and Recommendation to the Council on access to and preservation of scientific information in the digital age || || || x Table 12: Summary table of
delivery mechanisms for policy option 2, 3 and 4 Specific objective || Operational objective for 2014 || Policy Option 2 || Policy Option 3 || Policy Option 4 More effective national research systems || Barriers to competition removed || Communication and Specific Commitments || Framework Directive Barriers to use of using international peer review evaluation in national research systems are removed || Communication and Specific Commitments || Legislation Optimal transnational co-operation and competition || Barriers to compatibility and interoperability between national research programmes are removed || Communication and Specific Commitments || Legislation Barriers to access to pan-European research infrastructures by the user community are removed || Communication and Specific Commitments One pilot cross-border synchronised research call, notably on grand challenges, launched using international peer review evaluation and a single pan-European score || Communication and Specific Commitments Harmonised monitoring, evaluation and impact assessment principles and procedures for pan-European research infrastructures adopted and implemented || Communication and Specific Commitments || Legislation An open labour market for researchers || Barriers open, transparent and merit based recruitment in public research systems, cross-border portability and accessibility of national grants are removed || Communication and Specific Commitments || Legislation Frameworks supporting the career development of researchers and innovative doctoral training || Communication and Specific Commitments Gender equality and gender mainstreaming in research || Barriers to gender equality and the gender dimension in research removed || Communication and Specific Commitments Optimal circulation, access to and transfer of scientific knowledge || Policies and means for facilitating online access to publicly-funded scientific publications and data are defined and coordinated Policies to foster knowledge transfer, cross-border sharing of e-infrastructure and take up of digital services for research are defined Electronic identity services for researchers enabling transnational access to digital services (collaboration, computing, scientific information) are implemented or planned || Communication and Specific Commitments || Legislation The figure below presents the drivers and problems
to complete ERA by 2014. Figure 8: Problem tree for completing ERA Annex 7: Possible indicators to be used for monitoring ERA progress The table below presents for each of the
actions proposed to be undertaken by Member States and stakeholders one or more
indicators that could be used to measure progress in completing ERA. The final
decision on the indicators to be retained will be drawn after comparing the
value-as-indicator for reporting progress with the costs and feasibility of
data collection. The level of collection (Member States or stakeholders) is
indicated between brackets for each indicator. Specific objective in ERA || Action || Progress indicator Increased effectiveness of national systems || Introduce or enhance competitive funding through calls for proposals and institutional assessments as the main modes of allocating public funds to research and innovation, introducing legislative reforms if necessary || Share of national GBAORD allocated as project-based funding (Member States) Share of institutional funding allocated on a competitive basis (Member States) Ensure that all public bodies responsible for allocating research funds apply the core principles of international peer review || Share of institutions applying the core principles for international peer review (stakeholder organisations) Optimal levels of transnational co-operation and competition || Step up efforts to implement joint research agendas addressing grand challenges, sharing information about activities in agreed priority areas, ensuring that adequate national funding is committed and strategically aligned at European level in these areas and that common ex post evaluation is conducted || Assessment of the implementation of joint research agendas addressing grand challenges (Member States) Share of national GBAORD allocated to transnationally coordinated research based on common priorities (Member States) Ensure mutual recognition of evaluations that conform to international peer-review standards as a basis for national funding decisions || Assessment of the implementation of mutual recognition of evaluations that conform to international peer-review standards as a basis for national funding decisions (Member States) Share of institutions applying international peer review standards (stakeholder organisations) Share of institutions mutually recognizing international peer review standards (stakeholder organisations) Remove legal and other barriers to the cross-border interoperability of national programmes to permit joint financing of actions including cooperation with non-EU countries where relevant || Assessment of the degree of implementation of specific policies to facilitate cross-border interoperability of national programmes (Member States) Agree on common funding principles - eligible costs, reporting requirements, etc. to make national research programmes compatible, interoperable (cross-border) and simpler for researchers || Share of institutions implementing policies to facilitate cross-border interoperability of national programmes (stakeholder organisations) Pilot the use of synchronised calls with, where possible, single joint international peer review evaluation of proposals as a basis for funding decisions || Number of synchronised calls evaluated through a single joint international peer review (stakeholder organisations) Further develop and deploy the Lead-Agency, Money-Follows-Cooperation Line, Money-Follows-Researcher and other models for cross-border cooperation || Share of budget allocated to transnational funding, specified by model: Lead-Agency, Money-Follows-Cooperation and Money-Follows-Researcher and other models (stakeholder organisations) Confirm financial commitments for the construction and operation of ESFRI, global, national and regional RIs of pan-European interest, particularly when developing national roadmaps and the next Structural Fund programmes || Rate of financial commitments to the implementation (construction and operation) of the ESFRI Roadmap and to other global research infrastructures of pan-European interest (Member States) Remove legal and other barriers to cross-border access to Research Infrastructures || Share of non-national researchers (from Member States, Associated Countries and Third Countries) accessing RI of European Interest (Member States) A more open labour market for researchers || Remove legal and other barriers to the application of open, transparent and merit based recruitment of researchers || Assessment of the degree of implementation of policies and measures on open, transparent and merit-based recruitment (Member States) Share of researchers who feel that recruitment procedures are transparent, merit-based and open (Member States) Remove legal and other barriers which hamper cross-border access to and portability of national grants || Assessment of degree of implementation of policies and measures to ensure grant portability/accessibility of national programmes (Member States) Support a national body to implement the Declaration of Commitment to provide coordinated personalised information and services to researchers through the pan-European EURAXES network || Number of Member States with single access points providing coordinated information and services for mobile researchers (information on vacancies, social rights, tailored information, etc.) Support the setting up and running of structured innovative doctoral training programmes applying the Principles for Innovative Doctoral Training || Assessment of the degree of implementation (including financial commitment) of policies and measures supporting structured innovative doctoral training programmes applying the "Principles for Innovative Doctoral Training" (Member States) Create an enabling framework for the implementation of the Human Resources Strategy for Researchers incorporating the Charter & Code || Assessment of the degree of implementation (including financial commitment) of policies and measures supporting an enabling framework for the implementation of the "HR Strategy for Researchers" (Member States) Advertise all vacancies on the EURAXESS Jobs portal using the common profiles established in the European Framework for Research Careers || Share of total vacancies published on Euraxess Jobs Portal (stakeholder organisations) Fill research positions according to open, transparent and merit based recruitment procedures proportionate to the level of the position in line with the basic principles of the Charter & Code and including non-EU nationals || Share of researcher´s positions in European universities and public research performing organisations filled through open, transparent and merit-based recruitment in line with the Charter and Code principles (stakeholder organisations) Share of non-national researchers (stakeholder organisations) Develop strategies to support the career development of researchers in line with the HR Strategy for Researchers || Share of institutions developing or implementing human resources strategies or researchers in line with the Charter and Code principles (stakeholder organisations) Define and implement principles for accessibility to and portability of national grants || Share of identified grants which are portable across borders (stakeholder organisations) Share of national grants which are accessible to non-residents (stakeholder organisations) Provide structured doctoral training based on the Principles for Innovative Doctoral Training || Share of stakeholder organisations implementing doctoral training programmes linking public and private sectors (stakeholder organisations) Share of PhD candidates participating in innovative doctoral training (stakeholder organisations) Develop and implement structured programmes to increase mobility between industry and academia || Share of institutions implementing mobility programmes between industry and academia (stakeholder organisations) Share of staff participating in mobility programmes between industry and academia (stakeholder organisations) Gender equality and gender mainstreaming in research || Create a legal and policy environment and provide incentives in order to: – remove legal and other barriers to the recruitment, retention and career progression of female researchers while fully complying with EU law on gender equality – address gender imbalances in decision making processes – strengthen the gender dimension in research programmes || Share of female PHD graduates, researchers, senior level in academic position and in top positions (Member States) Assessment of adoption and degree of implementation of any legal and /or policy initiative as well as of incentives, in any of the three areas (Member States) Engage in partnerships with funding agencies, research organisations and universities to foster cultural and institutional change on gender - charters, performance agreements, awards || Share of institutions engaged in the partnerships and rate of financial commitment (Member States) Ensure that at least 40% of the under-represented sex participate in committees involved in recruitment/career progression and in establishing and evaluating research programmes || Share of under-represented sex participating in committees (Member States) Implement institutional change relating to HR management, funding, decision-making and research programmes through Gender Equality Plans which aim to: – Conduct impact assessment / audits of procedures and practices to identify gender bias – Implement innovative strategies to correct any bias – Set targets and monitor progress via indicators || Share of female PhD graduates, researchers, senior level in academic position and in top positions (stakeholder organisations) Share of institutions which have adopted and implement Gender Equality Plans (stakeholder organisations) Optimal circulation, access to and transfer of scientific knowledge || Define and coordinate their policies on access to and preservation of scientific information || Share of Member States implementing OA policies and assessment of the degree of implementation of OA policies (Member States) Ensure that public research contributes to Open Innovation and foster knowledge transfer between public and private sectors through national knowledge transfer strategies || Assessment of the degree of implementation of policies to support the contribution of public research to open innovation and public-private mobility (Member States) Harmonise access and usage policies for research and education-related public e-infrastructures and for associated digital research services enabling consortia of different types of public and private partners || Share of MS implementing jointly developed access and usage policies for public e-infrastructures (Member States) Adopt and implement national strategies for electronic identity for researchers giving them transnational access to digital research services || Assessment of the degree of development of MS strategies for realising digital ERA in identification services, provision of digital research services and human resources factors for supporting digital science (eScience) approaches (Member States) Adopt and implement open access measures for publications and data resulting from publicly funded research || Share of scientific publications and research data in OA amongst stakeholder organisations (stakeholder organisations) Implement and promote the uptake of electronic identity and digital research services || Share of research organisations providing electronic identification and authorisation service (stakeholder organisations) Share of research organisations providing research services that can be accessed online with federated researcher e-identity (stakeholder organisations) Ensure optimal interaction and linkages and strategic partnering between academia and industry and define joint collaborative research agendas to maximize the use of research results || Percentage of researchers in public research organisations with experience in the private sector (stakeholder organisations) Share of doctorate holders employed in business enterprise sector (Member States) Rate of growth of the number of Academia-Industry research training contracts signed (stakeholder organisations) Rate of growth of academia held patents licensed or sold to industry (stakeholder organisations) Share of professors whose primary occupation is not in Higher education institutions and or research performing organisations (stakeholder organisations) Improve recognition and professionalization of knowledge transfer activities and strengthen the role of knowledge transfer offices || Number of research organisations having a dedicated knowledge transfer office (stakeholder organisations) Share of permanent staff (by category) employed in knowledge transfer offices (stakeholder organisations)
Annex 8: Glossary and
acronyms Applied research: Original investigation undertaken in order to acquire new knowledge.
Contrary to basic research, it is directed primarily towards a specific
practical aim. The results of applied research are intended to be valid for a
single or limited number of products etc. The knowledge or information derived
from it is often patented but may also be kept secret. Basic research: Experimental or theoretical work undertaken primarily to acquire new
knowledge of the underlying foundations of phenomena and observable facts,
without any particular application or use in view (contrary to applied
research). The results of basic research are not generally sold but are
usually published in scientific journals. Basic research can be split into two
categories: 1) Pure basic research which is carried out for the advancement of
knowledge, with no positive efforts being made to apply the results to
practical problems. 2) Oriented basic research which is carried out with the
expectation that it will produce a broad base of knowledge likely to form the
background to the solution of recognised or expected current or future problems
or possibilities. BRIC-countries: Brazil, Russia, India and China. Business Europe: Its main task is to ensure that companies' interests are
represented and defended vis-à-vis the European institutions with the principal
aim of preserving and strengthening corporate competitiveness. Through its 41
member federations, Business Europe represents 20 million companies from 35
countries. The European Charter for Researchers and
the Code of Conduct for the Recruitment of Researchers (Charter and Code): The European Charter for Researchers and Code of Conduct for the
Recruitment of Researchers were adopted by the European Commission as a
Recommendation to the Member States. The 'Charter & Code' address
researchers as well as employers and funders in both the public and private
sectors. The Charter provides a framework for the career management of
researchers, while the Code promotes open and transparent recruitment and
appraisal procedures. Together they are aimed at developing an attractive, open
and sustainable European labour market for researchers. Code of Conduct for the Recruitment of
Researchers: It aims to improve recruitment, to
make selection procedures fairer and more transparent and proposes different
means of judging merit: Merit should not just be measured on the number of
publications but on a wider range of evaluation criteria, such as teaching,
supervision, teamwork, knowledge transfer, management and public awareness
activities. Cohesion Policy: Also known as Regional Policy of the European
Union, is a policy with the stated aim of improving
the economic well-being of regions in the EU and also to avoid regional
disparities. More than one third of the EU's budget is devoted to this policy,
which aims to remove economic, social and territorial disparities across the
EU, restructure declining industrial areas and diversify rural areas which have
declining agriculture. Collaborative Projects: Support to Framework Programme funded research projects carried out
by consortia with participants from different countries. The size, scope and
internal organisation of projects can vary from field to field and from topic
to topic. Projects can range from small or medium-scale focused research
actions to larger integrating projects which mobilise a significant volume or
resources for achieving a defined objective. CREST: The
Scientific and Technical Research Committee (CREST), composed of
representatives of Member States, is a high level advisory board to the
Commission and the Council in the field of RTD. (see ERAC) DEUFRAKO: DEUFRAKO is a bilateral Franco-German scientific and technical
research programme, set up in 1978 as a consequence of the EU deregulation
initiative. The intention was primarily to advance the planning and
implementation of modern guided surface transport systems and more particularly
high-speed rail. Both Germany and France are obligatory points of passage for
north-south and east-west traffic, are served by very active and extensive
networks. Their railway industries are among the most dynamic in the world and
they are pioneers in the development of innovative rail technology. If the two
systems are to be compatible, certain research activities need to be pursued
together. Such co-operation is all the more necessary nowadays to develop a
high-speed network throughout Europe. DEMETER: This
EU-funded project entitled aims to develop a well-validated European coupled
multi-model ensemble forecast system for reliable seasonal to inter-annual
prediction. A fundamental aspect is to establish the practical utility of such
a system, particularly to the agriculture and health sectors. ERAC
(European Research Area Committee, formerly CREST): is a strategic policy
advisory body whose function is to assist the European Commission and the
Council of the European Union in performing the tasks incumbent on these
Institutions in the sphere of research and technological development. ERA-NET: The
principal means for the FP to support the co-ordination of national and
regional research programmes. ERA Pacts:
voluntary agreements between research funding and performing organisations and
the Commission. The partnership principle would be at the core of the ERA
pacts. The pacts consist of priority ‘big tickets’ actions involving both the
collective engagement of key stakeholders to implement ERA, and increased
Member States action. The pacts would assert the firm commitment of the
partners to undertake a set of actions to promote ERA such as joint
transnational coordinated bottom-up and top-down calls and research agendas,
transnational peer reviewed evaluation systems, co-operation with third
countries, open recruitment, mobility, gender action plans, access to
information, etc. Each ERA pact would include a roadmap with milestones. EU-12: The
12 countries that joined the EU since 2004 (Bulgaria, Cyprus, Czech Republic,
Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and
Slovenia). EU-15: Before
1 May 2004, the European Union consisted of 15 Member States (Austria, Belgium,
Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, the
Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, and United Kingdom). EURAXESS: assists
researchers in advancing their careers in Europe and supports research
organisations in their search for outstanding research talent. EURAXESS is a
pan-European initiative, supported by thirty-seven participating countries. It
provides a single access point to information from all countries including a
network of walk-in centres offering personalised assistance to researchers
moving to another country. Europe 2020: Europe
2020 is the EU's growth strategy for the coming decade. Concretely, the Union
has set five ambitious objectives - on employment, innovation, education,
social inclusion and climate/energy - to be reached by 2020. European Added Value: EU support to research and innovation is provided only when it can
be more effective than national funding. It does this through measures to
coordinate national funding, and through implementing collaborative research
and mobility actions. European Association of Research Technology
Organisations (EARTO): is a non-profit
international association aiming to achieve a European research and innovation
system without border in which Research and Technology Organisations (RTOs)
occupy nodal positions and posse the necessary resources and independence to
contribute to a competitive European economy and high quality of the life
through beneficial cooperation with all stakeholders. European Partnership
for Researchers (EPR): aims at creating a framework
for joint priority actions for different Member States concerning the
systematic opening up of recruitment, pensions and social security for mobile
researchers, attractive employment and working conditions and improving
training and skills. European Research Area (ERA): A general concept proposed by the Commission and endorsed by the
European Parliament and Council in 2001 to overcome the fragmentation of
European research and innovation efforts. The concept comprises organising
co-operation at different levels, co-ordinating national or European policies,
networking teams and increasing the mobility of individuals and ideas. European Research Area Network
(ERA-NET): The objective of the ERA-NET scheme is
to step up the cooperation and coordination of research activities carried out
at national or regional level in the Member States and Associated States
through the networking of research activities conducted at national or regional
level, and the mutual opening of national and regional research programmes. The
scheme will contribute to making a reality of the European Research Area by
improving the coherence and coordination across Europe of such research
programmes. The scheme will also enable national systems to take on tasks
collectively that they would not have been able to tackle independently European Research Council (ERC): Introduced in FP7, it will be the first pan-European funding agency
for frontier research. Early stage as well as fully established investigators
from across Europe will be able to compete for grants with scientific
excellence as the sole criterion for funding. The independent Scientific
Council will direct the ERC’s scientific operations and ensure that its support
is in accordance with the highest standards of science and scholarship. European Space Agency (ESA): Established in 1975, ESA is an inter-governmental organisation
dedicated to the exploration of space, with 17 Member States. Its mission is to
shape the development of Europe’s space capability.
By coordinating the financial and intellectual resources of its members, it can
undertake programmes and activities far beyond the
scope of any single European country. Framework Programme (FP): Since 1984, research and innovation activities of the EU are grouped
in one big multiannual programme, the Framework Programme for Research and
Technical Development. While FP1 to FP6 were conceived for a period of 4 years,
FP7 is synchronised with the duration of the EU's financial perspective and
covers the period 2007-2013. The FPs are elaborated and proposed by the Commission
and have to be adopted by the European Parliament and the Council in
co-decision. Gender Action Plan
(GAP): The GAP intend to
provide detailed information on actions to be
undertaken - and monitored - to encourage women to apply for recruitment and to
ensure that equal opportunities will be promoted in recruitment at all levels,
in order to allow women to participate in all project's activities, and
encourage women to participate in the management and scientific committees. Government Budget Appropriations or
Outlays on R&D (GBAORD): All appropriations
allocated to R&D in central government budgets. Data on government R&D
appropriations therefore refer to budget provisions, not to actual expenditure,
i.e. GBAORD measures government support for R&D using data collected from
budgets. Grandfathering: Describes a situation
in which an old rule continues to apply to some existing situations, while a
new rule will apply to all future situations. Gross domestic expenditure on R&D
(GERD): Total intramural expenditure on R&D
performed on the national territory during a given period. GERD includes
R&D performed within a country and funded from abroad but excludes payments
made abroad for R&D. Gross Domestic Product (GDP): This aggregate represents the result of the production activity of
resident producer units. It corresponds to the economy's output of goods and
services, less intermediate consumption, plus taxes linked to imports. The sum
of the regional values of the GDP at market prices might differ from the national
values for some countries. Horizon 2020 (H2020): Horizon 2020 is the financial instrument implementing the Innovation
Union, a Europe 2020 flagship initiative aimed at securing Europe's global
competitiveness. Running from 2014 to 2020 with an €80 billion budget, the EU’s
new programme for research and innovation is part of the drive to create new
growth and jobs in Europe. Inco-Net projects: The purpose of an INCO-NET project is to bring together policy
makers and stakeholders of a given region or group of countries with the EU
partners to establish a dialogue to identify S&T priorities of mutual
benefit and interest, to define cooperation policy orientations together and to
implement specific activities to promote and contribute to the participation of
the targeted regions or countries in the Framework Programme. Information and Communication
Technologies (ICT): Information and Communication
Technologies are critical to improve the competitiveness of European industry
and to meet the demands of its society and economy. Institute for Prospective Technological
Studies (IPTS): The Institute for Prospective
Technological Studies is one of the seven scientific institutes of the European
Commission's Joint Research Centre (JRC). It promotes and enables a better
understanding of the links between technology, economy and society. Its mission
is to provide customer-driven support to the EU policy-making process by
developing science based responses to policy challenges that have both a
socio-economic as well as a scientific/ technological dimension. Intellectual Property Rights (IPR): They cover all aspects of owning, protecting and giving access to
knowledge and pre-existing know how. Joint Research Centre (JRC): As a service of the European Commission, the mission of the JRC is
to provide customer-driven scientific and technical support for the conception,
development, implementation and monitoring of EU policies. It functions as a
reference centre of science and technology for the Union. The JRC has a network
of research institutes in different member countries (Belgium, Germany, Italy,
Netherlands, Spain). Its activities are financed by the Framework Programme via
the direct actions. Joint Programming Initiatives (JPI): The overall aim of Joint Programming is to pool national research
efforts in order to make better use of Europe's precious public R&D
resources and to tackle common European challenges more effectively in a few
key areas. It follows a structured strategic process whereby Member States agree
common visions and strategic research agendas to address major societal
challenges. Lisbon Treaty: The Treaty of Lisbon entered into force on 1 December 2009. It
provides the EU with modern institutions and optimised working methods to
tackle both efficiently and effectively today's challenges in today's world Marie-Curie Actions: The main objective of the FP's Marie Curie Actions is to strengthen
training, the career prospects and mobility of European researchers in order to
provide support for the development of world-class human resources. National Reform
Programme (NRP): One of the main features of the
revised Lisbon strategy is that Member States are encouraged to tailor reforms
to their specific needs within the overall framework of the European Partnership
for Growth and Jobs. In this context, a new set of Integrated Guidelines was
proposed by the Commission and adopted by the European Council in June 2005.
Guidelines 7 and 8 in particular highlight the need to increase and improve
investment in R&D, in particular by private business and to facilitate all
forms of innovation. Member States agreed to prepare National Reform Programmes
to set out their plans with reference to the Integrated Guidelines. These
programmes were released from mid-October 2005 onwards. New Econometric Model for Environmental
and Sustainable Development and Implementation Strategies (NEMESIS): The NEMESIS-model is a large-scale econometric model at the macro-
and sectoral levels, which has been built by a Community funded consortium
of European research institutes. It comprises roughly 70 000
equations. The model can be used for several purposes, which include the assessment
of structural (mainly R&D and environmental) policies, the study of the
short- and medium term consequences of a wide range of economic
policies, short- and medium-term forecasting (up to 8 years) at the
macro- and sectoral levels, and building long-term baseline scenarios (up to 30
years). Open Access: 'open access' refers to the practice of granting free Internet
access to research articles. As all research and innovation builds on earlier
achievements, an efficient system for broad dissemination of and access to
research publications and raw data can accelerate scientific progress. In
August 2008, the European Commission launched the 'Open Access Pilot in the
Seventh Framework Programme (FP7)', intended to provide researchers and other
interested members of the public with improved online access to EU-funded
research results. The pilot aims to permit easy and free access to scientific
information, in particular peer-reviewed scientific articles published in
journals. Articles covered by the pilot will become accessible after an embargo
period of 6 or 12 months, depending on the FP7 area. Open method of coordination (OMC): A relatively new and intergovernmental means of governance in the
EU, based on the voluntary cooperation of Member States. It rests on soft law
mechanisms such as guidelines and indicators, benchmarking and sharing of best
practice, not on official sanctions for laggards. Rather, the method's
effectiveness relies on a form of peer pressure and naming and shaming, as no
Member States wants to be seen as the worst in a given policy area. Organisation for Economic Development
and Cooperation (OECD): The OECD is an
international economic organisation of 34 countries founded in 1961 to
stimulate economic progress and world trade. It is a forum of countries
committed to democracy and the market economy, providing a platform to compare
policy experiences, seek answers to common problems, identify good practices,
and co-ordinate domestic and international policies of its members. Peer review: The evaluation of proposals with the help of independent
external experts (peers). Research and experimental development
(R&D): R&D comprise creative work
undertaken on a systematic basis in order to increase the stock of knowledge,
including knowledge of man, culture and society and the use of this stock of
knowledge to devise new applications. This term covers three activities: basic
research, applied research and experimental development. R&D intensity: Gross Domestic Expenditure on R&D (GERD) expressed as a
percentage of Gross Domestic Product (GDP). Science Europe: Science
Europe is an association of European Research Funding Organisations (RFO) and
Research Performing Organisations (RPO), based in Brussels. Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises
(SMEs): Enterprises having fewer than 250 employees
and with either an annual turnover of no more than ECU 40 million or a balance
sheet total of no more than ECU 27 million. Spillover effect: are externalities of
economic activity or processes that affect those who are not directly involved.
In this particular case there are two type of spillovers: between sectors (i.e.
progress in information and communication technologies have a positive impact
in other sectors) and international spillovers (i.e. scientific progress in one
country benefits the other countries). Stakeholder: Any person or organisation with an interest in
or affected by EU legislation and policymaking is a 'stakeholder' in that
process. The European Commission makes a point of consulting as wide a range of
stakeholders as possible before proposing new legislation or new policy
initiatives. Strategic Forum for International
S&T Cooperation (SFIC): aims to strengthen the
international dimension of the European Research Area (ERA); to improve the
framework conditions for international S&T cooperation; and to promote
European technologies in the world. It outlines different approaches to
cooperation depending on the geographic and thematic targets, and calls for
long term commitment of the Member States and the European Community. Treaty on the Functioning of the
European Union (TFEU): The Treaty of Lisbon amends
the EU's two core treaties, the Treaty on European Union and the Treaty
establishing the European Community. The latter is renamed the Treaty on the
Functioning of the European Union. UNU-MERIT: UNU-MERIT
is a research and training centre of United Nations University (UNU) and
Maastricht University (UM), based in southeast Netherlands. UNU-MERIT explores
the social, political and economic factors that drive technological innovation,
with a particular focus on creation, diffusion and access to knowledge. World Intellectual Property Organisation
(WIPO): The World Intellectual Property
Organization (WIPO) is a specialized agency of the United Nations. It is
dedicated to developing a balanced and accessible international Intellectual
Property IP) system, which rewards creativity, stimulates innovation and
contributes to economic development while safeguarding the public interest.
WIPO was established in 1967 with a mandate from its Member States to promote
the protection of IP throughout the world through cooperation among states and
in collaboration with other international organizations. Its headquarters are
in Geneva, Switzerland. LIST OF ACRONYMS AGRI (DG) European Commission
Directorate General for Agriculture and Rural Development BAU Business As Usual BEPA Bureau of European Policy Adviser BRIC Brazil, Russia, India and China CERN European Organisation for Nuclear
Research COMP (DG) Competition CSF Common Strategic Framework for
Research and Innovation DEVCO (DG) Development and Cooperation DG Directorate-General DIR Directorate EAC (DG) European Commission Directorate
General for Education and Culture EARTO European Association of Research
and Technology Organisations EAV European Added Value ECFIN (DG) European Commission
Directorate General for Economic and Financial Affairs EFTA European Free Trade Association EMPL (DG) Employment ELARG (DG) Enlargement ENER (DG) European Commission
Directorate General for Energy ENTR (DG) European Commission
Directorate General for Entreprise and Industry ENV (DG) European Commission Directorate
General for the Environment EPR European Partnership for Researchers ERA European Research Area ERAC European Research Area Committee ERA-NET European Research Area Network ERA-NET EMRP Coordination of the European
Metrology Research Programme ESA European Space Agency ESF European Science Foundation ERC European Research Council ESTAT Statistical Office of the European
Union EU European Union EUA European University Association FP Framework Programme for Research and
Technological Demonstration GBAORD Government Budget Appropriations
or Outlays for Research and Development GDP Gross Domestic Product GO General Objective GOV Government GPT General Purpose Technologies HES Higher Education Sector HOME (DG) Home Affairs IAB Impact Assessment Board IASG Impact Assessment Steering Group ICT Information and Communication
Technologies INCO International Cooperation INFSO (DG) Information Society
and Media ISG Inter-Service Group IPTS Institute for Prospective
Technological Studies (DG JRC) IU Innovation Union JPI Joint Programming Initiative JRC (DG) European Commission Joint
Research Centre MARE (DG) Maritime Affairs and Fisheries MARKT (DG) Internal Market and Services MOVE (DG) European Commission
Directorate General for Mobility and Transport MS Member States NRP National Reform Programme (or Plan) OA Open Access OECD Organisation for Economic
Development and Cooperation OMC Open Method of Coordination OpenAire Open Access Infrastructure for
Research in Europe PO Policy Option PhD Doctor of Philosophy R&D Research and Development RFO Research Funding Organisations RPO Research Performing Organisations REGIO (DG) European Commission
Directorate General for Regional Policy SANCO (DG) European Commission
Directorate General for Health and Consumers SFIC Strategic
Forum for International S&T Cooperation SG (DG) Secretariat General SGHRM Steering Group on Human Resources
and Mobility SHO Stakeholder organisations, i.e.
research funding and performing organisations SJ (DG) Service Juridique SO Specific Objective S&T Science and Technology SMART (objectives) Specific, Measurable,
Achievable, Realistic and Time SMEs Small and Medium-sized Enterprises STI Science Technology and Innovation TFEU Treaty on the Functioning of the
European Union TRADE (DG) Trade WIPO World Intellectual Property
Organisation EU COUNTRY KEYS Austria
(AT) Belgium
(BE) Bulgaria
(BG) Cyprus
(CY) Czech
Republic (CZ) Denmark
(DK) Estonia
(EE) Finland
(FI) France
(FR) Germany
(DE) Greece
(EL) Hungary
(HU) Ireland
(IE) Italy
(IT) Latvia
(LV) Lithuania
(LT) Luxembourg
(LU) Malta
(MT) Netherlands
(NL) Poland
(PL) Portugal
(PT) Romania
(RO) Slovakia
(SK) Slovenia
(SI) Spain
(ES) Sweden
(SE) United
Kingdom (UK) Norway
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February 2012), http://en.rihe.hiroshima-u.ac.jp/news_topic.php?id=103 [1] COM(2000) 6 final [2] Article 179 (1) TFEU. [3] http://ec.europa.eu/europe2020/index_en.htm [4] COM(2010) 546 final [5] The Directorates present included Dir A, Dir B, Dir C,
Dir D, Dir E, Dir F, Dir G, Dir H, Dir I, Dir K, Dir M. [6] This category includes universities and higher
education institutions, public research organisations and research funding
organisations. [7] International organisations, national governments and
other stakeholders also replied to the online questionnaire (4% of respondents,
2% of respondents and 7% respectively). [8] These include: European Council of Doctoral
Candidates and Junior Researchers, European University Association, League of
European Research Universities and Science Europe. [9] These include: Association of European Research
Libraries, European Research Council, European Intergovernmental Research
Organisations, European University Association, German Research Foundation,
International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions, Institut
National de la Recherche Agronomique, League of European Research Universities,
Science Europe, SPARC Europe. [10] ERAC 1215/11 [11] "Internationalisation of business investments in
R&D and analysis of their economic impact", study commissioned by DG
Research and Innovation, forthcoming [12] For instance, the US is performing better than the EU27
in 10 indicators, in particular in tertiary education, international
co-publications, most cited publications, R&D expenditure in the business
sector and public-private co-publications. [13] Three symptoms of this are the deficits of the EU vs.
the US in terms of volume of private sector R&D investments (EU: 1.27% of
GDP, US: 2.12% of GDP in 2009), of patenting (25% of triadic patent families
originated from the EU in 2007 vs. 35% originating from the US) and of medium
and high-tech product exports (representing 47% of total EU products export in
2008 vs 59% of total US products exports) in 2008 (European Commission, 2011c,
and Pro Inno Europe, 2009) . [14] An overview of the most important explanations for the
European innovation underperformance has been developed in section 2.3 of the
Commission Staff Working Document "A rationale for action"
accompanying the Commission's Communication Innovation Union [15] COM(2008) 468 [16] http://ec.europa.eu/research/era/docs/en/voluntary_guidelines.pdf [17] COM(2008) 317 and Conclusions of the Competitiveness
Council on 25 and 26 September 2008 [18] COM(2005) 576 [19] In the last three years, 30% of researchers have worked
abroad for a period of at least three months. [20] COM(2008)1329 [21] Designed to facilitate the joint establishment and
operation of research infrastructures of European interest http://ec.europa.eu/research/infrastructures/index_en.cfm?pg=eric [22] 10 out of the 48 projects of
the 2010 ESFRI Roadmap are now in the implementation phase
and another 16 are proceeding so well that the start of their
implementation could be envisaged before the end of 2012 [23] They were identified using the following criteria: 1.
Compelling political logic; 2. Potential for radical improvement; 3. Short-term
feasibility; 4. Fundamental for sustained long-term reform; and 5. No
additional public resources required. [24] The launch of the Excellence Initiative in Germany, the
adoption of a similar program in France for the selective funding of
laboratories and universities, the creation of professional agencies for ex
ante selection of research in France and Poland, and for ex post evaluation of
research in Italy, all bear witness to a keen recognition for the need to
inject more transparency, openness and competition into research funding across
Europe. [25] E.g. Scandinavian countries, NL and CH. [26] This does not include EU and EU-funded initiatives such
as the ERA-Nets, Art. 185, etc. [27] The
leverage effect of FP funding is close to 5 Euros for the ERA-NETs and 2.5
Euros for the ERA-NET Plus. Participating researchers indicate the strong
structuring impact and confirm that these schemes enable transnational R&D
activities (85.5% of respondents), reduce duplication between national
programmes (37.5%), increase the thematic focus in existing (38%) or new
programmes (34%), stimulate good practices and innovations in programme designs
(over 50%) and positively influence national programme budgets (46%). The
interim evaluation of two Art.185 initiatives (AAL and EUROSTARS) shows that they
have created substantial leverage effect, integrated national programmes and
pooled. A recent study on FP6 behavioural additionality (IDEA Consult, 2009)
indicates that national projects would have led to a smaller range of potential
applications and a smaller number of marketable products without FP6 funding. [28] For instance, 23 Member States
and Associated Countries have committed on a voluntary and variable geometry
basis to the Joint Programming Initiative ‘Neurodegenerative
diseases/Alzheimer's’. The first two calls were
launched in 2011 with a budget of 14 million Euros. For more details, see http://www.neurodegenerationresearch.eu/ [29] A survey of 127 national programmes (Optimat,
VDI/VDE-Innovation and Technik, 2005) identified among the internal barriers
the 'traditional' approach to national programme design, the lack of explicit
criteria encouraging transnational activities (the transnational proposals will
be de facto disadvantaged in the selection process) and existing legal
frameworks explicitly forbidding the transfer of funds to non-residents
researchers. In 2007 the Commission (COM(2007) 161) indicated that national and
regional programme 'owners' are reluctant to restructure their programmes in a
way which would enable the development of genuine joint programmes. [30] Exceptions are the US, China and India which have a
large pool of domestic researchers. [31] Over the period 2000-2009, the Average of Relative
Citations of EU publications in Space (1.25) was higher than that of US
publications (1.11). [32] ASSIST project – Regular collection of bibliometric
indicator, CWTS-Leiden university using Web of Science data. [33] Stakeholders' contribution to Horizon 2020 (European
Commission, 2010) [34] These are Survey for Health Ageing and Retirement in
Europe (SHARE-ERIC) and the Common Language Resources and Technology
Infrastructure (CLARIN-ERIC). [35] ERC, 2011 [36] http://ec.europa.eu/invest-in-research/monitoring/analyses01_en.htm [37] Around 50,000 researchers have benefited from the Marie
Curie Actions between 1996 and 2010. Source: European Commission [38] While several Member States now publish a large share
of their research positions on the EURAXESS Jobs Portal, a number of other
countries make little or no use of this facility. [39] For example, over 40% of UK-based researchers said that they were unable to access
licensed content at least weekly and two-thirds at least monthly (Research
Information Network, 2009). [40] C(2008)1329 [41] COM(2007)56 [42] See Annex 3 for more details. [43] http://edugain.org/federation_status.php [44] http://www.epsrc.ac.uk/ourportfolio/themes/researchinfrastructure/subthemes/einfrastructure/escience/Pages/default.aspx,
http://www.nordforsk.org/en/programs/programmer/escience/evitenskap-og-einfrastruktur-en
and http://esciencecenter.com/about-the-center/background/ [45] According to Art.179,‘its scientific and technological
bases by achieving a European research area in which researchers, scientific
knowledge and technology circulate freely (…)’. [46] Annex 3 provides the list of ESFRI projects. [47] Currently approximately 150 institutions of which 82
have been awarded the "HR Excellence in Research" logo. [48] The key targets are young people, as well as women
researchers at an early stage in their career. [49] C(2008)1329 [50] The Ljubljana Process is an enhanced partnership
between the Member States, associated countries, stakeholders and the
Commission to make European research more effective. The Ljubljana Process was
launched in May 2008 with two clear goals: ‘Europe now needs to develop a
common vision and effective governance of the European Research Area’. [51] The national reform programmes are monitored within the
framework of the 'European semester' of enhanced economic policy coordination. [52] Federative and representative bodies of public and
private research actors including researchers, universities, funding and
performing organisations. [53] Full economic costing is an
approach being picked up in several countries, including Canada, Finland and
Sweden (OECD 2010c, p. 96). [54] http://www.hep.ucl.ac.uk/~markl/pp2020/CERN_ProcurementBenefits.pdf
[55] This applies to the Green open access scenario. See
Annex 4 for more details. [56] These figures were calculated based on Houghton (2009)
using the exchange rate of 1DKK/0.1344 Euros. [57] Implementation costs at national level amount to 135,000
GBP per year and approx. 3 million GBP over a period of five years. Source:
Vitae, UK. [58] These figures were calculated based using the exchange
rate of 1£/1.2 Euros. [59] It
is estimated that for adopting a Directive, 2 years are necessary, and another
2 year for transposition by Member States. [60] See for instance the ERAC opinion presented in December
2011 addressing the issue of data gathering, evaluation and monitoring. [61] ERAC is an advisory body to the Council and the
Commission, composed of experts from national authorities. [62] Biotechnology in Europe, 2006 comparative study,
Critical 1, prepared for EuropaBio.. [63] European Commission (2009), "STC Key Figures
report 2008/2009", pages 69 , and "Europe in the global research
landscape", pages 44 to 48 [64] Dosi, Llerena, Labini (2006) [65] P. Albarran, J. Crespo, I. Ortuno, J. Ruiz-Castillo,
(2009), "A comparison of the scientific performance of the US and the EU
at the turn of the century", [66] A country which exhibits an average scientific
performance is expected to have 10% of its publications among the top 10% most
cited ones worldwide. [67] EC 20011, Innovation Union Competitiveness Report. The
figures concern 2007 scientific publications, cited in 2007-2009. [68] P. Albarran, J. Crespo, I. Ortuno, J. Ruiz-Castillo,
(2009), "A comparison of the scientific performance of the US and the EU
at the turn of the century" [69] Science and Public policy, June 2007. [70] COM(2011) 572 Final [71] http://ec.europa.eu/euraxess/pdf/research_policies/MORE_HEI_report_final_version.pdf [72] European University Association (2011), University
Autonomy in Europe II, The Scorecard, by Thomas Estermann, Terhi Nokkala
& Monika Steinel, http://www.eua.be/eua-work-and-policy-area/governance-autonomy-and-funding/projects/university-autonomy-in-europe/
[73] http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/story.asp?sectioncode=26&storycode=418337&c=1
[74] European Commission (2009), She Figures 2009,
Statistics and Indicators on Gender Equality in Science [75] European Commission (2009), She Figures 2009,
Statistics and Indicators on Gender Equality in Science [76] Source: ERAWATCH [77] Albania, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Croatia, Faroe
Islands, Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Iceland, Israel, Liechtenstein,
Moldavia, Montenegro, Norway, Serbia, Switzerland and Turkey. [78] Relevant material and data for the ERA-NET section are
as follows: Evaluation and impact assessment of the ERA-NET scheme and the
related ERA-NET actions under the 6th Framework Programme, ERA-NET Plus Review
2010, Draft report Statistics on ERA-NET and ERA-NET plus actions and their
joint calls and programmes (2004-2010), NETWATCH, including ‘Mapping ERA-NETs
across Europe: overview of the ERA-NET scheme and its results’, published by
the IPTS, Input received from Interservice Group on Coordination of National
Programmes, Reports of the Annual ERA-NET events 2008-2010, ERA-NET
continuation workshop November 2010 [79] Relevant material and data for the Art.185 section are:
VAN VELZEN REPORT (EDCTP ACTIVITIES 2007-2008), Mid-term assessment AAL and
Mid-term assessment EUROSTARS [80] For a list of currently active INCO-NETs, see
http://ec.europa.eu/research/iscp/index.cfm?lg=en&pg=inconet. [81] ESFRI delegates are nominated by the Research Ministers
of the Member States and Associated Countries, whilst a representative of the
Commission is a member of the Forum. [82] Seven Member States are preparing national roadmaps (Slovenia,
Hungary, Austria, Germany, Belgium, Luxembourg and Lithuania). Currently, only
Portugal, Slovak Republic, Latvia and Cyprus do not have national roadmaps.
Source: ESFRI (2010), Annual Report [83] ESFRI (2009), 'European Roadmap for Research
Infrastructures, Implementation Report' [84] The fields are as follows: social science and
humanities, environmental sciences, biological and medical sciences, physical
science and engineering and energy. Most of the projects share the effort of
developing effective e-tools for the management and dissemination of the
produced data. [85] Stakeholders'' consultation for FP7 successor programme. Source:
European Commission, 2010 [86] http://ec.europa.eu/eracareers/pdf/am509774CEE_EN_E4.pdf [87] European Commission (2008), 'Communication from the
Commission to the Council and the European Parliament Better Careers and More
Mobility: A European Partnership for Researchers', Brussels, 23.5.2008,
COM(2008)317 final [88] It should be noted that some 50,000 mobile researchers
have been awarded a fellowship between 1996 (inception of the programme) and
2010. Source: European Commission [89] The Marie Curie actions under the programme 'People'
include five actions: the individual fellowships (IxF), Initial Training
Networks (ITN), Industry-Academia Pathways and Partnership (IAPP), COFUND and
International Staff Exchange Scheme (IRSES). [90] European Commission (2010), 'Interim Evaluation of the
Seventh Framework Programme, Report of the Expert Group', Final Report 12
November 2010 [91] The Evaluation Partnership (2010), Ex-post Impact Assessment
study concerning the ‘Marie Curie Actions’ under the
Sixth Framework Programme, Final report, Deliverable D 6-2 for the European
Commission, Research Directorate General, 8th September 2010 [92] The ‘She Figures’ series have been published in 2003,
2006 and 2006. This series supports the collection of statistics with a key set
of indicators, thus greatly contributing to creating a record of
sex-disaggregated data at EU level. The ‘She Figures’ publications provide
comparative statistics on the number of females, seniority, career development
and decision-making aspects between women and men in research. [93] http://www.genderandscience.org/web/reports.php
[94] Practising Gender Equality in Science (PRAGES) project
which has resulted in the development of the ‘Guidelines for Gender Equality
Programmes in Science 2009’. The Guidelines provide a unique reference and tool
for universities, research centres and other research entities which want to
implement a modern institutional management culture and to better support gender
diversity. http://cordis.europa.eu/search/index.cfm?fuseaction=result.document&RS_LANG=EN&RS_RCN=11485582&q=
[95] http://ec.europa.eu/research/evaluations/index_en.cfm?pg=archive
[96] European Commission (2010), 'Interim Evaluation of the
Seventh Framework Programme, Report of the Expert Group', Final Report 12 November
2010 [97] Although the ‘HR Excellence in Research’ logo is
awarded as part of the HR Strategy, it is not part of an accreditation
mechanism, as the HR Strategy does not aim at evaluating the level of
compliance amongst institutions with the Charter and Code. [98] European Commission (2008), 'Communication from the
Commission to the Council and the European Parliament Better Careers and More
Mobility: A European Partnership for Researchers', Brussels, 23.5.2008,
COM(2008)317 final [99] For instance, the definition of 'open, transparent,
competition-based recruitment of researchers' has not been clearly laid out and
agreed amongst participating countries. [100] For instance, the transparency and competitiveness of
the recruitment in the German higher education sector is guaranteed by the
Lander Higher Education Laws, which require the involvement of external experts
in the selection process. In Greece, open, transparent and competitive
recruitment seems to be based on the fact that positions are advertised online and
no other criteria have been reported by the Greek authorities. [101] Relevant indicators are currently under development. [102] Communication from the Commission of 17 February 1999, ‘Women
and Science’: mobilising women to enrich European research, COM(99) 76 final [103] European Commission (2010), ‘Stocktaking 10 years of ‘Women
in Science’ policy by the European Commission 1999-2009’, European Commission [104] The total number of members for the five EURAXESS networks
is approx. 6,250 members. Source: European Commission, DG Research and
Innovation [105] The EURAXESS Service Network dealt with approx. 118,000
queries in 2008, approx. 135,000 in 2009 and 2010 and approx. 65,000 in the
first semester of 2011. Source: European Commission, DG Research and Innovation [106] Deloitte & The Evaluation Partnership Limited
(2007), ‘Euraxess-Links Abroad (ELA) Geographic, Expansion-Feasibility study’,
Framework Contract: RTD-C5-2005-I&C, Lot 4: Assessment of the impact of
information and communication policy products, Final Report, for the European
Commission, Research Directorate General. The study confirmed the importance
beneficiaries attach to them, but revealed also the low awareness of the
research community. [107] European University Association (2011), University
Autonomy in Europe II, The Scorecard, by Thomas Estermann, Terhi Nokkala
& Monika Steinel, http://www.eua.be/eua-work-and-policy-area/governance-autonomy-and-funding/projects/university-autonomy-in-europe/
[108] European University Association (2011), University
Autonomy in Europe II, The Scorecard, by Thomas Estermann, Terhi Nokkala
& Monika Steinel [109] Source: Report by the ERA Steering Group on Human
Resources and Mobility (SGHRM), 2009-2010 [110] http://media.enseignementsup-recherche.gouv.fr/file/2008/88/5/fiches_36885.pdf
[111] www.researchconcordat.ac.uk/documents/concordat.pdf
[112] Responses by Member States to the EPR Monitoring
Questionnaire disseminated via the SGHRM in October 2011. [113] Responses by Member States to the EPR Monitoring
Questionnaire disseminated via the SGHRM in October 2011. [114] http://www.eurohorcs.org/E/initiatives/mfr/Pages/mfr.aspx
[115] ‘Commission Staff Working Document, Impact Assessment, Document
Accompanying the Recommendation from the Commission to the Council on Access to
and Preservation of Scientific Information in the Digital Age’, forthcoming [116] OpenAIRE supports the setting up of e-infrastructure for
interoperable repositories accessible via a single portal. It also has set up a
network of helpdesks in the MS, as well as a system to monitor and
systematically gather information on the deposit of OA peer reviewed papers.
Source: ‘Commission Staff Working Document, Impact Assessment, Document
Accompanying the Recommendation from the Commission to the Council on Access to
and Preservation of Scientific Information in the Digital Age’, forthcoming [117] In terms of implementation, the activities adopted by
Member States are mainly bottom-up and are not yet well structured through
national strategies. [118] ‘Commission Staff Working Document, Impact Assessment,
Document Accompanying the Recommendation from the Commission to the Council on
Access to and Preservation of Scientific Information in the Digital Age’,
forthcoming [119] These shares are based on calculations using available
data from a small number of universities on personnel and recruitment figures. [120] i.e. open access publishing [121] i.e. self-archiving [122] Houghton, John (2009a) Costs and Benefits of Alternative
Publishing Models: Denmark. Centre for Strategic Economic Studies Victoria
University, Melbourne [123] i.e. open access publishing [124] i.e. self-archiving [125] Houghton, John et. al (2009b) [126] i.e. open access publishing [127] i.e. self-archiving [128] Houghton, John et. al (2009c) [129] This conclusion is based on From Houghton, John (2009a) [130] Wellcome Trust (2004) Costs and business models in
scientific research publishing [131] From Houghton, John et. al (2009c) [132] RIN et. al (2011) Heading for the open road: costs and
benefits of transitions in scholarly communications. [133] Houghton, John et. al (2009c) [134] Houghton, John et. al (2009c) [135] Houghton, John et. al (2009c) [136] A Working Group on Portability has already been set up
with a report expected in spring 2012. [137] COM(2011)572