This document is an excerpt from the EUR-Lex website
Research and innovation serving growth and employment
Research and innovation serving growth and employment
Research and innovation serving growth and employment
This summary has been archived and will not be updated, because the summarised document is no longer in force or does not reflect the current situation.
Research and innovation serving growth and employment
To make the European Union (EU) a vibrant knowledge economy. Such is the common approach proposed by the European Commission. Its Communication describes the action to be taken at European and national levels in the fields of research and innovation from the point of view of policies, funding and company management. It also sets out the commitments and measures included in the Community Lisbon Programme (CLP).
ACT
Communication from the Commission to the Council, the European Parliament, the European Economic and Social Committee and the Committee of the Regions of 12 October, More Research and Innovation - Investing for Growth and Employment [COM(2005) 488 final - Official Journal C 49 of 28.02.2006].
SUMMARY
The goal set by the 2002 Barcelona European Council was clear: to raise overall research investment from 1.9% of GDP to approach 3% by 2010. The 3% objective and the follow-up action plan have had a mobilising effect on Member States. Nearly all of them have fixed targets, which - if met - will bring research investment in the EU to 2.6% of GDP by 2010.
However, instead of increasing, research is stagnating. In most Member States, increases in public and private research investment are inadequate. Similarly, the range and ambition of policy initiatives fall far short of what the national targets require. As for the overall objective, the situation is relatively disappointing.
At world level, the EU is faced with competition from countries such as the USA, Japan, China, India and Brazil, making it difficult to attract investment in research and innovation.
The targets
If knowledge and innovation are to serve growth to the full, the Commission and Member States must make an effort on four fronts:
EU policies in support of research and innovation
In its Communication, the Commission emphasises the need for the EU to "ensure a favourable regulatory environment" for research and innovation. Harmonisation of all policies at national and Community levels needs to be encouraged in order to support research and innovation.
State aid is an essential policy tool for the development of research and innovation. In order to ensure its long-term and optimum effects, the Commission has recently launched a consultation document on state aid for innovation. The document puts forward concrete proposals to improve the Community's state aid rules and hence to increase funding possibilities as well as legal certainty. The promotion of eco-innovation is also one of the Commission's targets.
Another research and innovation issue is the protection of intellectual property (IP). This is an essential matter for most high-technology companies, and in order to attract them, the EU therefore needs a suitable protection system. To this end, the introduction of the Community trade mark and the Community Design Right constitute major progress.
The Commission has also decided to strengthen existing information and support services such as the IPR Helpdesk and to encourage better cooperation among national agencies concerned with IP. It plans to launch a dialogue with industry and other stakeholders in 2006 to determine what else might be done to provide European industry with a sound IPR framework.
A further challenge to the EU is to attract more researchers. In this connection, the aim is to create an open and competitive European labour market for researchers, enhancing diversification of competences and career paths at transnational level. Despite the progress made at national and European levels, mobility remains a source of uncertainty among researchers, especially from the legal, administrative and information points of view. In order to overcome these difficulties, the Commission will:
In order to raise awareness of the benefits of reorienting public procurement towards stimulating research and innovation, the Commission also intends to publish a handbook on the subject. The main aim here is to publicise the possibilities offered by Community public procurement law.
Finally, the Commission is planning to put forward guidelines intended to encourage the optimum use of tax incentives for research and development.
Summing up, the Member States, in order to encourage research and innovation, are called upon to:
Research, innovation and European funding
Support programmes are essential to research and innovation. This area must thus become a priority from the point of view of the allocation of public funding, at all levels. Similarly, better use should be made of public support mechanisms as an incentive for private investment, e.g. grants, equity instruments, guarantee schemes and other risk-sharing mechanisms.
To this end, several instruments have already been put in place or proposed by the Commission:
As regards funding, a major effort has already been made during the 2000-2006 programming period. However, there is still more to be done at both European and national levels.
At European level, the Commission will:
At national level, it will be a question of:
Research and innovation at the heart of business
Research and innovation contribute to the growth and wealth of businesses. Even more so when they form clusters * or networks. In order to bring research and industry permanently closer in this way, various initiatives should be encouraged at both European and Member State levels.
In order to tackle the current fragmentation of the European research and innovation system, the idea is to:
Towards an improvement in research and innovation policies
In view of the patchwork nature of national and regional research and innovation systems, which reduces their effectiveness, the regions, Member States and Community institutions must develop coherent and complementary policies. This is part of the revised Lisbon strategy.
The specific measures needed are:
Background
This Communication follows the launching of the new Lisbon partnership for growth and jobs, which designates knowledge and innovation as one of the three main areas of action. It describes the measures to be taken in this field, in accordance with the new overarching partnership between the Community and the Member States based on the integrated guidelines (IG) for the preparation of the National Reform Programmes (NRP) and on the Community Lisbon programme (CLP).
Key terms used in the act
RELATED ACTS
Communication to the Spring European Council of 2 February 2005, Working together for growth and jobs - A new start for the Lisbon Strategy [COM(2005) 24 final - not published in the Official Journal].
Communication from the Commission of 4 June 2003, Investing in research: an action plan for Europe [COM(2003) 226 final - not published in the Official Journal].
Communication from the Commission, of 11 March 2003,Innovation policy: updating the Union's approach in the context of the Lisbon [COM(2003) 112 final - not published in the Official Journal].
Last updated: 06.06.2006