Brown to budget for R&D

十二月 12, 2003

Chancellor Gordon Brown this week said he wanted to make Britain "the best location" in the world for science, research and development.

Delivering his pre-budget report to the Commons on Wednesday, Mr Brown announced plans to widen tax credits to encourage companies to carry out more R&D. He also promised to include unspecified "further improvements" to drive science and innovation in his next full budget, alongside the plans to increase financial support for universities.

Mr Brown said: "I want to build in Britain a shared national economic purpose, so that building on our historic strengths - Britain's scientific genius and creativity, Britain's global reach, Britain's stability - we become, in the era of globalisation, one of the world's most enterprising, flexible and successful economies."

Mr Brown also confirmed that a council for graduate entrepreneurship would be set up to help students and new graduates to get into business, and that workplace skills training would receive a £190 million boost.

* The Higher Education Funding Council for England has launched a £187 million fund to develop knowledge transfer between universities and business.

Hefce is inviting bids for the  permanent third stream of funding, which is worth about £90 million a year for 2004-06.

A centrepiece of the initiative will be the establishment of a network of about 20 knowledge exchanges, announced in January's white paper, which will receive up to £500,000 a
year.

Last week's Lambert report says that the £90 million a year fund should be increased to £150 million.

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