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By David Patterson, News.com
Posted on ZDNet News: May 11, 2005 7:57:00 PM

Commentary--A hearing this week in Washington will determine whether the United States will lead critical IT innovation in the 21st century.

The hearing, to be conducted Thursday by the House Science Committee, will focus on the state of research funding for information technology. Such funding, and the innovation it spurs, is vital to the U.S. economy and national defense.

Some historical perspective illuminates what's at stake. In 1957, the launch of Sputnik by the Soviet Union sent a wake-up call to the U.S. In response, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency was created and charged with preventing such technological surprises in the future. DARPA funded high-risk, high-reward research and sought to engage the best minds.

Since then, innovation in U.S. IT has grown substantially under government-funded research and has been critical to this nation's leadership in technology. DARPA, together with the National Science Foundation, funds most academic IT research in this country. In addition to swatting home runs such as the Internet, the majority of IT companies listed on the New York Stock Exchange and the Nasdaq, and the most technically advanced military in the world, IT research has become a key economic driver. In the last decade alone, IT was responsible for 9 percent of the United States' gross national product. In 2001, a National Academies of Science and Engineering report gave 19 examples of IT research leading to industries worth a billion dollars or more. Federally funded academic research played a major role in every case.

Over the last 10 years, however, there's been a major shift in funding priorities and policy at DARPA and the National Science Foundation. The current DARPA policy, which mandates 12-month "go/no go" research milestones for IT, has shortened deadlines, thus discouraging long-term research. In addition, programs formerly open to academics are now classified; other programs have citizenship restrictions. In three years, DARPA halved academic IT research to $123 million in fiscal year 2004. DARPA today is no longer engaging all the best talent in long-term research, which has been so vital to America's prowess in defense and essential to a robust economy.

Ironically, the high tech industry increasingly depends on government-funded research partnerships with academic institutions to spur innovations.
The effects of this significant funding shift are far-reaching and long-lasting. In the last five years, IT proposals to the National Science Foundation jumped from 2,000 to 6,500, forcing the agency to leave many worthy proposals unfunded. Sadly, other agencies are not stepping in to take up the challenge. The Department of Homeland Security, which some hoped would augment the Science Foundation and DARPA, spends just a few million dollars per year for IT research. NASA also is downsizing its IT effort; in March it encouraged all but 70 of its 1,400 employees at its Silicon Valley center to retire.

Nor can we count on the IT industry itself for long-term research investment. Ironically, the high-tech industry increasingly depends on government-funded research partnerships with academic institutions to spur innovations. Those new companies that sprang to life in the recent past--Oracle, Dell, Cisco Systems--have no research labs. And of the established IT companies, only IBM and Microsoft maintain large and growing research arms.

If declining U.S. research funding simply slowed the pace of IT innovation, perhaps the upcoming House Science Committee hearing wouldn't be as critical to the nation as it is to the research community. However, the rest of the world isn't standing still.

Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao recently went to India to propose co-development of the next generation of IT, with China producing hardware and India developing software. He predicted the coming of the Asian century of the IT industry, as both countries strive for worldwide leadership in IT.

The history of IT is littered with companies that lost substantial leads in this fast-changing field. I see no reason why it couldn't happen to countries. Indeed, at the recent International Collegiate Programming Contest of the Association for Computing Machinery, four Asian teams finished in the top dozen, including the champion, while the best U.S. finish was 17th, the country's worst showing ever. If current U.S. government policies continue, IT leadership could easily be surrendered to Asia.

Allow me to suggest two questions for the hearing: Could loss of IT leadership--meaning, for example, that the IT available to the U.S. might be inferior to that of China or India--lead to a technological surprise akin to the one with Sputnik 50 years ago? And, if the U.S. must face serious competition for leadership, isn't it better to attract the best and brightest to U.S. universities to come and work to help grow the American economy, rather than have them innovate elsewhere?

biography
David A. Patterson is president of the Association for Computing Machinery and holds the Pardee Chair of Computer Science at the University of California, Berkeley. He is a member of the President's Information Technology Advisory Committee and the National Academy of Engineering.

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 67 Talkback(s)
So True
Very true. The atomic bomb, fer instance....we are so unoriginal....

Except maybe for Jack Kilby, but who knows...maybe his ideas were inspired by a random encounter with a immigrant living in Roswell, NM... (Read the rest)
Posted by: tww356 Posted on: 07/20/05 You are currently: Logged In | Log out
Gee... BitTwiddler   | 05/11/05
So... xxyl   | 05/11/05
Really tired of these CNET stories betelgeuse68   | 05/11/05
They sure created skeptic tank   | 05/11/05
Typical US Blinkered ignorance/arrogance whisperycat   | 05/11/05
Not to mention, T25   | 05/11/05
The basis of STEALTH came for Russia. Laff   | 05/11/05
Perhaps Roger Ramjet   | 05/12/05
So True tww356   | 07/20/05
Technical advances Roger Ramjet   | 05/12/05
Not to mention, T25   | 05/12/05
Interesting point Roger Ramjet   | 05/13/05
Interesting point... T25   | 05/13/05
Did you read the rest of the website? osreinstall   | 05/11/05
I heard different Roger Ramjet   | 05/12/05
Must have lots of towers osreinstall   | 05/12/05
Thanks! Roger Ramjet   | 05/13/05
Minutes/Degrees/Seconds bmonster   | 05/13/05
My Typo osreinstall   | 05/13/05
The long dead past Roger Ramjet   | 05/12/05
The rise and fall of nations/people seems to be cylicle. Laff   | 05/12/05
Marconi Roger Ramjet   | 05/12/05
Maconi..Exception proves the rule perhaps? Laff   | 05/12/05
Marconi?... T25   | 05/12/05
What does soviet/Nato alignment have to do with it? voska   | 05/12/05
The long dead past. T25   | 05/12/05
Rome Roger Ramjet   | 05/13/05
"Sphere of influence" T25   | 05/13/05
big deal Jellydude Jeff Spicoli   | 05/12/05
A matter of degree and not kind Roger Ramjet   | 05/13/05
"A matter of degree" T25   | 05/13/05
DUDE!!! They have like close to a BILLION people and Laff   | 05/11/05
US isn't lacking talent osreinstall   | 05/11/05
Who said anything about lacking talent? Still for our Laff   | 05/12/05
You did in a way osreinstall   | 05/12/05
Oh I agree there are other factors but look at some Laff   | 05/12/05
Laff out loud Roger Ramjet   | 05/12/05
Maybe what you observe is due to yet another event that I Laff   | 05/12/05
Wad shot Roger Ramjet   | 05/12/05
Well I would hope that the cycle continues after all Laff   | 05/12/05
Observation and Interpretation Roger Ramjet   | 05/12/05
OK, pretty simple to do voska   | 05/12/05
Most invention/discoveries till the middle ages kchahal   | 05/12/05
Greeks Roger Ramjet   | 05/13/05
Your genetic reasoning is flawed osreinstall   | 05/12/05
Unfocus Roger Ramjet   | 05/13/05
"People bicker ALL the time - getting along is MUCH more difficult " T25   | 05/13/05
You didn't read any genetic or origin of man books osreinstall   | 05/13/05
Where innovation comes from. Zinoron   | 05/12/05
"The US becomes a heaven for free thinkers" T25   | 05/12/05
Origins Roger Ramjet   | 05/13/05
"Your opinion" T25   | 05/13/05
"Invention", T25   | 05/12/05
Please! gimme a Break! cipherskull_z   | 05/12/05
Break comming Roger Ramjet   | 05/13/05
Re: cipherskull_z   | 05/13/05
Compare Japan, Europe cool_techie   | 05/12/05
Japan and Europe Roger Ramjet   | 05/13/05
Do you mean race or country? cool_techie   | 05/13/05
American invention since 1850 can be matched by Europe? T25   | 05/13/05
Perhaps USA should review patent system and unpunished bad corp behaviour hipparchus2000   | 05/11/05
Look at who you hire matrixdomain   | 05/11/05
Industry has already voted Art Royce   | 05/12/05
So in Reality... nucrash   | 05/12/05
Well, we care a lot less about poetry than Vogons... Anton Philidor   | 05/12/05
It's the money, not people, that makes diff cool_techie   | 05/12/05
Attracting the top talent to Universities... bmonster   | 05/13/05

What do you think?

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