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Brazil's Push for Innovation: an Example to Be Emulated PDF Print E-mail
Written by Luisa Massarani   
Monday, 07 August 2006 14:32

Brazil's Soar telescopeInnovation is now widely acknowledged as an essential tool for development. Other nations would do well to learn from the political challenges that Brazil's new legislation has unearthed. Last week, the five member countries (and five associate members) of the Latin American trade pact Mercosur agreed to work closely to boost trade, create jobs and reduce poverty.

In doing so, they injected new life into an organization that was created as the Latin American equivalent of the European Union, but has since struggled to get off the ground. Closer technological cooperation and a common desire to boost innovation are seen as central to this bid for regional integration.

In May, Mercosur ministers and senior science and technology officials agreed to develop a "shared space" for promoting innovation.

It is expected that Mercosur countries Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay, Venezuela and their associates - Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru - will set up a program for science, technology and innovation. This would promote links between research institutions and private companies.

Already some countries have indicated a strong desire to move in this direction. The new Chilean President Michelle Bachelet stressed in May that innovation would be a key part of her mandate. And in the previous month, Uruguay announced that scientific and technological innovation would be central to the country's development policy. 

A key issue coming out of discussions about innovation is how to achieve a better transfer of knowledge between universities and research centers on the one hand, and private companies - in which research and development activities are still limited in Latin America - on the other.

The concern is that most of the knowledge produced by research institutions stays on the shelf, and has little impact on society.

One country seeking to change this situation - and whose experience deserves to be closely watched by its neighbors - is Brazil.

Brazil recently passed the first national innovation law in Latin America.

An important element of the new law is its explicit attempt to increase social inclusion by encouraging public participation in decision making - which has rarely featured in the country's history. The law was drawn up with public consultations, primarily through posting a draft version on the Internet and asking for comments from different segments of society before it was discussed at public meetings. The final draft was approved in December 2004 and came into force last October.

The law has three main components: incentives for building and strengthening partnerships between universities, research institutes and private companies; incentives to encourage the participation of universities and research institutes in the innovation process; and incentives for promoting innovation within private companies.

A key component is that it encourages public and private companies to share research staff, funding and facilities, including scientific laboratories. This was previously forbidden on the grounds that it meant that public funds would be subsidizing private business.

In principle, one of the benefits of the new legislation is that it provides a way for private companies to receive government funding for innovation projects. Whether this materializes has yet to be seen; so far the government has not given any details on what form this support will take.

Private companies have also welcomed the government's promise to give tax credits for investment in research and development, although the details of how this will work have also not yet been clarified.

New legislation passed in June is a step in the right direction. It creates various fiscal incentives that are intended to promote technological innovation. In particular, it allows companies to deduct 60 per cent of any expenditure on technological research and development from their annual tax bill.

Similarly if a company increases the number of its research staff by more than five per cent, it can make a tax deduction of 80% of the researchers' salary. In addition, funding agencies will be able to cover part of the salary of masters and Ph.D. researchers working in a company.

Some industrialists have criticized the government for failing to allocate the budget necessary to put the legislation into practice. In response, the Ministry of Science and Technology said that an extra US$ 90 million is being spent on innovation in the private sector above the normal yearly allocation for 2006 - the increase represents about one sixth of the ministry's total annual budget.

Several other questions are being raised about the innovation law. There is concern that by subsidizing innovation, the government is helping companies motivated by private profit rather than social need.

Others say the government's strategy might only encourage a parasitic relationship between the public and the private sector. Or that it will undermine the independence of universities and research institutions, making them an extension of private companies.

It is too soon to provide a definitive answer to these questions. Certainly the law has yet to make any significant impact. Brazil's Minister of Science and Technology, Sergio Rezende, told the annual meeting of the Brazilian Society for the Advancement of Science last month that the impact of the new innovation incentives would only be visible in the medium term. This is because new links must first be created between companies and university research centers.

Rezende pointed out that as Brazil has invested in science and technology over the past five decades it has been slow to link this to the needs of industry. This situation - which Brazil shares with many developing countries - has placed the country at a disadvantage compared to other emerging economies such as South Korea.

Changing this situation will take time. Although promoting innovation is now widely acknowledged to have a major impact on both social and economic development, the issue is complex. Brazil has had the courage to take a step forward, and to recognize that political will is needed to make the shift. But it is not enough.

Strengthening partnerships between universities, research institutes and private companies can be important for stimulating innovation, but this needs to take place within a culture of innovation. And that takes time.

The Uruguayan social scientist Judith Sutz summarized the situation well.

"To increase their contribution to development through the production and distribution of knowledge, universities in developing countries need to transform themselves into 'developmental universities'," she wrote last year.

"But to achieve this, other participants, such as industry and government, must also be prepared to take on new responsibilities. No ready-made model exists to guide these changes; they will require both creativity and the willingness to engage in thoughtful dialogue, both within and outside universities."

Brazil is currently exploring how to encourage innovation through legislation, and in the process, is demonstrating the political challenges that need to be confronted. Other Mercosur countries should watch its experience closely. Hopefully the closer links being established through Mercosur will help other nations to succeed in achieving the same goal.

Luisa Massarani is SciDev.Net regional coordinator for Latin America and the Caribbean. This article appeared originally in Science and Development Network – www.scidev.net.

Comments (18)Add Comment
Emulations to reduce poverty ?
written by ch.c., August 07, 2006
With all the Brazilian emulations, why is Brazi the developing country with the LEAST economic growth ?????
With all the Brazilian emulations, why is Brazil the country with the highest poverty rate IN THE WORLD when compared to their GDP per capita ????????

Or simply stated : Where/What are you doing wrong AGAIN ?

Self compliments and Carressing your own navel will not change your rankings !

You cannot hide yourselves with populists lies !

Reality is not the reality you publish !

Come one ! Face the reality.... for once !

Many countries that were poorer than Brazil 1, 2 or 3 decades ago, are now Wealthier than Brazil !
What did they do right ?
And what did you do wrong ? Your supposed emulations ??????


A joke, a true joke !
Crap
written by Truth, August 07, 2006
Yikes, what a horrible text. Believe me, my fellow foreigners. That'll be just one more failed project. Did they ever think about reducing taxes and letting businesses grow? Did they ever think about creating an environment where PRIVATE COMPANIES invest in technology? What about letting companies keep most of their profits, so they can invest in whatever they want? What about letting grow companies whose business is technology? No. To the contrary, technology companies are the most taxed ones in LatAm and Brazil is no exception. The ones big enough to be able to pay good lobbists get some "incentives" in exchange, like those that the author is putting here. For all of the others, just the skyrocketing taxes. Believe me, that'll be just another failure.
Typical American Input...
written by Racureiu, August 07, 2006
Patronizing without substance… Gringo bastards!
Re: Typical American Input...
written by Truth, August 08, 2006
Quem te disse que eu sou americano? Não fale coisas que você não sabe.
Who told you that I'm american? Don't assume things that you don't know.
Brazilians.....mentally retarded !
written by ch.c., August 08, 2006
You want to develop technology (you have so much delasy) ! You want to have PCs affordable to the society ! Right ?
Thus why do you put an import tax of 100 % ???????????
Not very clever and in total contradiction with the goal of affordable technology !
Therefore where is your lie : do you want to have affordable technology for the society OR NOT ? And how are you going to do this ??????

I just remind you that in Brazil there is not 1 domestic car manufacturer ! Not 1 ! There is not 1 mobile phone manufacturers.....but just assembly lines...which is quite different !

Same for HDTV for which you just signed with Japan to get THEIR technology !

And same for drugs ! There is not 1 good size company with their own products...except eventually for generic drugs !

Brazil has simply never ever invested substantial amounts in R%D and in technology.
You always expect others to do the investments....but then you are even reluctant to pay a fair price, such as the HIV drugs !
Re: Brazilians.....mentally retarded !
written by Truth, August 08, 2006
Actually, brazilians are that retarded, in technical terms. Brazilians could do anything, if the government were not that joke and also if most of the people were not idiot. Anyway, you're mostly right, for most brazilians are retarded by not figuring out what's actually blocking the development of the country (which does not happen without the development of individuals and private businesses). There was one car manufacturer. A brave hero, Gurgel. He even researched some nice technologies, but of course, was killed by government regulations and taxes. That's the way it's here. Nonetheless, he was tremendously critical of brazilian government. For the rest, no way they could have been done in Brazil. As a matter of fact, any brazilian that has a good technological idea and knows how to make money on it, goes to do that in Europe or the US (when that brazilian manages to have a good technical education by international standards, which you can suppose is very very rare). Brazil is the land of the mediocre. Intellectual property protection here is virtually non-existent and the government is normally the first to break patents. How could anyone make drugs, something highly dependent on patents, here?

About the tax on computer, yeah, that's silly too. The government puts a 100% import tax on them, and then creates a program to finance those computers (the Comp**ador para Todos program, another laughable thing), as long as they are assembled in Brazil by some friends of the king. For that, the brazilian government is kind enough to cut ONLY SOME taxes. Of course they want to make money on it, and that's the main reason for the government to have so high taxes on imports. Hopefully, we have Paraguay and Miami, and we can buy goods in the black market. Were it not so, I guess many of my idiot fellow countrymen wouldn't be writing bulls**t in this site.
ooops
written by Truth, August 08, 2006
Where i wrote: "Actually, brazilians are that retarded", read "Actually, brazilians are NOT that retarded"
I forgot to add...
written by Truth, August 08, 2006
I just forgot to add. Brazil has some major international groups that were born here, such as Gerdau and Embraer. That makes it evident that our people are not inferior. If brazilian people were not idiot, and if we had a better government, the country could be much more. But as for now, it's mediocre with just a few exceptions. As of now, I don't have much hope. Quite simply, the brazilian government wants to control anything, and the brazilian people want a very large and powerful government. No way things will work this way.
Typical American Input... continues
written by Hey Mr. Veritas (Truth)!, August 08, 2006
Tem Culpa Eu?
Re: Crap
written by Batata, August 09, 2006
I agree with all this individual has put here. This article must be lobbist tailored and Brazil Government is a huge immense crap. :-\. Sad, very sad
But dont forget.......
written by ch.c., August 09, 2006
but dont forget.....
written by ch.c., August 09, 2006
....presidential elections are due very shortly. Thus articles describing things rosier than they really are......can just make anyone guess.....WHO paid and with WHAT money.......the writer of the article. ! smile -smilies/wink.gif)

And finally, I did not say that ALL Brazilians are mentally retarded. But the much less than half a million or so that are smart........ are not only governing the country....but are also the ones involved in ALL types of corruptions, money laundering, and voter buying, stealing the government and its agencies, instead of spending it for the well being of the whole society....as they are supposed to do !
In simple words, government money is their money. The whole society if their employees. And the country land is their farms. All the buildings and corporations belong top them. Which means that the other 98 % of the citizens are in a new and disguised form of slavery.
They even created laws that cannot punish them for doing illegal things.
They dont go to justice, justice being controlled too by them.
They dont go to jail for whatever illegal things they commit.
They are absolved by the others politicians, as corrupted as them, and worse....in a secret vote ! Thus no politician can be explicitly criticized to have voted for a non guilty verdict.

In conclusion : a true joke, true criminals, real liars and real clowns....the Brazilian politicians !
part 2......
written by ch.c., August 09, 2006
And then they want to give lessons to the developed world, not only by constantly criticizing them but also telling how things......should be done ! The WTO is a perfect example : they want richer nations to cut the agriculture subsidizes, but are unwilling for the same reciprocity in Industrial goods and financial services. If they are so good at administering their country.....why is there so much poverty.....despite a relatively high
GDP per capita when compared to their peers developing countries ?
They simply want it all for them ! "No import without heavy taxes and all exports without any taxes" should be the Brazilian national anthem !

The whole developed and developing nations are criticizing the Chinese trade surplus. But everyone making comparative analysis should realize that Brazil has in many ways a far higher trade surplus.
In 2005 China had an overall trade surplus of $ 100 billions and Brazil around 44 billions.
On the other hand China has 6 times more population !
China exported around $ 750 billions and imported around $ 650 billions. Their trade surplus being thus around 15 % of their imports.
Just do the same calculations for Brazil, and you will find out that their ration is at over 50 % !!!!!!!!! Yesssssss....Brazil imported around $ 80 billions !
Brazil also put some restraints on Argentina and Uruguay rice exports....despite the Mercosur agreement signed. But they expect the developed countries to buy even more of their agricultural products ! Really funny !
Afterall the EU is already buying around a third of ALL Brazilian agricultural exports, but our whole population is by far less a third of the world population ! Do they really expect that we will care more for the Brazilian farmers rather than our own 7 millions of farmers ? Should we make our farmers unemployed....to have the Brazilian farmers MORE employed ? Why not afterall....but then we may as well ask for all the car manufacturers to close down in Brazil and have them import 100 % of the cars. So that we can teach our farmers to switch their job and become blue collar workers !
But obviously that is not what Brazil wants ! Shortly they will also insist that we buy car built in Brazil ! In simple words, Brazil wants to dictate everything to poorer,comparable and richer countries.
They become quite arrogant in their " I want " everything and give nothing !
I tell you : Brazilians are loosers because they dont have common sense ! Brazil was, is and will remain a BOOM and BUST economy ! They can only produce cheaply the non value added goods, such as OJ, Grains, sugar, chicken, beef, iron ore and so forth ! All the rest is being made with foreign technology AND foreign investements !

Number of univesity degrees in Brazil : 10,6 % .........South Korea 85 %. S.K. was poorer than Brazil 2 decades ago ! Brazilian government spends as much money ( % of spendings) in government employees retirees as South Korea invests in education. And Brazil spends as much in education as S.K. spends in retirements pensions !

Brazil just do the exact opposite of what successful developing countries do !
The same could be said for technology and R&D investments. In Brazil what doesnt produce a quick profit is not a good investment.....thus they dont invest much in education, infrastructure, technology, healthcare, low cost housing.

A sad reality.....really sad !
True
written by Truth, August 09, 2006
The same could be said for technology and R&D investments. In Brazil what doesnt produce a quick profit is not a good investment.....thus they dont invest much in education, infrastructure, technology, healthcare, low cost housing.

Just to add one thing to this true statement. Do you know why every investiment must return a quick profit? Mostly because if it doesn't, the government is likely to change the rules and make it not profitable, both because our government never ever reaches any consent and understanding even on simple subjects like daylight saving times, and also because some politician might notice the possibility of profit and pass a law to stop it.

I agree to mostly everything that you say ch.c. That's what our country is all about, a big and ugly lie. I just disagree about protecting your farmers. Jobs should not be protected at all. What must be protected is the choice of consumers. I don't say that in defense of brazilian farmers, they should not be taken in consideration too. I say that in defense of you europeans. You have 7 million farmers, but 700 million consumers. In order to protect those 7 million farmers, 700 million consumers have to pay much higher prices for their food than they would if it was imported. The same applies to US. There is an economist called Frederic Bastiat who has written a lot about this. BTW, I'm also worried about some EU initiatives, like funding the development of search engines to compete against Google and Yahoo (see Quaero project), among others. I'm also worried about the regulations that are appearing in your continent. That's the way Brazil does things and it's an inefficient way of doing things. European leaders should look at Brazil, not in order to know what are the don'ts, but in fact in order to know what are the "don't even thinks", which unfortunately, some european leaders are copying from our bankrupted country. Sad reality for us, and potentially sad for you europeans. smilies/sad.gif

Anyway, your perception of brazilian reality is great. It's really less than half a million people the smart ones who control the country. The others are the idiots who hold the brazilian flag and defend this piece of crap, with some exceptions of people who manage to realize that.
What a shame!
written by Luciane, August 10, 2006
You may be as smart and bright as you think you are, but, Mr(s). (self called) Truth (?), you are really too rude to be taken seriously. Poor you!
Re: What a shame!
written by Truth, August 10, 2006
Rude? Rude is what my politicians do with my money. Rude is this piece of crap of innovation law that they are passing. Try running a technology company in Brazil, try paying all the taxes and try hiring people only to watch Finep projects, that have great deals like "loan at 19% of interest rates a year (very low by brazilian standards), ammount R$ 1 million to R$ 3 million, provided the borrower invests 50% of the money in (state) universities for research and provided he gives 100% of warranty of his own capital, like warehouses, machiney and others", among other laws like that.

That's rude! What a shame that you are not upset at that...
Half \"Truth\" is a Whole Lie!
written by racureiu, August 11, 2006
Cala a boca porque a ignorancia ta mostrando.... Good Day!
Re: Half \"Truth\" is a Whole Lie!
written by Truth, August 11, 2006
Quem vai me fazer calar? Que tal vir com argumentos contra o que digo? Mostre onde fui ignorante. Não tá gostando d'eu falar mal do Brasil e dos brasileiros? Pensa que eu gosto disso? Pensa que eu gosto de ver meu país transformado numa zona, entregue a um punhado de gigolôs? Isso que ainda falei bem dessa porcaria neste tópico... Good Day to you too!

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