The Korea Times

THOUGHTS of THE TIMES

Korea: world’s biggest investor in research

- By Dirgha Raj Joshi

With improving economic conditions, Asian nations are spending a lot of resources in hopes of winning Nobel prizes, but they will need more than cash to realize their ambitions.

The major part of South Korea’s scientific developmen­t strategy was created in 1999 as the “21st Century Frontier R&D Program,” and launched as part of a national plan called the “Long-term Vision for Science and Technology Developmen­t Toward 2025.”

After the successful setup of a prototype of a xion detector in Daejeon, a major experiment is slowly taking shape. One day it might answer a major mystery about the Universe by detecting a particle called the xion — a possible component of dark matter. If it succeeds, it will have the potential to rewrite physics and win its designers a Nobel prize.

The government is spending heavily to achieve this goal. In 1999, it allocated 2.07 percent of GDP, which reached 4.29 percent in 2014, surpassing runner-up Israel (at 4.11 percent), as well as regional competitor­s Japan and the United States. The government aims to increase its investment to 5 percent of GDP in 2017.

As of 2014 most of the R&D money came from industry (75 percent), government (23 percent) and others (2 percent). South Korea has one of the world’s highest proportion­s of researcher­s, 12.84 researcher­s per 1,000 as of 2013.

South Korea has doubled its academic publicatio­ns in scientific journals since 2005. Figures released in 2014 by the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) show that nearly 70 percent of South Koreans who were awarded Ph.D.s in the United States from 2008 to 11 planned to stay there. The government cannot stop this directly so it needs to think of working hours, stress, pay and other benefits within Korea.

As an internatio­nal student and a researcher from Nepal, I would like to request all concerned bodies including the government to re-think the current situation and improve it.

Graduate education should be made free and support given to graduate students for their living expenses because they are totally focused on research that will be a great asset for the country as well as for the betterment of the world.

A minimum of 30 percent of internatio­nal student admission should be made compulsory at all universiti­es. Respective cooperativ­e research labs should be establishe­d in diverse fields such as the Korea-Nepal Research Laboratory on Hydropower/Health/Agricultur­e. Korean scholars and researcher­s will no longer be only Korean but will be multicultu­ral and take their place rivaling the best research efforts in the world.

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