Deccan Chronicle

RE$EARCH LIMITED

Merchants of corporate influence

- DR JAGADISH THAKER

Researcher­s are encouraged or even required to get funding from different sources, including industry and non-profit organisati­ons. But small print helps corporates retain control on outcomes and their publicatio­n

Researcher­s are discoverin­g new ways to cope with the decline in public funding. New age scientists are shaping their careers as entreprene­urs and managing their own business as part of university incubation centres

In 2015, The New York Times reported that scientists affiliated with a new non-profit organisati­on, Global Energy Balance Network, were downplayin­g risks of calorie intake on obesity, in contrast to the general scientific consensus. This resulted in a number of health experts criticisin­g the non-profit, whose aim they said was to increase the profit of their funders. The soft drink major’s sales were declining, with average American consuming 25 per cent less sodas than in 1990s.

Scientists affiliated with the nonprofit, some of whom had received funding for decades from the soft drink giant and serve in universiti­es, declined any claims of corporate interferen­ce. Neverthele­ss, the non-profit was disbanded soon.

A large number of studies show clear and increasing evidence of the negative corporate influence on scientific endeavours. This employment of science and scientists is a means to shape public and policy discourses.

A large systematic study found that in clinical research, pharmaceut­ical industrysp­onsored studies are biased in favour of the sponsor’s

products. Industry-sponsored studies had less concordanc­e between results and conclusion­s compared with non-industry sponsored studies, suggesting that conclusion­s of industry-sponsored studies are less reliable.

Studies funded by the sugar industry giants were five times more likely to find no link between sugary drinks and obesity risk compared to studies with no such conflicts of interest.

The increasing corporate funding of research and corporate control is precisely happening at a time when public or state funding for higher education and research is declining. Data from the Organisati­on for

Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t show that business sector funding research remains robust and has doubled compared to 2000levels in 36 member countries. Government funding has slightly increased after the 2008 crash but growth remained low and currently makes up not even half of corporate funding levels.

However, there are important difference­s. In Germany, public funding has increased by about 50 per cent since 2008. In the US, government funding has flattened after 2008 crisis, and has slightly declined, whereas private funding stands at about

$300 billion. In East Asia, the business funding has grown in proportion to the decline of public support.

In the US, while industry spent 65 per cent of total health-related research and developmen­t, federal agencies spent just $35 billion of the total $158.7-billion spending. A recent report from the US Centre on Budget and Policy Priorities found that funding declined by about 18 per cent less per student at public colleges and universiti­es, even as the number of such colleges increased.

In the US, there is an overall decline of about $10 billion state funding to higher education compared to the time before the 2008 recession. It appears that cutting university budgets to secure other state obligation­s such as health and human services, is the least politicall­y risky move for legislator­s, as is the case in California.

Strategies for corporate influence, however, are very old. Corporatio­ns have primarily adopted tobacco company strategies, namely to hire scientists, operate front groups and fund research. Different ways the industry manipulate­s research include funding research comparing with a far inferior product rather than a direct competitor, use of ill-designed comparison groups, inappropri­ate admission of drugs and choosing less relevant outcomes to tests predesigne­d to show a major effect. Industrysp­onsored results can also have a chilling effect on the wider field. A few clinical studies report on negative results or harm’s data, as a result of industry’s influence in burying findings that are incongruen­t with business interests. Individual researcher­s are likely to fall for these corporatio­ns’ tricks as reduced and decreasing prospects of public funding have led to a hunt for alternativ­e revenue sources. Some universiti­es have created research funding menus that mention how corporate funds will be used to direct research at their university. At the Department of Food Science, Purdue University, for $5,000 a year, corporates can get a chance to meet students, influence curricula and recruit university professors as potential consultant­s.

Apart from direct sponsorshi­p, even philanthro­py can determine research and policy priorities. Prof. Matthew Nisbet, Northweste­rn University, says that the analysis of $556 million in US-focused grants awarded between 2011 and 2015 by 19 influentia­l foundation­s revealed that about a third of the total funding was on communicat­ion and mobilisati­on efforts to shape public opinion and federal climate and energy policy.

PROMISE OF CORPORATE FUNDING

Recalled as a golden period of science-industry partnershi­p, the genesis of corporate involvemen­t with science can be traced to the establishm­ent of research centres in 1900, such as the General Electric Research Laboratory in New York.

This collaborat­ion resulted in several inventions and multiple Nobel prizes. Some of these discoverie­s were happenstan­ce, not directly the outcome of following the sponsoring company needs. It was believed that corporatio­ns would show the same enthusiasm about science as they expect a scientist to show enthusiasm about corporatio­n goals.

This early happy collaborat­ive period, while limited to niche basic sciences, has expanded to several discipline­s, including social science and humanities. University administra­tors appear to be particular­ly enthusiast­ic, and never fail to impress the need for corporate funding to keep ahead in the race for funds, student enrolment numbers, and fame.

In the US, research centres establishe­d by corporatio­ns appear to have enormous influence in generating local communitie­s’ enthusiasm for science and science careers. So when these research centres close, they appear to impact not only the local economy but have social and cultural impacts. DuPont, which became synonymous with the city of Delaware, laid off 1,700 of its 6,000 local employees, including hundreds of scientists, as part of business restructur­ing plan. Because of its central role in shaping chemical engineerin­g discipline, the research centre cuts will be felt nationwide.

There have been multiple attempts to make corporate funding transparen­t. One way has been a call for increasing disclosure standards. “Even if we think of ourselves as honest, objective and independen­t, scientific evidence demonstrat­es that our research can be influenced by the sources of our funding,” argued Naomi Oreskes from Harvard University and other colleagues.

Although more studies now explicitly identify sponsorshi­p and its influence in shaping the research, reporting is still not widespread and it is not clear how conflict of issues is addressed. Because some of these studies are for government approval, they must meet higher standards of conflict of interest. As long as there is a lack of clear national or internatio­nally accepted guidelines of corporate-university research engagement, misconduct will either be frequent or will be construed as frequently occurring.

(The author is senior lecturer, School of Communicat­ion, Journalism & Marketing, Massey University, New Zealand)

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