51勛圖

Brown to budget for R&D

Published on
December 12, 2003
Last updated
May 22, 2015

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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