{
    "success": true,
    "data": {
        "id": 17765,
        "msgid": "searching-for-indonesiarsquos-amartya-sen",
        "date": "2015-08-13 09:08:33",
        "title": "Searching for Indonesia\u2019s Amartya Sen",
        "author": "Arnaldo Pellini and Zack Petersen",
        "source": "Jakarta Post",
        "tags": null,
        "topic": null,
        "summary": "The Indonesian government is making great strides to embrace more evidence-based policy making. Yet these policies, however forward-thinking, will have little uptake unless three key mechanisms are put in place. First, universities have to commit to higher-standards and equip students with the research skills to provide public institutions with high-quality research.",
        "content": "<p>The Indonesian government is making great strides to embrace more evidence-based policy making. Yet these policies, however<br>\nforward-thinking, will have little uptake unless three key mechanisms are put in place.<\/p>\n<p>First, universities have to commit to higher-standards and equip students with the research skills to provide public<br>\ninstitutions with high-quality research.<\/p>\n<p>Second, there must be an increase in the share of expenditure in research and development as a percentage of gross domestic<br>\nproduct. And finally, Indonesia must commit to attracting and retaining a higher number of policy researchers and analysis so<br>\nthat in the near future we will see an Indonesian Amartya Sen, the Indian economist and philosopher and Nobel Prize laureate for<br>\neconomics in 1998.<\/p>\n<p>Indonesia\u2019s ability to compete at a global level when it comes to research and development depends on the quality of the next<br>\ngeneration of researchers coming out of the universities and the support they receive upon graduation from the government and<br>\nthe job sector.<\/p>\n<p>Ask 10 kids in Indonesia what they want to be when they grow up and odds are entrepreneur, doctor and businesswoman all come up<br>\nmore than once. These days everyone wants to be a social entrepreneur. But what about a career as a researcher? What about<br>\ngrowing up to become Indonesia\u2019s premiere scientist?<\/p>\n<p>There is a stigma in Indonesia around science and technology. For whatever reason, research and researchers are the opposite of<br>\nsexy. Maybe it\u2019s the pay? Or lack of recognition?<\/p>\n<p>Indonesia is poised to become one of the world\u2019s top 10 economies by 2025, yet the government, which sets aside about 20 percent<br>\nof the state budget for education, only earmarks 0.08 percent of a Rp 257 trillion budget, for research. This equates to roughly<br>\nUS$16 million for all university, ministerial, and national development research.<\/p>\n<p>A comparative study by Greta Nielsen in 2010 showed that the gross expenditure for research and development as a percentage of<br>\nGDP in Singapore was at 2.61 percent and in Malaysia it was 0.64 percent. The average of the Organization for Economic<br>\nCooperation and Development countries in 2010 was 2.38 percent. The 2014 Global R&amp;D Funding Forecast for Indonesia puts the<br>\nspending on R&amp;D at 0.2 percent of GDP for 2014.<\/p>\n<p>As a result, Indonesian policymakers rely on research produced outside of the country to inform key policies shaping Indonesia\u2019s<br>\nfuture.<\/p>\n<p>The key actions that need to be taken, and the inherent risks that come with ignoring the knowledge sector, could prove<br>\ndetrimental to Indonesia\u2019s hopes and dreams.<\/p>\n<p>Indonesia\u2019s social and economic progress hinges on a bold, forward-thinking generation of business leaders and philanthropists<br>\ncommitted to funding high-quality research, urging the government to adopt smart policies and utilizing strategic philanthropy<br>\nas a compass to address the needs of Indonesia\u2019s burgeoning knowledge sector.<\/p>\n<p>A thriving knowledge economy depends on strategic linkages created by a flourishing ecosystem, constructed of government actors,<br>\nphilanthropists, policy research institutes, the private sector corporations all supporting development funding.<\/p>\n<p>Research, essential to any development endeavor, is the building block of a knowledge economy and is still underfunded in<br>\nIndonesia. The private sector has the potential to play an important role and lead the way in establishment of an effective<br>\nlocally based research system.<\/p>\n<p>But there are positive steps being taken. Recently, The Indonesian Academy of Sciences (AIPI), launched the Indonesian Science<br>\nFund, a never-before-seen pool of research funds aimed at increasing the pool of trained research scientists and engineers, and<br>\nfostering entrepreneurship and innovation.<\/p>\n<p>With support from philanthropists and the private sector, as well as technical assistance by programs such as the Knowlede<br>\nSector Initiative, a joint program of the Australian and Indonesian governments, the Indonesian Science Fund could grow to<br>\nsupport critical research in fields such as social science, bioengineering and computer science.<\/p>\n<p>It all boils down to perception. Real demand from the public and a groundswell of university students champing at the bit for<br>\nhigh-quality research coming from their professors will help improving the amount and quality of policy research that is used in<br>\nthe policy making process. It will take some time, but then we will see an Amartya Sen in batik.<br>\n_______________________________<\/p>\n<p>Arnaldo Pellini is a research fellow at the Overseas Development Institute and a senior advisor at the Knowledge Sector<br>\nInitiative. Zack Petersen is the strategic outreach specialist at the Knowledge Sector Initiative.<\/p>",
        "url": "https:\/\/jawawa.id\/newsitem\/searching-for-indonesiarsquos-amartya-sen",
        "image": "true-false.png"
    },
    "sponsor": "Okusi Associates",
    "sponsor_url": "https:\/\/okusiassociates.com"
}