Title: Science
1Science Engineering Indicators 2006
National Science Foundation
Division of Science Resources Statistics
Briefing to PCAST March 28, 2006 National
Science Foundation Division of Science Resources
Statistics www.nsf.gov/statistics/
Rolf Lehming rlehming_at_nsf.gov
2Major international ST trends and implications
for the United States
National Science Foundation
Division of Science Resources Statistics
- Broad expansion of ST capabilities is underway
in many countriesboth policy- and market-driven. - Growth by many measures of ST activity is
ubiquitous in much of the world - but is nowhere as rapid as in Asia outside of
Japan. - Consequently, the European and Japanese shares
of world totals are eroding. - The United States is generally maintaining its
position - but it is facing both domestic and external
challenges.
3International RD trends
National Science Foundation
Division of Science Resources Statistics
- RD expenditures are increasing robustly around
the world, driven by both governments and
industry.
4Internationalization of RD
National Science Foundation
Division of Science Resources Statistics
- Firms cross-border RD investments are on the
increase
5U.S. overseas RD
National Science Foundation
Division of Science Resources Statistics
- U.S. multinationals are shifting their growing
overseas investments to Asia.
6Rapid rise in Chinese RD
National Science Foundation
Division of Science Resources Statistics
- The rapid rise of Chinas RD expenditures is
unprecedented for any country in recent memory,
in part reflecting RD performed by
foreign-owned, China-based firms.
7High technology markets
National Science Foundation
Division of Science Resources Statistics
- U.S. manufacturing has shifted swiftly towards
high technology, resulting in a strong world
market position, while Europe and Japan are
losing market share.
8High technology exports
National Science Foundation
Division of Science Resources Statistics
- High technology exports are expanding, but
European, Japanese, and U.S. export shares are
shrinking as those of China and other Asian
exporters are rising.
9High technology trade balance
National Science Foundation
Division of Science Resources Statistics
- The U.S. trade balance for both high technology
industries and goods has turned negative.
10Academic scientific research
National Science Foundation
Division of Science Resources Statistics
- Chinese academic research has grown robustly,
with double-digit annual growth rates since 1999,
but remained at only about 10 of the national
total.
11ST expertise and scientific publishing
National Science Foundation
Division of Science Resources Statistics
- Outside of Japan, Asian nations still modest
international publishing and patenting activities
are on accelerating upward trajectories.
12International SE labor forces
National Science Foundation
Division of Science Resources Statistics
- International SE labor force data can only be
approximated.
13International SE degree production
National Science Foundation
Division of Science Resources Statistics
- International degree production is rising and
focused on natural sciences and engineering,
especially in Europe and Asia.
14International SE doctorate degrees
National Science Foundation
Division of Science Resources Statistics
- The bulk of SE doctorates have been granted
outside the United States
15International mobility
National Science Foundation
Division of Science Resources Statistics
- Large numbers of highly educated persons live
outside their home countries
16SE jobs in the United States
National Science Foundation
Division of Science Resources Statistics
- SE jobs have grown faster than U.S. degree
production, but foreign-born scientists and
engineers have filled the gap.
17Foreign-born in U.S. SE
National Science Foundation
Division of Science Resources Statistics
- As Asian countries develop their ST
infrastructures, fewer of their scientists and
engineerscurrently 2/3 of foreign SE doctorate
holdersmay come to or stay in the U.S.
18Student and high-skill visas
National Science Foundation
Division of Science Resources Statistics
- The number of U.S.-issued foreign student visas
remains 25 below its pre- 9/11 peak, reflecting
lower applications
19Retirements
National Science Foundation
Division of Science Resources Statistics
- A large number of retirements from the U.S. SE
labor force is impending
20Demographic trends pose challenges
National Science Foundation
Division of Science Resources Statistics
- Yet continuing demographic changes pose
challenges to raising domestic SE degree output
21International K-12 performance
National Science Foundation
Division of Science Resources Statistics
- The performance of U.S. students in K-12 may
raise concern
22U.S. academic RD funds
National Science Foundation
Division of Science Resources Statistics
- Since 1990, inflation-adjusted academic RD
expenditures have almost doubled, driven by
federal and institution funds
23Researcher support
National Science Foundation
Division of Science Resources Statistics
- Strongly rising government funding reaches
proportionately fewer of a growing number of
researchers
24Overall U.S. RD investment
National Science Foundation
Division of Science Resources Statistics
- Total U.S. RD investment has rebounded
robustly after declining in 2002
25U.S. venture capital trends
National Science Foundation
Division of Science Resources Statistics
- But U.S. venture capital, seedbed of startup
companies, has grown risk-averse
26Conclusion
National Science Foundation
Division of Science Resources Statistics
- The globalization of RD, science and
technology, and SE labor markets continues as
countries seek competitive advantage and as RD
spending, business investment, people and
employers cross borders. - Human capital is a key ingredient in these
developments. Three factors affecting the size of
the U.S. SE labor force are - Retirements,
- SE degree production, and
- immigration.
27Conclusion, continued
National Science Foundation
Division of Science Resources Statistics
- A prolonged slowdown in the growth of the U.S.
SE workforce would produce wage growth
adjustments whose net effects in a mobile and
integrated ST world are currently hard to
assess. - Better data, metrics, and models are needed to
capture the evolving dynamics of international
SE labor markets and other aspects of ST
systems.