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| Arguments - Intervention Possibilities |
| Science and Technology in Agriculture, Livestock
Production, and the Food Industry |
| What could be
done to promote science and technology for improving China's food security? China is
facing the following major challenges and opportunities in the science and technology
sector: |
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It is necessary to stop
the "brain drain," which has deprived China's scientific community of
some of its greatest talents. There are numerous Chinese scientists at Western
universities and research centers who have chosen to stay abroad after being educated in
the West. The USA, in particular, has benefited from this flow of talent. Improved
conditions in China's science infrastructure have motivated some of these researchers to
return to China in recent years. This trend should be re-inforced. |
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It would help if the research
institutions could be focused and streamlined. First steps have been taken to
concentrate basic research in areas that are of strategic relevance for improving China's
food security, such as research in plant genetics and molecular biology. As data on
national research investments show, there was a massive increase in the number of
agricultural researchers, from 10,166 in 1965-1969 to 61,835 in 1990-1994 (see Table
1). |

Table 1 |
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As in many other countries, there
is a big gap in China between the center and the periphery. While some research institutes
have already mastered highly advanced methods of plant chromosome engineering, the farmers
in the hinterland often can use only the most basic technology. This is not only a problem
of lack of investment in agriculture, but also one of knowledge transfer. China should develop
a "fast-track" program for implementing available agricultural know-how
at the village level, particularly in those regions that have clearly fallen behind in the
general modernization of agriculture. |
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Finally, China could strengthen
the relationship between industry, science, and business, both for
research funding and for the transformation of research results into marketable
agricultural products. China has already encouraged commercialization of research in the
past decade; research centers have earned a portion of their income through technology
sales and collaboration with international companies. Some authors, however, have warned
that commercialization might distract researchers from their primary task and thus weaken
research effectiveness. |
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| Related Arguments |
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Science & Technology: Trends
Impact Data Quality Prediction Error Intervention Possibilities Intervention Costs
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| revision Heilig, G.K. (2004): RAPS-China. A Regional Analysis and Planning System. Laxenburg, Austria |
| Revision 1.11 |
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