Communication Forum for Economics,Business and Management Sciences Section#
Global Scientific Policy Advice Needed#
Op-ed by Klaus F. Zimmermann
Bonn, December 16, 2015
Scientific research does not have to follow socio-political concerns, but it is often inspired by practical challenges. While science cannot help policymakers in cases where hard evidence and convincing findings are lacking, both sides should nonetheless engage in evidence-based policy advice. National and international labor market policies provide a number of good examples how this concept can work.
Earlier this year, the governments of France and Italy have decided to draw their lessons from the successful German labor market reforms. This is a great step forward, even if the implementation has yet to come. On the other hand, many in Europe still fear the economic and social consequences of open and mobile labor markets – despite the proven success of EU enlargement and the available evidence from numerous international migration studies. Unfortunately, the new refugee issue has led people to increasingly ignore such findings.
But even though the success and the potential of evidence-based policy advice have been widely shown, the concept is subject to criticism from various sides. The necessary independence cannot be guaranteed, a common arguments goes. From this point of view, any policy recommendations are ultimately driven by political and economic interests and dependencies. This allegation is an attack on the scientist’s professional ethos, which includes compliance with the principles of good scientific practice, the pursuit of robust findings, and the impartial communication of these findings. New ethics codes, which the profession has recently adopted, ensure that these principles are upheld.
While good science is always global, some claim that good policy advice must be primarily national in scope. To be sure, national contexts and institutional differences are relevant for a policy adviser. But the increasing global interdependence leaves no room for provincial strategies. For highly open economies like Germany, policy is no longer national. Since globally oriented science ensures the competitiveness of national policy advisers, the quality of German policy advice would be threatened if it were to concentrate on national peculiarities alone.
Evidence-based policy advice, moreover, requires a combination of research and advice: The researcher also acts as an adviser, while the adviser also conducts research. In Germany, the Science Council and other scientific organizations have always stressed the need for this dual role, and the Academies of Science have been practicing it worldwide. Opponents of this concept claim that the dirty business of policy making only keeps scientists from doing good research. Likewise, the demands of policymakers are better met, according to the argument, if they free themselves from the constraints of seeking science-based advice.
Of course, there will always be scientists who shy away from offering policy advice, just as well as policy advisers who do not want to do research. This is not to be condemned. But these two types cannot be considered actors of evidence-based policy advice. And in the long run, this is likely to result in policies of inferior quality. Only the best scientific findings should provide the foundation for important economic policy decisions. Only genuine scientists, i.e., those who contribute to the advancement of science through their own publications, can produce such output, inspired by the challenges of their advisory role, and communicate their results as evidence-based policy advice. This superiority is owed to global competition both in research and policy advice, which ensures the use of the best methodology and findings.
- If you just want to read, you do not have to log in. Otherwise, log in with your username and your password. (Use the login button visible on top; if you have forgotten how to log in read this)
- When you are logged in, click at "Create a new page" to write a new contribution. Then type a short title. Do not use special characters except hyphen - and blank, or better underscore instead of blank. Then click OK. Now you will see an empty page. Just enter any text. When you have finished typing, just click at the button "Save". That's it, the title of your contribution is now automatically inserted as first item in the list of contributions on this page.
- You can insert plain text, but you can also edit it by using the small editor visible at the top (for example clicking at the paragraph symbol shown, or marking a part of your text with your cursor and clicking at B to make it bold, etc.). If you want to upload a picture, click at the "Upload" button, choose the picture from your harddisk or USB stick, and click "Upload" again; you can now adjust the size of the picture or put a caption between the two single quotes after the "caption".
Comments
If you want to comment a contribution, when you see the contribution, just click at the button "Comment", type your comment in the now appearing empty space, and click at "Save". Your comment is now visible, and notification that a comment has been made is sent to the owner of the document you have commented. Also, your comment is entered into the Blog of Comments. Try it out!
...no Data available!