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February 14, 2005Business Week Makes the Economic Case for Federal R&D SpendingMichael Mandel notes in today's BusinessWeek Online op-ed that President Bush's proposed cuts to federal support of R&D in his FY 06 budget request are shortsighted because of the impact they'll have on the U.S. economy. He focuses on multifactor productivity (MFP). a measure of productivity that, when it goes up, means "output per hour of the average worker goes up without any additional skills or a change in equipment." "An increase in MFP equals free money, extra production that you don't have to pay for," he writes. The key, according to Mandel: Multifactor productivity is borne of the essence of technological innovation -- the creation of new products and new opportunities out of ideas and thin air. For example, the spread of the Internet has not only made doing business easier and cheaper but also allowed people to do things that weren't even possible in the past. Think about Amazon, Google, and eBay. Wireless phones aren't just a substitute for landlines; they enable people to organize their activities in very different ways.Mandel notes that the President's cut to nondefense R&D spending "can only hurt the nation's ability to maintain a rapid pace of multifactor productivity growth." Putting more resources into technology and education is the best way to ensure that the bounty of higher MFP continues in the future.Read the whole piece. Thanks to Anthony Pitagno of ACS for the tip. Posted by PeterHarsha at February 14, 2005 12:38 PM | TrackBackPosted to Policy |