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Tide of International Science Moving Against US, EU

explosivejared writes "The Economist has a story on the increasing scientific productivity of countries like China, India, and Brazil relative to the field's old guards in America, Europe, and Japan. Scientific productivity in this sense includes percent of GDP spent on R&D and the overall numbers of researchers, scholarly articles, and patents that a country produces. The article notes increasing levels of international collaboration on scholarly scientific articles in leading journals. From the article: '[M]ore than 35% of articles in leading journals are now the product of international collaboration. That is up from 25% 15 years ago — something the old regime and the new alike can celebrate.'" Note that the "old guard" are still firmly in the lead on these measures of scientific prowess, but the growth rate is higher in the newcomer states.

3 of 302 comments (clear)

  1. "Tide" of Science by Compaqt · · Score: 1, Redundant

    I thought this was going to be a global warming study, rising sea levels ...

    with the US singled out for special opprobrium because it's basically the only country unwilling to accept the consensus of (most) scientists that global warming is happening.

    --
    I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on the Internet. Blog
  2. Re:Just too bad by The+Great+Pretender · · Score: 0, Redundant

    I say make more people MBAs! We need more MBAs!! (What do MBAs actually do? Cause at my work all they seem to do is regurgitate things I say and make very boring power point presentations with the same clip art and generic percentage data about general stuff)

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    A positive attitude may not solve all your problems, but it will annoy enough people to make it worth the effort.
  3. Re:Here's the solution by eulernet · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Who cares about scientists and teachers ?

    Let's train a generation of lawyers !