100,000 new jobs by 2030
The Green Paper follows Labour’s stated aim to restore the sector’s growth rates to those seen under previous Labour governments and create 100,000 new jobs by 2030. They claim that achieving the 2012 share of global life sciences R&D would potentially attract an additional £10 billion in annual investment.
A range of major sector initiatives are proposed, to include:
- reforming the Life Sciences Council
- placing life sciences and innovation under the health secretary’s responsibilities
- strengthening the Office for Life Sciences (OLS) by working more closely with industry
- introducing 10-year budgets (to replace the typical current 3-year cycles) for major funding bodies such as the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) and UK Research and Innovation (UKRI).
Collaboration between academic institutions, funders and industry players is vital for the translation of research into practical applications. The government plans to facilitate partnerships between universities, research institutions and life sciences companies. Key to this is a strategy to increase university spinouts. It is proposed to follow recommendations adopted by the last government to achieve this by reducing high university equity stakes in spinouts, which can hamper early investment, and universities taking an equity stake of 10% or less in exchange for providing less support.