China should surpass Japan this year to become the world's No 2 investor in
research and development after the United States, the Organization for Economic
Co-operation and Development (OECD) said yesterday.
China is expected to spend just
over US$136 billion on R&D in 2006, passing Japan's forecasted US$130
billion, the Paris-based OECD said in a report on world technology
trends.
China's spending on R&D as a percentage of GDP, known as R&D intensity, has more than doubled from
0.6 per cent of GDP in 1995 to just over 1.2 per cent in 2004, the OECD
said.
In current prices, this represents an increase from just over US$17
billion in 1995 to US$94 billion in 2004. This means R&D spending is growing
even faster than the economy, which is expanding by between 9 per cent and 10
per cent a year, according to an OECD press release yesterday.
Figures
for 2005 and 2006 are projected on the assumption of a continuation of growth in
R&D spending last year and in 2006 at the same average rate as was observed
over 2000-04.
Sources with the Ministry of Science and Technology declined to
comment on the report, but said last year's figure was less than one fourth of
the OECD's 2006 figure.
According to the ministry, China spent 245
billion yuan (US$30.6 billion) on R&D in 2005, which was about 25 per cent
more than in 2004.
Of the 2005 total amount, about 55 per cent was from
the central government, said the ministry. There was a rapidly increasing
percentage from businesses.
According to Dirk Pilat, head of the OECD's
science and technology division, "the rapid rise of China in both money spent
and researchers employed is stunning."
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