The new generation has its orders - to start inventing.
|
For
Parents line up in the corridor, each holding onto a worried-looking child. Behind a curtain, there is a nurse wearing a face mask. Beside the nurse is a pile of syringes.
One boy, Lu Junran, starts to shriek. His father holds him and strokes his hair, and the nurse gives the injection.
The vaccines this clinic uses have been developed by the Chinese company Sinovac.
After all, that is what
Yimin Zhang |
But in recent centuries, its inventions have dried up. Now it wants to start innovating again.
Sinovac's headquarters is in an industrial park on the outskirts of
In its labs, Sinovac scientists are trying to pioneer a bird flu vaccine - something that no other country has managed to do.
"We can't just be a factory for the world," says Sinovac's boss, Yin Weidong. "There's a huge market out there. We have to start designing our own products."
Mind-bending problems
Since 1999, Chinese spending on research and development has grown by 20% every year.
Hu Jintao has set a research and development target of 2.5% of gross domestic product by 2020.
The country's spending is now starting to have a global impact.
Young Chinese are increasingly involved in technological innovation |
The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) says that
In seven years time,
So multinational firms are now betting that the long-term future of innovation may lie in
Hundreds of companies have opened research centres in
Intel has its own compound in a skyscraper in
Intel's strategy is simple - sign up the best young brains in
"We believe that
"
And there are more and more of them. Every year more than 20,000 Chinese students obtain their doctorates. Some choose to work abroad, but many are now being encouraged to stay in
This new generation has its orders - to start inventing.
That is quite an ambition for a country built on repetition, copying and obedience.
No comments:
Post a Comment