Skip to main content

Main navigation

  • Home
  • About Alan
  • Residents' Survey
  • News
  • Contact
  • facebook
  • twitter
  • instagram

Daily Telegraph - Investment is welcome, but Brexit Britain needs a new innovation culture too

  • Tweet
Alan Mak MP meets the Chancellor

The following article was first published in The Daily Telegraph on 21 November 2017. To see the original story click here.

In tomorrow’s Budget, the Chancellor will pledge to increase Britain’s combined public and private investment in R&D to 2.4% of GDP by 2027 and to 3% in the future. This means another £80 billion for our scientists, innovators and entrepreneurs over the next decade, transforming whole sectors and creating new jobs across the country.

This is welcome investment, which I’ve called for over the last 18 months as I’ve led work in Parliament to make Britain a global leader in new technologies such as artificial intelligence, precision medicines, driverless cars and robotics. These breakthroughs herald what many term the Fourth Industrial Revolution, and are transforming economies and societies around the world.

But if Britain is to lead this new wave of innovation, turbo-charge our economy after Brexit, and ensure we squeeze every ounce of return from our R&D investment, we must acknowledge that money alone isn’t enough. We need a change of culture and mindset too.   

The work of the Francis Crick Institute in central London, a gleaming symbol of Britain’s world-leading life sciences sector, reminds us about what is at stake.

Opened last year as Europe’s largest biomedical research laboratory, the £650million facility’s task is bringing new scientific breakthroughs and techniques to market. A hotbed of researchers and scientists, the Institute’s focus is commercialisation.

Since all research and innovation involves an element of risk, this means being at the cutting-edge of technologies which have sparked controversial debates, such as the development of ground-breaking gene editing techniques. For some, a potential cure for debilitating genetic diseases. For others, the thin end of the wedge towards “designer babies”. But as Sir Paul Nurse, Institute’s chief executive, recently said: “I don’t buy the ‘slippery slope’ argument, which I see as an extreme version of the Precautionary Principle — a way to stop something happening that could bring real benefits.”

The Precautionary Principle is a risk-adverse EU law enshrined in the Lisbon Treaty. It shifts the burden of proof onto innovators, often setting an impossibly high-bar when it comes to proving that a new product, technology or medicine doesn’t have any negative health implications. This can inhibit investment in research and development by either establishing an overly long and complex route to market, or banning research in a given area altogether.

The UK's life sciences industry employs nearly 500,000 people and contributes £30billion to the British economy. Holding back this sector from further growth with overly stringent regulation like the Precautionary Principle would be the wrong step for Brexit Britain’s economy. It would stifle innovation and prevent transformative medicines and treatments from coming to market.

However, regulations can and do provide important protections. Deployed sensibly, the Precautionary Principle can safeguard our health and safety, providing protection against future thalidomide scandals for example.

That’s why when we leave the EU, we should keep the Precautionary Principle – but establish a new British Innovation Principle to sit alongside and complement it. As the European Risk Forum think-tank points out, an Innovation Principle would recognise the “need to protect society and the environment” while also protecting the “ability to innovate”. This idea for a European Innovation Principle was supported by 12 CEOs of multi-national companies, who collectively invest more than €21billion a year in innovation across Europe.

In a letter to European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker they warned that regulation was holding back European growth. “Innovation is by definition a risk taking activity. These risks need to be recognized, assessed and managed,” they added.

A new British Innovation Principle, which I have proposed the Government adopt through its Industrial Strategy to be published next Monday, would place a duty on all public-sector bodies to ensure that whenever policy or regulatory decisions are under consideration the impact on innovation as a driver for jobs and growth is addressed alongside any potential risks. Regulators must consider the potential positive benefits of new innovations for public health and social wellbeing, as new technologies can improve quality of life, not just boost the economy.

A post-Brexit Britain needs a system of risk management – not risk avoidance.

This pro-innovation approach is vital as the new technologies of the 4IR become mainstream. We have a number of fledgling 4IR industries that would be in danger of being snuffed out through over-zealous regulation.

In agriculture for example, our farmers risk becoming less competitive as the rest of the world moves ahead in the production of genetically modified crops, despite repeated scientific assessments which have concluded that GM crops are safe for humans and the environment. As the supermarket magnate Lord Sainsbury put it: “For the first time we could genetically modify plants to make them more genetically resistant to disease, more productive, more nutritious and more healthy.”

The eponymous Sainsbury Laboratory is attempting to grow blight free GM potatoes – eradicating a disease that costs the industry more than £5billion a year. A British Innovation Principle would allow these scientists the space to flourish.

Post-Brexit, let’s give British businesses the confidence to invest in new products or services, safe in the knowledge that they can commercialise without innovation being stifled. This would also attract foreign investment, incubate 4IR technologies, and incentivise R&D investment, ensuring we receive the most bang for our buck as we match the 3 per cent of GDP on R&D that our competitors like South Korea and Germany already achieve. 

To make a success of the British Innovation Principle, Government must play its part by establishing an Innovation Commission tasked with scrutinising public policy and regulations to determine their impact on innovation and test the balance between risk and reward. An existing body such as the Better Regulation Executive could also have its remit extended to cover this too.

An independent Commission would ease the fears of environmentalists, and prove that Britain is still committed to the environmental protections secured by the Precautionary Principle as set out in the Rio Declaration. We mustn’t let the Innovation Principle become a backdoor for lowering standards, but adding it to our statute book after Brexit lays the foundation for a turbo-charged economy.

Britain is home to some of the world’s best engineers, scientific institutions, and entrepreneurs. Only by embracing a new Innovation Principle alongside sustained investment can we help them turbo charge Britain’s economy.

About Alan

  • Alan's Achievements - Local
  • Alan's Achievements - National
  • London 2012
  • Media Centre
    • National Newspaper Articles
      • The House - More British-Chinese should begin their journey to Westminster
      • Times Red Box - Breakfast food and phonics boost our children’s learning
      • Times Red Box - Forty years on, let’s renew our support for the Falklands
      • Times Red Box - How we’re giving a digital boost to small businesses
      • ConservativeHome - A new tech scrappage scheme will boost productivity
      • ConservativeHome - A week on from the Budget, it’s clear that it will boost innovation and productivity
      • ConservativeHome - Britain should champion a new Five Eyes critical minerals reserve system
      • ConservativeHome - End child hunger in Britain to help build a fairer society
      • ConservativeHome - Five new policies to ensure that post-Brexit Britain leads the Fourth Industrial Revolution
      • ConservativeHome - Industrial strategy. Focus narrowly and don’t spread thinly – concentrating on key innovative sectors.
      • ConservativeHome - Reform capital allowances and R&D tax credits to fire up investment and create jobs
      • ConservativeHome - Reform capital allowances and R&D tax credits to fire up investment and create jobs
      • ConservativeHome - To make Britain’s own ARPA a success, we must focus on the Fourth Industrial Revolution
      • ConservativeHome - We had a technological revolution in the 1980s, delivered by a strong leader. We have the same chance now.
      • One Nation Conservatives - The Fourth Industrial Revolution
      • ConservativeHome - Conservatism 4.0 series - 1) Adapting our Party for the Fourth Industrial Revolution is our greatest challenge
      • ConservativeHome - Conservatism 4.0 series - 2) Build an Opportunity Society means nobody is left behind by the Fourth Industrial Revolution
      • ConservativeHome - Conservatism 4.0 series - 3) Four Freedoms should define the Conservatives in the digital age
      • City A.M. - Let’s get serious about leading the fourth industrial revolution
      • ConservativeHome - The Industrial Strategy is a bold vision for economic renewal. But we need to invest more in R&D
      • Daily Telegraph - Investment is welcome, but Brexit Britain needs a new innovation culture too
      • FAZ - NATO remains central to Europe’s defence post-Brexit
      • London Evening Standard - The British Chinese should take more part in public life
      • Spectator Health - The new health secretary needs to bonfire Labour’s NHS fax machines
      • ConservativeHome 4IR series 1) Conservatives must champion and harness new technologies
      • ConservativeHome 4IR series 2) Technology can address the productivity problem
      • ConservativeHome 4IR series 3) We must prepare workers for the changes that are coming
      • ConservativeHome 4IR series 4) The case for embracing technological advances must be made now
      • ConservativeHome 4IR series 5) A Global Britain must look to the future
      • Daily Telegraph - Only a Tiger Mother Economy Gets Britain to the Future First
      • CityAM - Osborne delivered a Budget that backs Britain’s Millennials
      • Yorkshire Post - Put Joseph Rowntree’s values at heart of new industrial age for Yorkshire
      • CityAM - Britain must be boldly pro-enterprise to master the 4IR
      • Daily Telegraph - After Brexit how Britain can lead the new industrial revolution
      • PoliticsHome - Britain can lead the Fourth Industrial Revolution
      • Huffington Post - Why Britain Can Lead The Fourth Industrial Revolution
      • New Statesman - Our financial future depends on our ability to innovate
      • The Times - ‘Fourth industrial revolution’ is key to Britain’s future
      • CityAM - Shelve the EU’s anti-innovation precautionary principle to turbocharge the UK’s Fourth Industrial Revolution post-Brexit
      • Daily Telegraph - Robots will free Southern Rail passengers from the tyranny of the Luddite unions
      • London Evening Standard - We need to nurture new tech for the Fourth Industrial Revolution
      • The Times - ‘Britain has the talent to lead the Fourth Industrial Revolution’
      • City A.M - Britain needs a smart state, not big government, to lead the Fourth Industrial Revolution
      • The House - Britain can lead the fourth industrial revolution – but we all need to get behind the effort
      • Yorkshire Post - Importance of tech industry to North’s economy cannot be stressed enough
      • The Times - Time to lead a new industrial revolution

Alan Mak Member of Parliament for the Havant Constituency

Footer

  • About RSS
  • Accessibility
  • Cookies
  • Privacy
  • About Alan Mak
  • Alan's E-Mail Newsletter - Sign Up!
  • Media Centre
  • facebook
  • twitter
  • instagram
Promoted by Alan Mak of Denvilles House, 33 Emsworth Road, Havant PO9 2SN. Unauthorised use, copying, storage or distribution of the text and/or photographs and/or other content on this website is prohibited. This website is not funded by the taxpayer.
Copyright 2025 Alan Mak Member of Parliament for the Havant Constituency. All rights reserved.
Powered by Bluetree