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In fact,
probably the best way to look at productive innovation is as a two-phase
process -- an exploratory phase and a deployment phase. The exploratory
phase is bottoms-up, a little chaotic, autonomous in that it’s
spontaneous. The deployment phase is goal-oriented, mission-oriented,
and it has to be directed from the top down, and it is expensive. That's
where the billion dollars come. The current grant mechanism almost
completely serves the autonomous process. You put all things together,
80 percent of the NIH budget goes toward that and much of the 20 percent
goes to related infrastructure.
We need to rebalance the
system so that the equivalent of manufacturing in our business, the
deployment, is as well-funded and as well-celebrated, as well-organized
as the autonomous process.
To
rebalance this, you need a new grant mechanism. I propose a new grant
mechanism that I’ll call, in the absence of anything better, the X01
grant.

The X01
Grant is mission-oriented -- the mission should be set top down. The
dollar amount should be high, in the billion-dollar range. And it should
be monitored by a rolling two-year forecast every six months, for the
following two years. And if the goals are not met, the grant should be
terminated -- with regrets.

Very importantly, in
choosing a principal investigator, special attention should be toward
program management skills. Program management skills will make or break
these things. And the science should not be the best science. It should
be science that is good enough for the mission. The best
science is for another train, another day.
Our country has been able
to marshal resources to do this in war time, but not when driven by
economic imperatives, like an Alzheimer's disease meteor coming our
way. My question is, is the science establishment -- are you and your
seniors ready to lead? And I think you should consider that the day may
come when Congress will have no choice but to look at the performance of
the billions of dollars that has been spent on science and ask, "Has it
been worth it? Is the world ready to use that money that we give out in
trust for the public? And if not, why give it to them any more?”
I apologize for being
over time and it's your turn now.
[Applause]
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