That's a complex question. I think there has been a quite extraordinary move in recent decades in the direction of conceptualizing science and technological development solely in terms of economic growth, national competitiveness. I think the innovation strategy has been almost over-burdened with that kind of rhetoric. In my view, that has led to institutional arrangements that in some cases compromise the independence of scientific research.
But another outcome is a kind of depoliticization of science and technology. We're consistently given the message that there's a national crisis to which the only viable response is massive public investment in scientific and technological development. Such an investment would create a science culture, but a science culture in which people aren't encouraged to ask questions about science and technological development, because they're consistently told that we need to get on board or there's going to be a national economic disaster.
As important as science and technological development is to economic prosperity and viability, if our investment in it comes at the expense of our ability to ask questions about the social implications of scientific and technological development, or if it comes at the expense of the independence of scientists to pursue avenues of inquiry that often get labelled “pure science” and have no immediate economic benefit, then we're going down the wrong road. I think, at least on a rhetorical level, there are some alarm bells to be paid attention to here.