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SLIATE Keynote 2017 Prosperity through

research and development

The present production model in the world is not to produce a whole product in
a single country. Instead, many nations collaborate with each other to bring out
a product today. Take for example the iPhone which is assembled in a factory
called FoxConn in China. The parts for iPhone come from 740 odd production
facilities scattered throughout the globe
SLIATE research symposium on an apt theme

Monday, 4 December 2017

I am honoured to be invited to deliver the keynote


address at the 2017 Research Symposium of Sri Lanka Institute of Advanced
Technical Education, popularly known as SLIATE. It is both encouraging and
promising that SLIATE has organised this symposium, assembling researchers on
many subjects together here.

It also has chosen an apt theme for the symposium, namely, Prosperity through
Research and Development. It is both timely and opportune, given the thrust of
the present government to convert Sri Lanka into a high-tech based economy
linked to the rest of the world to deliver prosperity to its people. I congratulate
the organisers on the enterprise they have shown in bringing it to a success.
Challenge the existing knowledge

Research adds to knowledge and knowledge is a prerequisite for delivering


prosperity to a people. As the Oxford historian, Yuval Noah Harari has
documented in his book, Homo Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind, humans
have advanced from one stage to another through the development of new
knowledge.

How does new knowledge come about? It starts by challenging the existing
knowledge. Then, new views are formed by people. Those new views should then
be tested against the phenomena which they observe in the real world. The
observations should be rational, meaning that they should be free from biases or
prejudices. Once a sufficient number of observations has been made, people can
make inferences about whether the new views are supported or refuted.

The pre-historic Homo sapiens as well as their successors in the agricultural, and
later industrial and now digital, revolutions followed this process almost every
day with respect to everything that they did.
University students should be critical, probing and challenging

This takes me back to 1959 when Vidyodaya University was set up. Its founding
Vice Chancellor, Weliwitiye Sri Soratha Thero, addressing the first batch of
students, is reported to have left a key message with them.

He is reported to have advised them that they should be critical, probing and
challenging. However, the working on this piece of wisdom should be in the
reverse order. Thus, the wise should set about creating new knowledge by
challenging the existing knowledge, probe into it by seeking evidence for and
against it and then take his own critical stand on the issue. What this erudite
Buddhist priest has left to posterity has been a universal truth. Human wisdom
progresses not by agreeing but by disagreeing.
Wisdom of the wise: Dont accept everything you are told as true

This was aptly presented by the Buddha in Kalama Sutta when he said that one
should not accept anything simply because it is acquired through repeated
hearing, tradition, rumour, scriptures, surmise, axiom, reasoning, pondering or
from learned Gurus. Acceptance should be done when one finds that it is
blameless and it leads to general goodness.

The 11th century Arabic philosopher Ibn al-Haytham advised scientific researchers
in a more cogent manner as follows: The duty of man who investigates the
writings of scientists, if learning the truth is his goal, is to make himself an enemy
of all that he reads and attack it from every side. He should also suspect himself
as he performs his critical examination of it, so that he may avoid falling into
either prejudice or leniency. Thus, a researcher should be outside the system,
looking at it as an outsider and not as one of its cohorts.

Researcher should be outside the subjects being researched

Therefore, conducting research is not an easy task. It requires the researcher to


stand on the top of a mountain and extricate herself from the rest of the crowd.
That extrication should be with respect to their beliefs, values, knowledge and
wisdom. If she is one of them, she cannot see beyond what others see. She will
simply be a follower imprisoned in a frame which others have set for her. If she is
to add new knowledge, she should be free from biases or prejudices.

This requires a researcher to be impartial, impassioned and objective. She should


not attach herself to her own beliefs. If evidence, gathered through an objective
process, does not support her view of the world, she should be ready to throw it
out. That requires discipline, humility and humbleness on the part of researchers
and they are the foundation of the scientific inquiries. The cultivation of these
attributes in oneself is difficult, but not impossible.
Even a lay mechanic is a scientist

Robert M. Pirsig, American Philosopher-Academic, argued in his fiction Zen and


the Art of Motor Cycle Maintenance, that everyone who follows the method of
questioning, probing and then coming to conclusions is a scientific researcher.

For example, consider a sideway motorcycle mechanic. When you take a faulty
motor cycle to him for repairs, he would form an opinion about where the fault
lies, starts testing that opinion with evidence he collects by examining the
motorcycle and if the evidence does not support his opinion, he throws it out.

Then, he begins a new testing by going through the same procedure. He would
continue to do so until he finds where the fault lies and what should be done to
rectify it. Thus, throwing out an idea which one has held very dearly if evidence
does not support it is not a disgrace at all. Rather, it is a part of the modern
scientific inquiries that help mankind to come up with better solutions.
Break the fetters that bind Sri Lanka to be a developing nation forever

Now back to the theme of the symposium. Sri Lanka is at a crossroads today with
respect to creating prosperity for its peoples. It is thriving to break a barrier which
has effectively pushed it back to the status of a developing nation. It was a
developing nation at the time of independence. It is a developing nation today
even after the lapse of some seven decades. Of course, Sri Lanka has made small
gains during this period. But they have been too small compared to the big gains
which its peers have made all these years creating an ever-widening gulf between
Sri Lanka and those nations.

Should it remain a developing nation in the next seven decades too? The answer
is that it is not the aspiration of this nation. If it remains so, the social, political
and cultural frustrations with which Sri Lankans would be afflicted will certainly
lead to chaos that would impede its growth further. Hence, the present
Government has as its vision to see Sri Lanka a rich nation within the time-span of
a generation and has pledged to lay foundation for same now itself.
Mastering disruptive technologies will make a nation a Master of the World

The prosperity of the world today comes from the advancement of human
knowledge and wisdom. The knowledge too changes day after day and a nation
should be flexible enough to acquire new knowledge if it is to remain on top
continuously. Thus, at the turn of the new millennium, the Singapore authorities
instructed all universities and higher learning institutions to concentrate on only
four areas which they thought would be the future of the world. They were
genetic engineering, information and communication technology,
nanotechnology and entertainment.

The wisdom of Singaporean authorities was that if any nation has mastered in
these fields, it would be the master of the world in the future. At that time, only a
few western countries had earned that qualification. Hence, Singapore wanted to
jump their bandwagon and be one of the future masters of the world.
Accordingly, it provided liberal funding to universities to undertake research in
these fields in collaboration with the best of the best universities in the world.
Today, Singapore is a giant in this region in these fields.

Of course, since then, there have been many new fields that have been added to
this list and it is ever-growing as demonstrated by the list of disruptive
technologies catalogued by the World Economic Forum every year. For Singapore
which has gone halfway in becoming a new scientific nation, it is easy to add on to
the list of new fields. For Sri Lanka, which is not even aware of these new
developments in the world, the challenge is to make a new start altogether.
Be a partner of the global production sharing network

That can be done if Sri Lanka could collaborate with other nations in creating a
new research and scientific culture. The governments plan is to create prosperity
for people by moving from a simple technology based nation to a complex
technology based nation.

The present production model in the world is not to produce a whole product in a
single country. Instead, many nations collaborate with each other to bring out a
product today. Thus, no nation has a single ownership for a product today, though
the tag attached to it may attribute to a single country.

Take for example the iPhone which is assembled in a factory called FoxConn in
China. The parts for iPhone come from 740 odd production facilities scattered
throughout the globe. They are connected together via a new production and
distribution channel called Global Supply Chain. But the appropriate term,
according to Sri Lanka born economist Prema-chandra Athukorala, is Global
Production Sharing. What it means is that the whole globe today functions as a
single production unit and shares its prosperity. Nations which can join this chain
will be winners. Others will simply remain laggards. Sri Lankas choice today is to
join the first category and not the latter.
Universities should lead the markets and not follow them

Hence, all the research which universities, other higher learning institutions and
research institutes conduct should be aligned to this goal of the nation. For that,
there is no need for them to wait until the government issues instructions. They
should make an assessment of where the nation stands today, where it wants to
go and how that migration should be done. Annual research programmes,
conducted by students or teachers, should be based on this requirement of the
nation. Universities should lead the markets and not follow them.
Encouraging initiatives to join the global production sharing network

There is of course some encouraging news about Sri Lankas entry to global
production sharing network in a small way. One Sri Lankan start-up firm, Lanka
Harness, has captured the whole world market in the supply of sensors for airbags
in motor cars. Another established firm, Brandix, is supplying canvass clothes for
Nike shoes.

This is a good start but not sufficient to create prosperity to Sri Lankans on a
sustained basis. There should be thousands of such firms supplying variety of such
products to global production networks if Sri Lanka to become a rich nation in the
next 30 to 40 year period. Research should be geared to identifying what new
products which Sri Lanka can produce and how existing products could be further
developed to supply as completely new products.
Ingenious brand building of Ceylon Tea by British tea traders

Let me elaborate on this second point by taking Sri Lankas tea industry as an
example. Tea was introduced by British planters to the country as a beverage and
created a market for it by using ingenious marketing methods.

I recall seeing in the London Museum a grocery store of mid 19th century London
displaying a bill board coaxing people to Drink Ceylon Tea, the Brain tonic. If the
message is true, Sri Lankans who are addicted to tea should be the brainiest
people in the world. But that was how the brand name Ceylon Tea was
established in the minds of European consumers.
The challenge of tea is to compete with soft drink bottlers

But today, with stiff competition from other beverages, tea has a limited success
as a beverage. Recall the foresight and strategy pronounced by the Chairman of
Coca Cola Company, Roberto Goizueta, in a sales representatives convention in
1986.

He declared: Right now at this point in time in the United States, people
consume more soft drinks than any other liquid, including ordinary tap-water.
Well take full advantage of our opportunities. Someday, not too many years into
our second century, well see the same wave catching on markets after markets
on to eventually the number one beverage on earth will not be coffee or tea or
wine or beer. It will be soft drinks our soft drink. So, all resources at the
command of Coca Cola were diverted to make it the number one beverage in the
world by targeting the young people. Ceylon tea which did not have such a
strategy has now lost the war to soft drink manufacturers.
Tea should cease to be only a beverage

Thus, the rescue of tea should be not as a beverage but as an industrial raw
material. For that purpose, research should be conducted to identify and extract
various chemical components of tea which can be used in the pharmaceutical,
beauty-care and healthcare industries.

India has already got patents for more than 100 odd perfumes manufactured out
of tea. However, in this game, Sri Lanka is a late beginner but like all late
beginners, it can learn to walk faster than others. Let Sri Lanka make this
beginning by concentrating on research on what the nation needs and not what
the researchers want to conduct.
Direction of future research by SLIATE

The SLIATE research symposium is one such beginning. For the time being, it has
been confined only to those on its academic staff. But that need not be the case
in the future. Its staff can benefit immensely if they collaborate with researchers
in other places and do joint studies.

(W.A. Wijewardena, a former Deputy Governor of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka,
can be reached at waw1949@gmail.com.)
Posted by Thavam

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