Published:
Big Ten Provosts Commit to Working Together to Make the Midwest's Economy More Competitive
MINNEAPOLIS, June 30 /PRNewswire/ -- Twelve provosts from the Big Ten
universities and the Midwest region say they will work together on efforts to
make the Midwest's economy more competitive and are calling on governors to
join them in this effort. The provosts from the Committee on Institutional
Cooperation (CIC), a consortium of the Big Ten universities plus the
University of Chicago, signed a resolution to that end on Friday, June 27. The
resolution came during an economic summit convened by the provosts at the
Federal Reserve Bank ofMinneapolis.
University leaders, leaders of regional banks, chief executive officers,
government leaders, economists, researchers and professors participated in the
summit in an effort to find ways to break down barriers that prevent them from
effectively working together to build a vital Midwest economy. The summit,
"Developing a Regional View of the Midwest Economy: Breaking Down Barriers
That Impede Regional Progress," was sponsored by the University of Minnesota,
the CIC and the Federal Reserve Bank ofMinneapolis.
"Like the national economy, the Midwest economy is facing great
challenges. We believe it is important for our universities to work closely
with each other and with CEOs and leaders of government to make the Midwest
economy more robust," said University of Minnesota Provost Thomas Sullivan.
To watch a video interview about the summit with University of Minnesota
Provost Thomas Sullivan, visit:
https://mediamill.cla.umn.edu/mediamill/embed/14499
"There has to be a better partnership -- public-private partnership
between the political leadership of each state and the business and corporate
leaders, to be able to understand that they need a closer relationship with
the universities that are literally in their back door and have all the talent
to educate and to train the next generation of workers," Sullivan said.
The region already possesses vitally important assets, including the Great
Lakes, significant industrial and corporate entities, world-class research
universities, dynamic cities and agricultural resources -- all of which are
central to a vibrant Midwest economy. The National Science Foundation (NSF)
reports that the 12 CIC universities received over $3.1 billion in federal
science and engineering support in FY2005. This represents 12.4 percent of the
total federal science and engineering dollars -- some $25.4 billion -- awarded
in the U.S. for that year. In addition, CIC universities have been awarded 18
percent of the total NSF science and engineering dollars, and nearly 16
percent of the total U.S. Department of Agriculture dollars.
"Just to show you the importance in terms of education research and
economic development, if you look at the Big Ten Universities and the
University of Chicago together, we spend more than $6 billion in research
annually, we have 50,000 faculty more than 142,000 staff and employees and
some 385,000 students. It's something like a fifth of the economy in the upper
Midwest in terms of that research impact and productivity," Sullivan said.
Universities play an important role in the economy, Sullivan said.
"Particularly in an economy like this," Sullivan said. "The very first
thing that goes when you're in a recession or a near recession is the research
and development in businesses and corporations. That's the future lifeblood
for the business -- their research and development and that research and
development still goes on at the universities. And it's the university
researchers who will do that kind of planning."
The American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) reports
that the seven states of the Midwest that have schools in the CIC --Iowa,
Minnesota,Indiana,Illinois,Wisconsin,Ohio andMichigan -- have a robust
nonprofit sector, which is highly competitive for federal research and
development funds, with three of the top 10 nonprofit recipients of federal
research and development funds in the Midwest -- the Mayo Foundation, Battelle
Memorial Institute and the IIT Research Institute.
"When you assess the human and physical capital assets of our region, they
are considerable; however our region's position is slipping relative to the
rest of the country," Sullivan said. "This may be a watershed moment for the
Midwest in terms of an available, talented workforce, as well as
productivity."
The region attracts research and development and boasts educational
resources, but the Midwest has also witnessed a dramatic restructuring of the
region's economy to rely less on manufacturing. And, the Midwest population is
also growing older than the nation on the whole and, in turn, the region has
been losing its influence at the national level -- since 1930, every
Midwestern state has lost congressional seats.
"The Midwest economy is undergoing an uneven transition to a new economic
model propelled by knowledge based industries. While cities such asChicago
andMinneapolis have prospered by reinventing themselves and becoming meccas
for new industries and talented workers, other parts of the region struggle
with moving up the economic food chain. What is clear is that the production
and retention of skilled human capital will have to be at the center of any
regional plan to promote economic vitality," said Richard Mattoon, senior
economist and economic advisor, Federal Reserve Bank ofChicago.
The region has strengths to build on, but it is losing ground as other
regions make a more compelling case for where investment should go.
"The Midwest is failing the challenge of globalization, largely because
it's so balkanized, with each state trying to compete in the global economy.
Midwestern states are simply too small, too incompetent, too obsessed with the
wreckage of the industrial economy, to deal with the problems of the future,
like education. It's time for other players -- cities, businesses, especially
universities -- to come together in a concerted regional approach that would
leverage the Midwest's strengths, not undermine them," said Richard C.
Longworth, senior fellow, Chicago Council on Global Affairs and author of the
new book, "Caught in the Middle: America's Heartland in the Age of Globalism"
(Bloomsbury). Longworth spoke at the summit.
CIC member university leaders as well as leaders of regional banks and
other summit attendees want to stop that erosion and, instead, start gaining
ground.
"We believe it is time for us to do more than talk together. It is time to
act together," Sullivan said.
CIC: The CIC is made up of 12 research universities with campuses in eight
states which include the University of Chicago, University of Illinois,
Indiana University, University of Iowa, University of Michigan, Michigan State
University, University of Minnesota, Northwestern University, Ohio State
University, Pennsylvania State University, Purdue University and University of
Wisconsin-Madison.
Patty Mattern, University of Minnesota News Service, (612) 624-2801
SOURCE University of Minnesota
Copyright © 2008, PRNewswire
Copyright © 2008, NewsBlaze,
Daily News
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