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Promoting
Economic Growth
echnology
proved its value to national security once again in the 1990s when
the United States used it to help win the Gulf War. More significantly,
technology also demonstrated its power to fuel economic growth when
American inventions, such as the Internet and the graphical "browser"
for the World Wide Web, created a new national pastime and a multitude
of new information industries. Partly as a result of this phenomenon,
the concerns of the 1980s regarding U.S. competitiveness dissipated
somewhat. NIST contributed to the new Information Age in important
ways by, for example, leading the development of standards for computer
security, many of which subsequently were adopted as voluntary industry
standards.

© Robert Rathe |
| NIST
is identifying biomarkers and developing standards and other
measurement technologies needed to help ensure the safety and
viability of tissue engineered materials. |
Development
of civilian technology was accelerated in the 1990s through a series
of government initiatives. With leading economists asserting that
technology accounts for at least half of U.S. economic growth, the
federal government took a new approach to funding science and technology.
Instead of just basic research and military and space applications,
the new outlook also encompassed broadly applicable, "precompetitive"
(not quite ready for commercialization) technologies that can be
applied by industry to create better products, high-paying jobs,
and a clean environment.
In addition
to electronics and information systems, a number of other technology
areas were identified by the government as critical or strategic
to U.S. interests. These included energy and environmental quality,
manufacturing, medicine and biotechnology, materials, and transportation.
There remains strong interest in helping small businesses compete
and in nurturing the interdisciplinary research that increasingly
fuels advances in science and technology.
NIST continues
to be involved in all these areas. In addition to maintaining strong
basic research programs in physics, chemistry, materials, electronics,
manufacturing, building technology, and other fields, its Measurement
and Standards Laboratories provide measurements, standards, and
other support for industries that produce critical technologies.
This work helps companies solve problems and commercialize new technologies
faster than before, a linchpin of competitiveness in the 1990s and
the new millennium.
Meanwhile,
the ATP nurtures innovation across a broad range of technology sectors.
A study of the first 38 completed ATP projects estimated that the
national economic benefits of just several projects will exceed
the ATP's entire investment in the more than 450 projects selected
at the time of the study. The ATP also has proven to be highly effective
in fostering cross-cutting, interdisciplinary collaborations among
large and small firms and academic institutions. To assist small
businesses, the MEP provides essential support and services, such
as help in streamlining manufacturing processes to improve productivity.
And a broad consensus has emerged indicating the Baldrige program
has greatly improved attention to quality and organizational excellence
across the private sector.
©
Robert Rathe |
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This
Braille reader was created as part of a NIST project to make
electronic books more accessible to the blind.
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Although the
economic threat posed by foreign countries has lessened for now,
ensuring the nation's ability to compete in the 21st century remains
a challenge. Recent analyses by a variety of organizations indicate
that the U.S. lead over Japan is widening in technology areas such
as software, sensors, and information management. But Japan is leading
in other sectors, such as flat-panel displays, and gaining ground
in others. And Japan has been joined by many other emerging economies.
Of further concern, U.S. investment in research and development
is lower as a percentage of national wealth than it was in the early
1980s, leading some to question America's capacity for future innovation.
At the close
of the 20th century, there are more than 700 federal laboratories
in the United States, a stark contrast to the days when NIST stood
alone in focusing on physical science. But NIST's influence continues
to be pervasive. In fact, NIST's importance increases with the number
of other federal laboratories (and university and corporate research
organizations) because many of their measurements need to be traceable
to NIST, and because technological innovation and development depend
more on measurements now than at any time in the past.
Although the
time has passed when U.S. technology standards automatically became
de facto world standards, NIST staff continue to work toward ensuring
the marketability of U.S. products worldwide by serving on more
than 800 standards committees of national and international organizations.
NIST also continues to explore the frontiers of science and industry,
from atomic physics to electronic books, and the technologies of
tomorrow, such as devices designed and fabricated on the nanometer
scale that offer stunning new capabilities. Because who knows what
tomorrow's equivalent of radio, atomic clocks, lasers, or the Internet
will be ... or from where they will come?
Previous Section
(New Direction)
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Date created:
11/2/00
Last updated: 11/15/00
Contact: inquiries@nist.gov
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