Erica Fuchs shares the journey of her policy idea becoming a pilot project, collaborating with academia, industry, and government contributors. The podcast explores the need for a national technology strategy, better data and analytics, and the importance of asking the right questions to optimize resource allocation. It also discusses building support for a national technology strategy and the attractiveness of a stand-up capacity for target technologies. Additionally, they delve into the process of turning a policy idea into legislation and finding another opportunity through the National Science Foundation.
The government needs accurate data and analytics to anticipate and respond to supply chain problems effectively.
A government-private partnership involving academia, industry, and government is crucial for analyzing technology and supply chain issues and informing national technology strategy.
Deep dives
The Frustration of Government Flying Blind
Erica Fuchs expresses her frustration with the government's lack of data and analytics to inform decision-making. She provides examples of the government being ill-prepared during the pandemic regarding mask and respirator shortages, as well as the semiconductor shortage. Fuchs discusses the importance of asking the right questions, having accurate data, and involving small and medium-sized enterprises in supply chain analysis.
The Development of a National Technology Strategy
Fuchs proposes the development of a government-private partnership to analyze technology and supply chain issues and inform national technology strategy. She emphasizes the need for analytics, data-driven decision-making, and interdisciplinary collaboration involving academia, industry, and government. Fuchs highlights the value of stakeholder feedback and the quantification of impacts for different missions.
The Implementation of an Analytics ARPA
Fuchs envisions an Analytics Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) that orchestrates the diverse analytical capacity of academia, industry, and government to inform national technology strategy. She discusses the need for intellectual foundations, interdisciplinary collaboration, and political support. Fuchs emphasizes the importance of building coalitions and finding a suitable home for this capacity within the government.
By day, Erica Fuchs is a professor of engineering at Carnegie Mellon University. However, for the past year she’s also been running a pilot project—the National Network for Critical Technology Assessment—to give the federal government the ability to anticipate problems in supply chains and respond to them.
The trip from germ of a policy idea to pilot project in the National Science Foundation’s new Technology Implementation and Partnerships directorate has been a wild ride. And it all started when she developed her thoughts on the need for a national technology strategy into a 2021 Issues essay. Two years later, the network she called for, coordinating dozens of academics, industry, and government contributors to uniquely understand how different supply chains work, was a real, NSF-funded pilot project. In this episode of The Ongoing Transformation, Erica talks with Lisa Margonelli about how she took her idea from a white paper to the White House, and the bipartisan political support that was necessary to bring it to fruition.