148 Educational institutions in Latvia at the beginning of school year 2002/2003. Central Statistical Bureau of
Latvia, Riga 2003, p.100
112 FACTORS AND IMPACTS IN THE INFORMATION SOCIETY
A PROSPECTIVE ANALYSIS IN THE CANDIDATE COUNTRIES
4027 enterprises and business companies provided continuing vocational training (CVT) in
1999149, and 48.6 thousand persons participated in these courses. Not surprising, the largest
number of such enterprises fall in group with 10-49 employees, while the largest number of
participants – in groups 50-249 and 1000 and more.
G.1.2. Reforms in secondary and tertiary education
Education and science system was substantially reformed in early nineties, and reforms
continue.
In 1990-1994 the education system was revised and transformed in order to adjust it to the
conditions of independent state. The legal background of reforms in education, the law “On
education” was adopted on 10 June 1991. Main activities included: de-politisation of the
content of education, provision of free choice in education, diversification of education
options, decentralisation of management of education. Private education institutions appeared
for the first time.
In 1995 – 2001 the most attention was paid to the perfection of education system and its
legislative background. Education Concept in Latvia was elaborated and approved by the
Cabinet of Ministers on 4 July 1995. In 1998 the Cabinet of Ministers approved “Strategic
program for development of education for 1998 – 2003”. “Amendments to the Education
Law” that were adopted by Latvian Saeima prescribes that the government is responsible for
the state policy and strategy in education, and that the government must submit to Saeima an
education development conception for the next four years. In 1992, the Ministry of Education,
Culture and Science prepared the concept for the development of technological centres in
Latvia and the first two centres were established.
On 2 November 1998 Saeima adopted a law “On higher education”, on 29 October 1998 it
improved the law “On education” and on 10 June 1999 a law “On general education” and a
law “On professional education”. Adoption of “Education Law” in 1998 earmarked the
beginning of even more fundamental reforms in higher education. The law prescribed the
integration of higher education and S&R&D institutions. Consequently almost all science
institutions have integrated into universities and high schools, and many new research
institutions were established in universities.
Recent strategic plans in development of education are set in the National Concept of
Education for 2002-2005 that was elaborated and discussed in the Cabinet of Ministers in
2002. The concept is based on guidelines set by other strategic documents such as the
National Development Plan, the National Employment Plan, the Life-long Learning
Memorandum of the EU, the UNESCO program “Education for all” and other policy
documents in education elaborated up to 2002.
Up to now primary and secondary education was available in Latvian and other languages,
while tertiary only in Latvian and English (the latter one only in foreign based high schools).
The law envisages that beginning with 1 September 2004 secondary education in non-
Latvian schools must be 60% in Latvian and 40% in minorities’ language.
Analytical conclusion:
The education system is still under reforms. Improvements are necessary in financing of
education, as well as in its content. For instance, free choice in selection of subjects in general
education have squeezed out more difficult natural science subjects, and this eliminates
149 The latest available data from the sample survey of enterprises and business companies, published in
Statistical Yearbook of Latvia, 2002.Central statistical Bureau of Latvia, Riga, 2002, p.97
G. Educational Sector
REPORT ON LATVIA 113
possibilities to study engineering sciences at higher education level. On the other side, the
demand for engineers increases in industry.
G.2. Key educational trends
Reform of the educational system in its initial phase before 1994 resulted in the
democratisation of education; people were provided gradually the opportunity to acquire an
education according to the interests and abilities of the society and the individual.
Between 1995 and 2001 the government focussed mostly on streamlining the system of
education, essentially supplementing the regulatory base. The Law on Higher Education
Establishments, the new Law on Education, Law on General Education, Law on Vocational
Education, etc. were passed.
The objectives of the third phase of development of the education system are identified in the
Concept of the Development of Education for 2002-2005 adopted in Saeima on October 17,
2002. The goal of the concept is to transform the educational system of Latvia into the system
promoting formation of knowledge-based integrated society and increase of competitiveness
of people and the economy of Latvia. The concept foresees the improvement of the quality of
education matching the needs of economy, to ensure access to lifelong learning to all
residents and also to raise cost efficiency of education.
Data of Population Census 2000 show that compared to 1989 the share of persons with higher
education (aged 15 and older) has gone up till 13.9% or by 2.4 percentage points compared to
1989, the share of persons with secondary education grew up to 51.2% (by 2.3 percentage
points). The number of people with elementary education and lower has dropped from 16.2%
till 8.4%.
The number of students in educational establishments since 1993/1994 was gradually going
up until the year 2001, yet starting with 2002 began to decline because of the demographic
crisis. Now it equals to 506 thousand (511 thousand in 2001). The biggest decline of the
number of pupils (9%) is observed in the elementary (1-4) grades of the general full-time
education schools. The number of students in higher educational establishments continues to
grow. At the beginning of the academic year 2002/2003 the number of students in higher
educational establishments of Latvia continued going up and reached 119 thousand – by 2.6
times exceeding the respective figure of 1990/1991. The number of university students in
Latvia is among the highest between the EU accession countries.
Educational system (because of insufficient financing) still does not provide teaching staff
with adequate remuneration, which hampers the attraction of well-educated teachers to
schools (and especially to rural schools), introduction of new programs, subjects and methods
of teaching. There is a shortage of resources for maintenance of educational infrastructure.
Creation of the general information system of education in Latvia proceeds at a rather slow
pace. It is necessary to use the existing financial resources more efficiently.
Main achievements, as it is concluded in the National Concept of Education for 2002-2005,
are:
• The education system is organised according to the education program principle,
implementation of the official standards in education, thus facilitating that the content of
education programs responds to the needs of society and labour market.
• The education quality monitoring system provides international recognition of diplomas
issued in Latvia.
114 FACTORS AND IMPACTS IN THE INFORMATION SOCIETY
A PROSPECTIVE ANALYSIS IN THE CANDIDATE COUNTRIES
• Financing according to expenditure normative that provides differentiation of funding
regarding different education spheres and programs has been started.
• Systematic investment in education infrastructure and optimisation of the network of
educational institutions provides at least some economy in spending.
• Wage reform in education has been started with the purpose to increase wages in
education.
• Implementation of minorities’ education programs has been started, that simultaneously
provides the observation of minorities interests, social integration and also the
improvement of official (Latvian) language skills.
• Normative for professional education in arts, culture and sports have been produced.
• Regional levelling of funding for “interests education” (special training outside official
training in fields of interests, like technical, art, music, dance classes etc.) that eliminates
differences in accessibility of such education.
• Creation of study credit system, that improves the accessibility of high education for
economically less provided people and increase students’ interest in the quality of
education.
• Participation of international comparative research in education provides a better insight
into local problems and solutions, as well as helps to learn trends, quality requirements
and problems in education at the world scale.
• A unified system of reporting of credit-points in academic study programs is
implemented, which is necessary for international recognition of Latvia’s higher education
study programs.
• Accreditation of high schools and study programs in high schools that corresponds to the
international criteria is implemented.
• The state requirements (study standards) in academic education and high professional
education are adopted and consequently unified requirements to study programs in all
high schools are implemented,
• A system of academic and professional degrees that is comparable with the European
education space is established, that facilitates mobility of Latvian students in European
context and foreigners’ studies in Latvia.
In accordance with the Education Development Concept, within the next four years the
government plans to achieve three goals:
• to improve quality of education at all levels and forms of education,
• to improve accessibility of education,
• to increase effectiveness of education costs at all levels and forms of education.
In the general education the main problems are:
• theoretical knowledge prevail, graduates fail to apply knowledge in practice,
• education does not provide skills in independent and creative thinking, decision-making,
• professional training of teachers is not satisfactory, teachers are not able to provide
advanced knowledge,
• there are methodical problems in teaching: application of specific methods, such as games
is not sufficiently professional and therefore does not provide expected result,
• the interrelation between science, education and economy is weak, employers do not
participate at early stage of education,
• professional orientation in general education is not sufficient,
G. Educational Sector
REPORT ON LATVIA 115
• free choice of subjects in early age or in beginning of secondary stage of education leads
to the situation that graduates are not prepared to study exact sciences.
Analytical conclusion
The main problem in academic and professional education is that the number of graduates is
important, but specialists are not flexible at the labour market, and their profession and/or
skills are not corresponding to the demand of the economy. Business, on the contrary, reports
lack of skilled specialists, and growing lack of engineers and other technical specialists. There
are attempts to improve inter-relation among education, R&D and business by creating
innovation institutions.
G.3. Domestic and international mobility of scientific personnel
Information in this chapter is borrowed from a research “Baltic R&D systems in transition”
(Dagyte, Kristapsons, Martinson, 2000).150
As it is concluded in the mentioned research, “a considerable part of researchers in the Baltic
States changed their field of activities or emigrated at the beginning of nineties”. The process
is characterised in Table G2.
Table G2: Migration direction of research personnel leaving during 1989 – 1994 (thsd
persons)
Country Left the
country
Another
research
institution
in the
home
country
NGO Private
inst. in
home
country
Public
admin.
and
service
Unemployed Other Unknown
Estonia 14.5 18.9 12.9 27.0 19.6 0.9 6.0 21.1
Latvia 2.1 8.4 0.6 0.7 25.5 5.3 57.4 22.4
Lithuania 13.4 16.3 2.7 3.9 16.3 3.3 22.9 21.1
Source: Kristapsons J., Martinson H., Dagyte I. Baltic R&D systems in transition. Experiences and future
prospects. Riga, 2002, p.86
Researchers note that little information is available through aggregate statistics on the external
and internal brain drain. In 1996, researchers of the Institute of Economics, Latvian Academy
of Sciences (Parsla Eglite, Inna Zarina) carried out a survey on the brain drain. The president
of Latvian Academy of Sciences, Janis Stradins has said in his papers, that in 1992, about
500-700 post doctoral scholars went abroad, but “if we include in those who left for Russia
and Israel, then total number exceeds 3000-5000” (Stradins, 1999).
In Latvia the internal brain drain (to commercial and governmental structures) has dominated
over the external brain drain (Eglite, 1996). Emigration was mostly to countries of the
Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS). The number of long-term business visits in
Western countries grew significantly in the beginning of 1990’s. The dominating destinations
for Latvian researchers were U.S.A. (29%), Sweden (20%), and Germany (19%).
150 Kristapsons J., Martinson H., Dagyte I. Baltic R&D systems in transition. Expperiences and future prospects.
Riga, 2002, p.85-86
116 FACTORS AND IMPACTS IN THE INFORMATION SOCIETY
A PROSPECTIVE ANALYSIS IN THE CANDIDATE COUNTRIES
Unfortunately, more information is not available, migration of the research personal and
technical personal after these investigations (period after 1996) has not been observed. It is
known from discussions at the Academy of Science, that many of emigrants that left country
in the beginning of nineties would like to return, but financial conditions of Latvian science
do not allow them to continue their work at home. Even more, many of graduates cannot find
appropriate scientific occupation in Latvia after postgraduate studies abroad and so they rather
stay abroad.
G.4. Tertiary sector and research performance in IST related
subjects
IST related subjects are treated specially in one research institution – Institute of Electronics
and Computer Technique of the Latvian Academy of Sciences. The institute has achieved
some results in information proceeding.
Other research institutes participate in the development of IS in an indirect way – by
providing R&D basis. All institutes explore the same conditions; no preferences are given to
any particular institute. The basic legislation includes the law “On Scientific Activities” and
several Regulations of the Cabinet of Ministers: On state ordered research projects, Statutes of
State Commission of scientific qualification, On state research programmes, On the
arrangements and criteria for awarding of scientific degrees, On the Latvian Council of
Science, On state scientists emeritus.
The Saeima adopted the law “On Scientific Activity” on 10 November 1992, it was amended
in 1996 and 1998. The law changed status of research institutes from units subordinated to the
Academy of Science to independent research units. Latvian Saeima adopted the “National
Concept of Higher Education and Research Development” in spring 1998. This was a
summary of strategic statements based on the forecast of national development and financial
estimates with a view to ensure up to 2010 a constantly growing role of research in the society
and national economy (National Concept). The Concept recommended increasing funding of
research from the state budget to at least 0.8% of the GDP by 2001, but this was not
implemented. The Concept also sets the priorities of research development. These are
information technology, material sciences, forestry and timber technology, organic synthesis,
biotechnology, biomedicine and pharmacy, and Lettonics (national humanities sciences). The
Ministry of Education and Science has also identified the priority research directions in cooperation
with the European Commission: information technology and telematics, life
sciences and biotechnology (biomedicine, drug design and biotechnology), new materials and
technologies, ecology and environment protection.
The Concept envisaged the development of state research centres in perspective research
areas that may be established on the basis of current research institutes (single or by merging
several institutes). The maintenance of infrastructure in such centers had to be insured by the
state. With this perspective 11 academic institutes founded the first state research center – the
Center of Material Science. Expected financial system however was never implemented, as
the state was neither able nor willing to provide for stable financing of research infrastructure
units.
In order to improve the quality of higher education a new position – namely a State professor
– was introduced for educational staff, and criteria were developed for election for this
position. The “Scientist’s Code of Ethics” was adopted by the LAS Senate on November 4,
1997 and by LCS on November 11, 1997.
G. Educational Sector
REPORT ON LATVIA 117
Graph G5:
Institutions of Latvia engaged in reserch and development
(at end of the year)
266
273
109
105
85
89
92
81
18 49 23
2
2
2
1
1
2
19
17
30
54
40
47
49
43
42
39
40
37
31
36
26
22
23
23
191
174
15
2
0 100 200 300
2001
2000
1999
1998
1997
1996
1995
1994
Year
Total Higher education sector Government sector
Business enterprises sector Private sector
Several other conceptual documents were discussed, but not adopted. In the meantime
situation in science deteriorates very fast. Total number of research units in Latvia increases.
43% of the total number are academic research units, 33% are established within business
sector. In 2003, the number of institutions engaged in research and development increased to
315, of which 53 were in higher education sector, 34 in government sector, 225 (by 51 more)
in business enterprise sector and 3 private. Total number of R&D personal (full-time
equivalent employment) was 3451 persons (less than in 2001), of which 2226 (less than in
2001) were in higher education sector, 549 (less than in 2001) – in government sector, 675
(less than in 2001) in business enterprise sector and 1 in private sector. This is official
statistics, but figures seem unrealistic.
At the same time, number of researchers declines year by year (Table G3).
Table G3: Number of R&D personnel*
1990 1993 2000 2001 2002
Total 18970 3999 3814 3497 3451
higher education sector 1528 994 2156 2242 2226
government sector 662 571 549
business enterprise sector 995 683 675
private non-profit sector 1 1 1
self-dependent R&D
institutions
9649 2451
design institutions 3898 225
Estimation based on full-time–equivalent employment
Source: Statistical Yearbook of Latvia 2003. central Statistical Bureau of Latvia, Riga, 2003, p.96
118 FACTORS AND IMPACTS IN THE INFORMATION SOCIETY
A PROSPECTIVE ANALYSIS IN THE CANDIDATE COUNTRIES
Of 44 research institutes in Latvia, 9 are established by the state or are private. 8 institutes are
research institutes of the University of Latvia (LU), 1 belongs to Latvian Agriculture
University (LAU) and 26 to Riga Technical University (RTU).
Characteristic feature of Latvian science is the co-existence of basic and applied research in
the research institutes. This phenomenon is pre-determinate due to financial conditions –
applied research has consumer financing while basic research does not have. Research
institutes try to attract applied research and to share financing with the basic research (on
behalf of researchers salaries), and also they try to develop services for charge (testing and
control laboratories) to get money for academic research.
The knowledge transfer from the research institutes to enterprises is very limited. The process
is not organised and facilitating structures do not exist. Still several models can be identified,
how enterprises and institutes find each other:
1) on the basis of former contacts and information about specialisation and product of
research institutes,
2) on the basis of former own experience or information about other’s experience,
3) from information in general mass media,
4) with help of phone book and seeking for contacts on the basis of name and
eventual specialisation of institutes or enterprises.
Participation in the teaching process is also used for introduction and dissemination of
research results and creation of innovative education. On the other hand, institutes provide
enterprises with control and certification facilities. Institutes operating in exact sciences are
more active in these fields. For instance, the Institute of Wood Chemicals hosts a group of
professors – specialists in innovation and marketing, provides lecturers for Universities, hosts
laboratory that provides certification and quality control of exported timber, provides study
practice for university students.
Regional innovation structures do not exist in Latvia, as there is no operating innovation
system at the national level. The first attempt to establish a regional innovation system was in
seaport Ventspils, where local authority tried to create innovation promotion system
consisting of innovation fund, high school with research units, industrial park and innovative
business entities. The attempt was not successful.
Relationships between Latvia and trans-national and EU are formed in several ways:
• through international co-operation in research programs – Latvia participates in EU 5th
and 6th Framework Programme and some other research programs,
• through international co-operation at the level of higher education,
• through the market.
The first two knowledge distributing organisations – Riga Technological Centre and Salaspils
Technological Park were founded in 1992, on the basis of the concept for the development of
technological centres in Latvia. The first technological park, established in Salaspils
(academic town in 23 km distance from Riga) on the basis of academic institutes was not a
successful story (mainly because of poor management). An example of successful
development is Latvian Technological Center (LTC) in Riga. Founders of the LTC are
Municipality of Riga, Latvian Academy of Sciences, Institute of Physical Energetics,
Association of Latvian Scientific and Technical Societies. LTC operates according to the
principles of business incubators, and at present it supports more than 30 tenant firms or new
small enterprises. The main fields of their activities are: electrical engineering and
telecommunications, biotechnology, equipment for medicine and biology, remedies for
G. Educational Sector
REPORT ON LATVIA 119
veterinary etc., multimedia systems, computer networks, software, environmental protection,
technology for industrial waste utilisation, new material technology, laser technology etc.
LTC manages 2000 square meter business space and provide for appropriate infrastructure.
From April 1995 the Bureau for Information and Consulting (BIC) provide services on
business planning, marketing, international co-operation, quality assurance, regional market
research etc. On the basis of LTC another innovation institution - FEMIRC-Latvia was
established with financial support of the EC DG XIII (INCO-COPERNICUS program).
FEMIRC-Latvia was the centre for European integration of research, technologies and
development. The mission of the Centre was to promote economic development in Latvia by
integration EU and Latvia’s research and industrial potential. The Centre worked in close cooperation
with the Latvian government. In 2000, FEMIRC project was closed, but on its basis
a new project – IRC LATVIJA began. IRC LATVIA is an innovation-facilitating centre.
Since 1 August 1999 Latvia is a full right member of the EU 5th (now 6th) Framework
Program, and a special contact office carries out management of this program in Latvia.
LTP - Latvian Technological Park was established with incentive of Riga Technical
University. Business innovation centre (BIC) is a structural unit of LTP. BIC delivers
consulting and information services to business and scientists from universities.
The role of the academia in development of ICT and innovation is rather important. Latvian
Academy of Sciences still is the main co-ordinator of science activities in Latvia. Together
with the Science Council (what is about the same as it consists of academicians) it is also a
main initiator and lobbying institution for innovation and science related activities, including
creation of IS.
Academia, as well as Universities take an active part in dissemination of innovation ideas via:
• cooperation with the Ministry of Education and Science (expertises, advisory),
• co-operation with universities and high schools,
• co-operation with business enterprises (awards for outstanding researchers initiated by
Academia and financed by business enterprises),
• Academic meetings in business enterprises and local governments.
It is questionable if the existence of universities or other type of higher education and research
organisations attract foreign companies to establish their centres around them. We did not find
such examples, however the attempt to improve academic environment is there. Academia, as
well as national universities and high schools are not subjects for FDI, but there are some high
schools that are established or supported by foreign governments – Stockholm School of
Economics and the School of Law (Sweden), Business College (Canada), and 2-3 more.
Foreign governments or institutions establish education institutions and support their
operation for some years, and after that forward them under the responsibility of Latvian
education system.
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