A strong university is a vital investment for French sovereignty

A group of university presidents and economists Philippe Aghion and El-Mouhoub Mouhoud warn in a Le Monde op-ed about the risks of budget cuts in higher education. These measures threaten France's ability to sustain its scientific and technological power. They emphasize that key innovations now stem from civil university labs.

In an op-ed published on December 19, 2025, in Le Monde, a collective of university presidents, joined by economists Philippe Aghion and El-Mouhoub Mouhoud, argue that strong universities are not a cost but a vital investment for French sovereignty. They denounce repeated budget cuts in higher education and research as strategically dangerous amid intense global competition.

The authors note that discussions on technological sovereignty often emphasize military efforts or industrial production, yet the core lies in universities. The flow of innovation has reversed: artificial intelligence, quantum computing, sensors, and advanced materials largely originate from civil research labs blending universities and national bodies. Over 70% of 'dual-use' technologies—serving both civilian and military purposes—emerge from open research. In quantum fields, 80% of scientific publications come from universities. Civil R&D budgets for AI greatly exceed those of military agencies.

Concrete examples highlight this connection: the laser, GPS, and Oxford-AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine build on scientific foundations from university labs or public funds. The nation's scientific vitality, through proper funding of fundamental and interdisciplinary research, is essential. Countries invest heavily in universities strategically, not out of generosity, the signatories assert, urging a reevaluation of priorities to safeguard France's technological power.

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Tense scene in French National Assembly as government weighs Article 49.3 or ordinance for 2026 budget amid deadlock with socialists.
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French government to choose between 49.3 and ordinance for 2026 budget

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The French government, facing a parliamentary deadlock on the 2026 budget, must decide on Monday between article 49.3 and an unprecedented budgetary ordinance. It is renewing the surtax on large companies' profits at 8 billion euros, while renouncing a cut to the CVAE. This aims to secure an agreement with socialists to avoid censure.

Presidents of France's major regions, leading powerful local authorities, build national profiles from their local bases. Since the 2016 reform that reduced regions from 22 to 13, several leaders see their positions as stepping stones, though success at the top is not assured.

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The issue of controlling public sector workforce resurfaces during the 2026 budget review. The Senate revived the principle of not replacing one in two retiring civil servants, a measure started under Nicolas Sarkozy. This longstanding debate on the number of civil servants in France spans political eras.

French deputies overwhelmingly approved the principle of a 6.7 billion euro increase in military spending for 2026 in a symbolic vote initiated by the government. The tally was 411 in favor against 88, aimed at facilitating the state budget's passage. Several opposition parties criticize this as instrumentalization.

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일본 문부과학성이 도쿄과학대학을 10조 엔 규모 정부 기금 지원 자격이 있는 2번째 대학으로 인증했다. 2024년 도쿄공업대학과 도쿄의료치과대학이 합병되어 설립된 이 대학은 첫 해에 100억 엔 이상의 보조금을 기대한다. 이 인증은 의학 및 공학 연구자 간 협력을 강화하는 계획을 뒷받침한다.

Confronted with debt, environmental crisis, and insecurity, many French people feel the state is no longer up to the challenges. Some would accept an authoritarian leader to prevent collapse, even at the cost of democracy. Donald Trump’s election has served as a shock for some.

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정부 전문가 패널이 금요일 발표한 보고서에서 도쿄 과학 연구소를 국제 연구 우수 대학 지정 후보로 추천했다. 이 상태는 대학 지원을 위한 10조 엔 일본 정부 펀드의 원조를 받을 자격을 준다. 현재 도호쿠 대학이 이 인정의 유일한 기관이다.

 

 

 

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