Yeah, I absolutely agree with both of you regarding the value of scientific research (if I didn't, I wouldn't be in this line of work, for instance!). This was an unusual paper to come up in my morning reading, and I thought the idea was interesting enough to share...
Fundamental research is very important period. Even if it just shows that one avenue is a dead end. That is useful research because others will know not what to do. I'm tired of the ideology that everything must be economically viable. Especially if we consider that economists more often than not do not take externalities* into the equation. The cost of obesity is rarely factored in when we talk about the revenues of McDonald's.
Studying history or archeology's, just to give an example, are worth doing because we learn about ourselves. CERN lets us learn about the universe. Just learning makes those endeavors worth while.
Like I said, I agree absolutely that the gain of knowledge makes it worthwhile. I've made that argument many times myself. But a lot of people (including politicians who make a lot of decisions about big experiments) think in terms of money. The point of this article is to express the value of pure knowledge in financial terms and possibly more convincing to decision-makers. Too many times, as you say, people think about only the direct financial benefit to some specific corporation or industry (that is a concern in how scientific research funding is being directed in Canada right now, for example). This gives an argument on the pure research side to say, hey, pure knowledge is worth just as much in some quantitative way.
Also, if you look at it in more detail, the article talks about externalities, as well, so they are at least giving lip service to the idea of looking at all outcomes.
Interesting article. I'm a big fan of the research, and my belief is that the project is worthwhile, but I'm not sure the article proves it very well. But, it's a very dense article and hard to evaluate.
At a first glance, it seems very very busy with data and charts, and too little "gentle explanations" of what the charts show.
Yeah, I'm no economist, so I can't evaluate the technical merits very well. And it's certainly meant as a technical paper for at least close-to-experts, which is why they don't have a lot of the explanation, I think. Honestly, it's not the normal thing for the physics arXiv and is probably destined for an econ journal, but I but the authors decided a physics audience would also be interested.