Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

The Federal R&D Budget: Process and Perspectives

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "The Federal R&D Budget: Process and Perspectives"— Presentation transcript:

1 The Federal R&D Budget: Process and Perspectives
Matt Hourihan October 13, 2016 For the Vanderbilt Federal STEM Policy & Advocacy Seminar AAAS R&D Budget and Policy Program

2 The Federal Budget is Kind Of a Big Deal
“Politics is who gets what, when, and how.” - Harold Lasswell “Budgeting is about values, and it’s about choices.” – Rep. Rosa DeLauro Every dollar in the budget has its claimants! Negotiation between competing interests (and their proxies) in a decentralized system Major impact for R&D and innovation: most basic research, and most university research, is federally funded

3

4

5

6 Two Spending Categories: Discretionary vs. Mandatory
Mandatory Spending (aka Direct Spending) Mostly entitlements, mostly on “autopilot” Potential for high political sensitivity = “third rail” New spending requires new legislation from the authorizing committees Discretionary Spending: Adjusted annually through appropriations bills via the appropriations committees Easy (nondefense) targets? i.e. Sequestration Vast majority of federal R&D is discretionary

7

8

9 A Typical Federal Budget Process: Three Years, Four Phases
Phase 4: Execute the fiscal year’s budget (not shown) Arranged by fiscal year (October to September)

10 The Federal Budget Cycle
Phase 1: Internal agency discussions and planning Strategic plans, staff retreats, program assessments OMB is present throughout Agencies deliver budget justifications to OMB (early fall)

11 One Agency’s R&D Budget
Agency Budgeting Coordination and Top-Down Guidance One Agency’s R&D Budget Decentralized planning and scientific input

12 The Federal Budget Cycle
Phase 2: OMB performs multi-stage review, responds to agencies (“passbacks”) Agencies and agency heads can and do negotiate Budget proposals are finalized in January President presents the proposed budget to Congress early February

13

14 The Federal Budget Cycle
Phase 3: Congress gets involved Receives and reacts to President’s budget, holds hearings Approves budget resolution (simple majority) Writes and passes appropriations

15 Natural Resources Cmte
House Budget Cmte Natural Resources Cmte Approps Cmte Subc on Interior + Env Subc on Energy + Water Energy + Commerce Cmte Senate Energy and Nat Res Cmte Env and Pub Works Cmte And many others… Also revenue (tax) committees (House Ways and Means, Senate Finance)

16 Natural Resources Cmte
House Budget Cmte Natural Resources Cmte Approps Cmte Subc on Interior + Env Subc on Energy + Water Energy + Commerce Cmte Senate Energy and Nat Res Cmte Env and Pub Works Cmte Budget Committees

17 The Budget Resolution Established by 1974 Congressional Budget Act
Overall framework Discretionary spending Also revenue, deficit, and total spending targets Can’t change law, but can set up reconciliation instructions The budget resolution is a political document (and therefore, often not passed!)

18

19 Natural Resources Cmte
House Budget Cmte Natural Resources Cmte Approps Cmte Subc on Interior + Env Subc on Energy + Water Energy + Commerce Cmte Senate Energy and Nat Res Cmte Env and Pub Works Cmte Appropriations Committees

20 From Budget to Appropriations Committees
Budget Resolution limits  Approps Committees  Subcommittees [302(b) allocations] These caps remain in place all the way to floor, but can be revised as needed Twelve Appropriations Subcommittees Nine subcommittees responsible for at least $1 billion of R&D Approps led by “Cardinals” Committee Chairs: Rep. Hal Rogers (KY), Sen. Thad Cochran (MS) Ranking Members: Rep. Nita Lowey (NY), Sen. Barbara Mikulski (MD) Appropriators will often have their own priorities “There are three parties: Democrats, Republicans, and appropriators” “President proposes, Congress disposes”

21 Defense House Senate Chair Rodney Frelinghuysen (NJ) Thad Cochran (MS) Ranking Member Pete Visclosky (IN) Dick Durbin (IL) Over $500 billion Tradeoffs: balancing force modernization, readiness, personnel costs, RDT&E (and medical research) Offset Strategy War funding

22 Energy & Water ~$40 billion
House Senate Chair Mike Simpson (ID) Lamar Alexander (TN) Ranking Member Marcy Kaptur (OH) Dianne Feinstein (CA) ~$40 billion Tradeoffs: Balancing basic research and facilities, DOE technology portfolio, NNSA; also Army Corps, Bureau of Reclamation Highly partisan debates over energy technologies (renewables vs. nuclear vs. fossil) Have mostly embraced new research and innovation models at DOE

23 Labor, HHS, Education >$150 billion
House Senate Chair Tom Cole (OK) Roy Blount (MO) Ranking Member Rosa DeLauro (CT) Patty Murray (WA) >$150 billion Deep divisions – especially Obamacare Usually one of the hardest to pass, thus usually one of the last out of the gate Everybody likes NIH lately Especially Alzheimer’s research Cancer moonshot? Success rates?

24 Commerce, Justice, Science
House Senate Chair John Culberson (TX) Richard Shelby (AL) Ranking Member Mike Honda (CA) Barbara Mikulski (MD) ~$55 billion Tradeoffs: Balancing Depts. of Justice and Commerce, NASA, NSF NSF: social and geo science funding? Facilities? NASA: planetary exploration, climate research, human spaceflight (and where do we fly to?) Commerce: NOAA climate research and NIST industrial technology programs can be controversial

25 Agriculture ~$20 billion
House Senate Chair Robert Aderholt (AL) Jerry Moran (KS) Ranking Member Sam Farr (CA) Jeff Merkley (OR) ~$20 billion Funds most USDA (but not Forest Service); also FDA Balancing between conservation, public assistance, food safety Research activities often take secondary prominence Fragmented? Formula funds or competitive grants? Once a big source of pork via earmarks

26 Interior & Environment
House Senate Chair Ken Calvert (CA) Lisa Murkowski (AK) Ranking Member Betty McCollum (MN) Tom Udall (NM) ~$30 billion Includes: Dept. of the Interior, EPA; also Forest Service; small bit goes to NIH Another divisive bill: environmental protection, land use, emissions regulation, wildfire management and response Again, science funding tends to take secondary prominence (U.S. Geological Survey, EPA S&T)

27 The Federal Budget Cycle
302(b) allocations to the 12 appropriations subcommittees Approps committees write/approve 12 appropriations bills Bills have to pass both chambers Can be amended (subject to caps) Differences are resolved in conference committee Can be filibustered “President proposes, Congress disposes”

28 Other Legislative Appropriations Tools
Continuing Resolutions …with depressing regularity Uncertainty? New starts? Omnibus Or minibus, or megabus, or cromnibus, or… Supplementals i.e. Zika, Ebola, Hurricane Sandy Also war funding Not subject to spending caps

29 The Federal Budget Cycle
Gov’t is usually working on 3 budgets at any given time

30 Looking Ahead Good approps progress but regular order broke down, because of course it did CR through Dec. 9 Included Zika funding And full-year MilCon Next: omnibus (?) negotiations, to lead to legislation in late fall March: Debt ceiling. Ugh. FY 2018: Sequester-level spending returns, maybe

31

32

33

34

35

36

37

38 For more info…


Download ppt "The Federal R&D Budget: Process and Perspectives"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google