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The Federal R&D Budget: Overview and Outlook Matt Hourihan February 5, 2014 for the Society of Research Administrators International AAAS R&D Budget and Policy Program http://www.aaas.org/spp/rd
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*Keep in mind… Department of Defense development activities have declined more than everything else
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Recent R&D Budget History R&D down by 8.4 percent between FY10 and FY12 August 2011: Budget Control Act AAAS estimated ~$50 billion R&D cuts in first 5 years January 2013: American Taxpayer Relief Act FY 2013: Sequester cuts nearly $10 billion more Summer 2013: Appropriators operate under two different spending baselines December 2013 budget deal: 50% sequester rollback for FY14
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Department of Defense DOD R&D cut, but not to S&T programs Basic research at all-time high Nanotechnology, materials science DARPA: small from FY12 Medical research BIG increase
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NIH Continuing stagnation Most institutes about halfway between sequester and FY12 Largest increases: National Institute on Aging, NCATS Translational medicine, Alzheimer’s research, BRAIN Initiative, National Children’s Study Success rates down to 16.8 percent in FY13
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Department of Energy Generally good news Science: much closer to Senate mark Advanced Computing and Fusion (especially domestic research) Energy Frontier Research Centers at $100 million Clean energy programs (EERE, ARPA-E) avoid the guillotine NNSA R&D also picked up significant funding DOE R&D at all-time high
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NASA Positive outcomes for Science, Exploration Planetary Science avoids deeper cuts; Europa Mission? Largest increase for Webb Telescope Skepticism toward asteroid mission Clear commitment to next- generation flights systems, also commercial spaceflight Aeronautics, Space Tech flat
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National Science Foundation Lower number than other agencies, about even with FY12 Appropriator support for ocean research, cybersecurity, advanced manufacturing R&D, neuroscience Social Sciences research restrictions lifted Large Synoptic Survey Telescope to commence construction Likely to fall short of COMPETES Act doubling target
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USDA Another good outcome Intramural R&D: Request matched Minus poultry research center Extramural R&D: closer to Dems than GOP Big boost for AFRI Forest Service dodges cuts Farm Bill establishes ag research foundation
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Other notes Environmental agencies (EPA, USGS) come up short DHS got (mostly) what it wanted NIST not looking bad Patient outcomes research (via Obamacare) not funded
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TOTAL
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GDP
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Looking ahead… President’s budget to be released March 4, for now Priorities: manufacturing, clean energy, climate, IT and computing, biological innovation, neuroscience, STEM Ed Discretionary spending limit in FY 2015 has already been agreed And will increase hardly at all 25% of sequester reductions rolled back Big-picture fiscal challenges remain largely unchanged Beyond FY 2015: back to sequester levels
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Current Politics: The “Pong” Model? Cut spending! Raise revenues! The science and innovation budget Obviously, a very facile oversimplification…!
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For more info… mhouriha@aaas.org 202-326-6607 www.aaas.org/spp/rd/
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