Research and Development in the FY 2010 Federal Budget
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Transcript Research and Development in the FY 2010 Federal Budget
Federal R&D: Overview,
Update and Outlook
Matt Hourihan
October 9, 2013
for the Science Diplomats Club
AAAS R&D Budget and Policy Program
http://www.aaas.org/spp/rd
Federal Spending as a Percent of GDP, 1962 - 2018
30%
25%
Defense
Discretionary
20%
Nondefense
Discretionary
15%
Mandatory
10%
Net Interest
5%
0%
Source: Budget of the U.S. Government FY 2014.
© 2013 AAAS
Composition of the FY 1980 Budget
outlays in billions of dollars
Net Interest
$53
Defense
Discretionary
$120
Other Mandatory
$100
[Defense R&D]
$15
Medicaid
$14
Medicare
$31
Nondefense
Discretionary
$126
Social Security
$117
[Nondefense R&D]
$16
Source: Budget of the United States Government FY 2013.
© 2012 AAAS
Composition of the FY 2017 Budget?
outlays in billions of dollars
Net Interest
$566
Defense
Discretionary
$515
[Defense R&D]
$66
Nondefense
Discretionary
$517
Other Mandatory
$714
[Nondefense R&D]
$63
Medicaid
$423
Social Security
$1,026
Medicare
$633
Source: Budget of the United States Government FY 2013.
© 2012 AAAS
Emergent Budget Tendencies
Discretionary spending tends to be constrained…
Early 1980s: nondefense constraints under Reagan
Late 1980s/early 1990s: spending caps
2011 Budget Control Act caps
While mandatory spending tends to grow
Health care costs
Expanding beneficiaries, aging population
Medicare Part D, Affordable Care Act…
…versus failed efforts at control/constraint/reform
And, of course, anti-tax politics
Federal R&D in the Budget and the Economy
Outlays as share of total, 1962 - 2014
14.0%
2.5%
12.0%
2.0%
10.0%
8.0%
6.0%
1.5%
1.0%
4.0%
0.5%
2.0%
0.0%
Source: Budget of the United States Government, FY 2014. FY 2013 data do not
reflect sequestration. FY 2014 is the President's request.
© 2013 AAAS
0.0%
R&D as a Share
of the Federal
Budget (Left
Scale)
R&D as a Share
of GDP (Right
Scale)
*Keep in mind…
Department of Defense technology development activities
have declined a little more than everything else
Enter FY 2014: Admin R&D Priorities
Clear shift from D to R
And from Defense to Nondefense
Science + Innovation
COMPETES Agencies
Advanced Manufacturing
Translational Medicine
Clean Energy + Environment
Defense technology cuts
STEM education
R&D Changes by Function Since 2004
percent change from FY 2004 to FY 2014, in constant FY 2013 dollars
Applied Energy Programs
88.4%
Commerce (NIST)
66.5%
General Science (NSF, DOE SC)
20.2%
Environment Agencies
-7.3%
Health (NIH)
-7.8%
Agriculture
-8.2%
Defense Activities
-40%
-14.8%
-20%
0%
20%
40%
Source: AAAS Research and Development series, OMB R&D data, agency budget justifications
and other budget documents. Select DHS programs were categorized in Defense and General
Science in prior years; the above data have been adjusted for comparability.
© 2013 AAAS
60%
80%
100%
The biggie for R&D: Returning discretionary spending to presequester levels
Every agency would receive major increases above FY13
Approps: What Have We Learned?
Everybody still mostly likes science and
innovation funding…
Though to varying degrees
But again, fiscal politics trumps all
Current Politics: The “Pong” Model?
Raise
revenues!
The science and
innovation budget
Cut
nondefense
spending!
Obviously, a very facile
oversimplification…!
Some concluding thoughts…
If increasing aggregate R&D is the goal…
Should the sci & innovation community take broader fiscal view?
Science as % of discretionary? Discretionary as % of total?
Social spending is popular. Responsible taxation is unpopular
How to grapple with tradeoffs
If we’re to ask more of the taxpayer:
Should science programs more directly tie to public outcomes?
Temporal problem: allocative spending and tax policy is about
past & present, science and innovation spending is about future
The alternative: Glide along happy with what we’ve got?
Notes about shutdown…
Intramural vs. extramural vs. contractors
i.e. ARS/NIH vs. universities vs. JPL
Impacts: radio telescopes; Antarctic station; meetings and
symposia
Clock is ticking for some big-ticket items
A transient event, one hopes
For more info…
[email protected]
202-326-6607
www.aaas.org/spp/rd/