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The
AAAS Board of Directors, in accordance with Association policy,
has approved publication of this report as a contribution
to the understanding of an important process. The interpretations
and conclusions are those of the authors and do not purport
to represent the views of the Board or the Council of the
Association.
This
project is funded by grants from the Carnegie Corporation
of New York and the Burroughs Wellcome Fund. Carnegie Corporation
and Burroughs Wellcome are not responsible for any statements
or views expressed in this report.
After
nearly 50 years of steadily increasing budgets, the U.S. research
community is facing the prospect of significantly reduced
federal funding. Efforts to balance the budget and reduce
the size of the federal government have created great uncertainty
about the future of federal funding for science and technology.
Although science and technology funding fared relatively well
in FY 1996, projections indicate it will decrease significantly
as discretionary spending falls over the next several years.
At the same time, the congressional agenda is increasingly
dominated by issues involving science and technology.
In January
1996, the American Association for the Advancement of Science's
Center for Science, Technology, and Congress, undertook to
produce a series of reports to provide information on the
state and regional impacts of federal R&D spending. AAAS
also began planning a series of meetings tied to these reports.
Our goal is to help the research community, both industrial
and academic, state and federal lawmakers, and local opinion
leaders better understand the effects of current trends in
public and private sector R&D spending in key regions
of the U.S. At the same time, we want to provide oft-requested
information to Congress and the public about the role of science
and technology, including federal, state, and industrial R&D,
in the economies of various states.
In gathering
information for The Future of Science and Technology in
California: Trends and Indicators, we used the most recent
data available from the National Science Foundation. Because
of the complexity of collecting information on a state-by-state
basis, especially with regard to industry spending, the most
recent NSF data is from 1993. We have augmented this information
with additional research and with projections of future government
spending based on outyear funding data from the President's
budget request and the congressional budget resolution. The
report provides basic demographic information on California's
R&D activity; examines the distribution of federal R&D
funding in the state; discuss any major state R&D initiatives
and government-industry-university partnerships; and assesses
the potential future impacts of trends in federal, state,
and private sector R&D spending.
We would
like to thank Kei Koizumi for his efforts in collecting and
analyzing the data and for his work in drafting the report
and Robert Rich for his work in editing the report.
Albert
H. Teich
Director
AAAS Science and Policy Programs
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Bonnie
Bisol Cassidy
Assistant Director
AAAS Center for Science, Technology, and Congress |
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