American Association for the Advancement of Science

AAAS R&D Funding Update November 22, 1999

Final FY 2000 Appropriations:


A Preview Report for
Congressional Action on Research and Development
in the FY 2000 Budget

Go to:

-Highlights

-R&D Appropriations for Key Agencies

-Total U.S. R&D Funding in 1999 and Other Funding Trends

-Publication Information

-Table 1. Total R&D by Agency

-Table 2. Estimated Research by Agency

-Table 3. Major Functional Categories of R&D

-Table 4. "21st Century Research Fund" by Agency

-Table 5. Total U.S. R&D, 1997-1999

PDF version of this document

Detailed agency updates (including agency tables; PDF):

U.S. Department of Agriculture

Department of Commerce

Department of Defense

Department of Energy

Department of the Interior

Department of Transportation

Environmental Protection Agency

National Aeronautics and Space Administration

National Institutes of Health

National Science Foundation

 

Supplemental Tables and Full-Color Charts (PDF):

Historical Table 1. Federal R&D by Agency, 1982-2000 (current dollars)

Historical Table 2. Federal R&D by Agency, 1982-2000 (CONSTANT FY 1999 dollars)

Chart. FY 2000 R&D Request and Final Appropriations (Figure 1)

Chart. Trends in R&D, FY 1994-2000 (Figure 2)

Chart. Trends in Federal R&D, FY 1982-2000

Chart. Selected Trends in Federal R&D, FY 1982-2000

Chart. Trends in Basic Research, FY 1982-2000

Chart. Trends in Defense R&D, FY 1982-2000

Chart. Trends in NSF R&D, Request vs. Actual, FY 1984-2000

Chart. Trends in National Institutes of Health R&D, Request vs. Actual, FY 1984-2000

Chart. Total U.S. R&D Funding by Source, 1953-1999 (Figure 3)

Chart. Total U.S. R&D Funding by Performer, 1953-1999

Chart. U.S. R&D Funding as Percent of Gross Domestic Product, 1953-1999

(This Preview Report is a summary of final FY 2000 appropriations for federal R&D. This is a preview of the forthcoming publication Congressional Action on Research and Development in the FY 2000 Budget. (Ordering information is on the last page). This report provides AAAS estimates and analyses of final approved FY 2000 appropriations for research and development.)

On November 18, nearly two months into fiscal year (FY) 2000, President Clinton and Congress reached a final agreement on FY 2000 appropriations, including federal support for R&D. The House approved the agreement that day and the Senate approved it the following day, and both chambers adjourned for the year. President Clinton will sign the agreement into law this week. The final omnibus appropriations bill is a compilation of five out of the 13 annual appropriations bills and unrelated legislation, and contains a 0.38 percent across-the-board cut for all appropriated programs to keep FY 2000 spending from dipping into a projected Social Security surplus. Eight FY 2000 appropriations bills were enacted separately earlier; the across-the-board cut applies to programs in these bills. Together, these FY 2000 bills provide increases for most federal R&D programs, including substantial increases for the National Institutes of Health and the Department of Defense.

Every year, AAAS analyzes appropriations as signed into law and provides detailed estimates on the federal investment in R&D for the new fiscal year in the publication Congressional Action on Research and Development. The FY 2000 printed edition will be published in mid-December; the full text is now available on line on the AAAS R&D Web site (www.aaas.org/spp/R&D). Detailed information on the largest R&D funding agencies, historical tables, and other supplementary materials will also be available on the AAAS R&D Web site. This preview report offers selected highlights from the book.

Highlights

Going into the FY 2000 budget process, it was expected that tight statutory caps on discretionary spending would result in flat or declining funding for discretionary programs, including R&D. But Congress and President Clinton, while technically sticking to the caps, in practice obliterated them through numerous budgetary tricks and accounting devices that allow FY 2000 discretionary spending to far exceed the caps. The final budget agreement includes billions of dollars in emergency spending, advance appropriations of FY 2001 funds, delayed obligations, "directed scorekeeping," revenue offsets, and even an across-the-board cut of 0.38 percent in all appropriations to keep spending technically under the caps while also appearing to preserve a projected Social Security surplus for FY 2000. Discretionary budget authority is capped in FY 2000 at $538 billion, far less than FY 1999, but final FY 2000 discretionary budget authority (including new advanced FY 2001 funding) is expected to exceed $580 billion.

As a result, Congress and the President are able to award large increases for federal R&D. Most areas of federal support of R&D receive modest increases in FY 2000, even after adjusting for the across-the-board cut, but selected high-priority areas receive large increases, resulting in another year of favorable appropriations for federal R&D (see Table 1; all figures in the tables are adjusted to reflect the across-the-board cut):

  • Total federal support for R&D in FY 2000 increases substantially to $83.3 billion, $4.0 billion or 5.0 percent more than FY 1999, primarily because of large increases for the Department of Defense (DOD) and the National Institutes of Health (NIH). There are increases in R&D funding for most agencies, but some agencies receive increases less than the rate of inflation or even cuts in their R&D programs (see Figure 1 and Table 1). The National Institutes of Health (NIH) receives the largest dollar increase in history, a nearly $2.2 billion or 14.4 percent increase in its R&D budget to $17.1 billion, but $3 billion of the total NIH budget is withheld until the end of September 2000. Department of Defense (DOD) R&D totals $39.1 billion, an increase of $1.1 billion or 3.0 percent, including a 11.0 percent increase to $8.7 billion for DOD's "S&T" programs ("6.1" through "6.3").


Figure 1 (click on image to download full-size PDF chart).

  • The FY 2000 R&D total is $5.4 billion above the President's request. Final FY 2000 appropriations for DOD's R&D exceed the request by more than $4.0 billion because of strong congressional support for increased defense spending after more than a decade of cuts. Congress awarded NIH $1.8 billion more for its R&D than it had requested. Most other agencies receive less for their R&D programs than requested (see Figure 1).

· Nondefense R&D totals $40.9 billion, an increase of 7.1 percent or $2.7 billion over FY 1999, the first time the federal civilian investment exceeds $40 billion. Nearly all of the substantial increase is due to a $2.2 billion or 14.4 percent boost for NIH R&D. Excluding NIH, however, nondefense R&D rises only 2.4 percent or $555 million to $23.7 billion, barely ahead of the expected inflation rate of 2.0 percent (see Table 1). Funding for nondefense R&D in FY 2000 is 12.1 percent higher than the FY 1994 level in inflation-adjusted terms (see Figure 2), but this is due primarily to increases for NIH. Figure 2 also shows that if NIH is excluded, nondefense R&D is 4.4 percent below the FY 1994 level in inflation-adjusted terms because most non-NIH civilian R&D funding agencies (except for the National Science Foundation (NSF)) have less in FY 2000 than they did in FY 1994.


Figure 2 (click on image to download full-size PDF chart).

· After a decade of cuts or only modest increases, total defense R&D increases $1.3 billion or 3.1 percent to $42.5 billion because of large increases in DOD and Department of Energy (DOE) defense spending. The "Science and Technology" portion of DOD's budget (encompassing basic and applied research plus exploratory technology development) increases by 11.0 percent to $8.7 billion, including $274 million for congressionally designated medical research. The FY 2000 increase begins to reverse years of decline in DOD S&T, which provides significant portions of total federal support for engineering and physical sciences research. DOD requested a cut for S&T and total R&D, but appropriators added more than $4 billion to the request for DOD.

  • Basic research is a high priority in FY 2000 appropriations. Table 2 shows that federal support for basic research is expected to total $19.1 billion in FY 2000, an increase of $1.8 billion or 10.6 percent. The increases, however, go mostly to life sciences and medical research funded by NIH. Although the total for basic research is $1.0 billion higher than the request, the President's request would have spread increases more evenly among the agencies. Nevertheless, the National Science Foundation (NSF), the second-largest supporter of basic research and the largest supporter of most non-life sciences disciplines, sees its basic research increase by 6.0 percent to $2.5 billion. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration's (NASA) basic research increases by 18.0 percent to $2.5 billion, but mostly because of a reclassification of existing work from applied to basic research. DOD, the primary supporter of basic research in engineering, mathematics, and computer sciences, sees its basic research ("6.1") rise by 5.4 percent to $1.2 billion.
  • In FY 2000, NIH funds, for the first time, a majority of federal support for basic research. NIH also funds two-thirds of all federal support for R&D at colleges and universities, a proportion that will almost certainly increase in FY 2000.
  • FY 2000 appropriations show a clear priority for health-related R&D when the total federal R&D portfolio is considered by national mission (see Table 3). Health R&D surges by 14.1 percent to $18.7 billion because of large increases not only for NIH but for other R&D funding agencies in the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). Defense-related R&D increases by $1.3 billion or 3.1 percent to $42.5 billion; once again, it accounts for a majority of the federal R&D portfolio, although the Clinton Administration's FY 2000 request would have made nondefense R&D a majority of the portfolio for the first time since FY 1980. Energy-related R&D increases significantly by 9.3 percent to $1.3 billion because of last-minute boosts to DOE support of fossil energy and energy conservation R&D. Other mission areas receive modest increases or cuts; natural resources and environment R&D declines 0.9 percent to $2.1 billion because of cuts in R&D funding in the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the Department of the Interior.
  • The Clinton Administration presented a "21st Century Research Fund" in the FY 2000 request, as it did in FY 1999, to highlight programs that it considers important to the nation's science and technology enterprise. The Fund highlights both R&D and non-R&D items while excluding large parts of the nation's R&D portfolio (primarily in development). Table 4 summarizes appropriations for the Fund, which total $39.9 billion in FY 2000, 7.9 percent or $2.9 billion more than FY 1999. Congress cut the Administration's request for most nondefense R&D programs in the Fund, but balanced it by providing nearly $2 billion more than the request for NIH and nearly $500 million more than the request for DOD's basic and applied research. "FS&T," another alternative measure of the federal investment in science and technology developed by the National Academy of Sciences, totals $52.1 billion (up 7.7 percent; see Table 1).
  • Information technology (IT) research was a high priority for the Clinton Administration in the FY 2000 request. The Administration proposed $366 million for a new six-agency Information Technology for the 21st Century (IT2) initiative to support long-term fundamental research in IT. Though not labeled as IT2, new fundamental IT research activities receive $235 million, including $126 million for NSF and $60 million for DOD. DOE did not receive any funds for new IT activities, though it requested $70 million.

R&D Appropriations for Key Agencies

Full information on final funding levels and program details for individual agencies can be found in revised AAAS R&D Funding Updates on the AAAS R&D Web site. (Follow the links to see the agency updates in PDF format). Please see also the agency sections in Congressional Action on R&D in the FY 2000 Budget.

· Department of Defense (DOD) R&D totals $39.1 billion, $4.0 billion more than the request and $1.1 billion or 3.0 percent more than FY 1999. DOD funding of basic and applied research is well above both the request and the FY 1999 funding level. DOD's basic research ("6.1") totals $1.2 billion, 5.4 percent above FY 1999, while applied research ("6.2") totals $3.4 billion, 7.5 percent above FY 1999. Including DOD's medical research programs, DOD S&T ("6.1" through "6.3" programs, representing DOD's investments in basic and applied research and technology development) increases by 11.0 percent to $8.7 billion, though even this increase leaves DOD S&T 6.1 percent below the FY 1994 level after adjusting for inflation (see Figure 2). The final Defense bill contains substantial increases for the overall DOD budget as well as for R&D programs, after a decade-long post-Cold War decline. The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) budget declines by $82 million or 4.2 percent to $1.8 billion. DOD receives $60 million of a requested $100 million for the multi-agency IT2 initiative.

  • The National Institutes of Health (NIH) is once again the beneficiary of strong support for biomedical research from both branches of government. The NIH budget of $17.8 billion represents a $2.2 billion or 14.3 percent increase over FY 1999, keeping NIH on the second year of a course toward doubling its budget in five years. However, $3 billion of the budget is withheld until September 29, 2000, a day before the end of FY 2000, in order to shift spending to FY 2001. For all practical purposes, then, NIH will have to operate for nearly all of FY 2000 on less than its FY 1999 budget. Every institute receives an increase greater than 12 percent, and five receive increases greater than 20 percent. In addition to the regular NIH budget, there is an additional $20 million from the HHS Secretary's office to fund cooperative R&D between NIH and the biotechnology, pharmaceutical, and medical device industries. Because of steady increases every year, the NIH R&D budget is now 47 percent larger in inflation-adjusted terms than it was in FY 1994 (see Figure 2).

· The National Aeronautics and Space Administration's (NASA) total budget is $13.6 billion in FY 2000, 0.5 percent less than FY 1999. Total NASA R&D, which excludes the Space Shuttle and its mission support costs, increases slightly by 0.6 percent to $9.8 billion. The Science, Aeronautics, and Technology (SAT) account receives $5.6 billion, a reduction of 1.2 percent from FY 1999 but $161 million more than the request. Space Science has 2.7 percent more than FY 1999 for a total of $2.2 billion; there is reduced funding for future Discovery and Explorer missions, which could result in fewer spacecraft launches over the next few years than NASA had planned; funding is also reduced for the Mars missions in response to the recent loss of a Mars spacecraft. Life and Microgravity Sciences and Applications (LMSA) receives $275 million, an increase of 4.3 percent; much of the increase is for a dedicated shuttle science mission by 2001. NASA receives $2.3 billion for continued development and construction of the International Space Station, $70 million or 3.1 percent more than FY 1999 but $161 million less than the request.

  • In the wake of congressional anger over allegations of security breaches and mismanagement at Department of Energy (DOE) weapons laboratories, Congress recently moved DOE's weapons-related activities to a new semi-autonomous agency within DOE called the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA). Meanwhile, DOE has an R&D budget of $7.2 billion for FY 2000, $258 million or 3.7 percent more than FY 1999. The Science account totals $2.6 billion for R&D, a slight decline of 0.3 percent. Fusion Energy Sciences receives a boost of 11.2 percent to $246 million, while Nuclear Physics increases 3.9 percent to $347 million. The final budget denies funding for the proposed Scientific Simulation Initiative, part of the proposed IT2 initiative. Congress reduces funding for the Spallation Neutron Source to $117 million, down from a requested $214 million. In DOE's investments in energy R&D, nuclear energy R&D ($91 million, up 19.3 percent), fossil energy R&D ($330 million, up 11.9 percent), and energy conservation R&D ($440 million, up 10.0 percent) all receive substantial increases. In defense R&D, the Stockpile Stewardship program is funded at $2.2 billion, $126 million or 5.9 percent more than last year despite the controversies over the weapons labs.

· The National Science Foundation (NSF) receives $3.9 billion for its total budget in FY 2000, an increase of 5.0 percent. NSF's R&D funding, which excludes NSF's education and training activities and overhead costs, totals $2.9 billion (up 5.2 percent). NSF receives $126 million out of a requested $146 million for new fundamental information technology (IT) research activities in FY 2000, most of which comes from the $390 million budget for the Directorate of Computer and Information Science and Engineering (up 30.6 percent). Although growth in the NSF budget stagnated somewhat in the mid-1990s, in the last few years it has received significant funding increases. NSF's R&D is 14.4 percent higher in inflation-adjusted terms compared to FY 1994 (see Figure 2), one of only two major R&D funding agencies to receive increased funding over this time period.

· Funding for the Department of Commerce's R&D programs increases slightly in FY 2000. The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) sees its R&D budget rise modestly by 1.0 percent or $5 million to $473 million. Within NIST, the Advanced Technology Program (ATP) receives $130 million for R&D activities, a cut of 27.0 percent, but this is balanced by a near-doubling to $108 million for the mostly intramural Construction of Research Facilities program. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA) programs for natural resources and environment R&D increase by $17 million or 2.8 percent to $617 million. Total Commerce R&D is $1.1 billion (up 2.0 percent).

· The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) has an R&D budget of $1.7 billion in FY 1999, an increase of $56 million (up 3.4 percent). This amount, though an increase, is still far below the request of $1.85 billion because the final bill blocks a non-appropriated competitive agricultural research grants program from spending a planned $120 million in FY 2000. The existing competitive grants program, the National Research Initiative, receives $119 million, the same as last year but far less than the request of $200 million. Special Research Grants receives $63 million, $58 million more than the request, for 142 separate grants, all but six of them to congressionally designated performers. The Agricultural Research Service (ARS) receives $903 million in FY 2000, an increase of $36 million or 4.2 percent.

· The Department of the Interior's (DOI) R&D budget declines by 0.9 percent in FY 2000 to $562 million. The U.S. Geological Survey receives $496 million for its R&D, 0.2 percent less than FY 1999, partially because of a major restructuring of USGS activities. Because of severe cutbacks in recent years, Interior's R&D is now nearly 30 percent less than the FY 1994 funding level in inflation-adjusted terms.

  • The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has an FY 2000 R&D budget of $645 million, $23 million or 3.5 percent less than FY 1999 but the same funding level as the request. In order to make room for congressionally designated projects, Congress trimmed the request for R&D related to the Climate Change Technology Initiative and other R&D programs.

· The Department of Transportation's (DOT) R&D budget of $643 million (up 6.7 percent or $40 million) is a small part of the total DOT budget. Because of a multi-year reauthorization of transportation programs in May 1998 that significantly boosted funding for highways and other surface transportation programs, the total DOT budget climbs $2.1 billion to $50.1 billion; DOT R&D shares in these gains.

The full report offers 17 detailed funding tables, several charts, a chronology of the events in the FY 2000 budget process, an analysis of funding trends, and analyses of the impacts of the FY 2000 budget on each of the major R&D funding agencies. Individual agency analyses, historical tables, agency funding tables, and charts of recent funding trends are also available on the AAAS R&D Web site in the "FY 2000 R&D" section.

Total U.S. R&D Funding in 1999 and Other Funding Trends

The mostly good news for federal R&D in FY 2000 follows the good budget news of FY 1999, when the federal government recorded its largest budget surplus in history and came tantalizingly close to achieving the first non-Social Security surplus in 40 years. The final FY 1999 surplus was $123 billion, up substantially from the $69 billion surplus in FY 1998. The off-budget (Social Security) surplus in FY 1999 was $124 billion, meaning that the non-Social Security or on-budget deficit was only $1 billion, narrowly missing the first non-Social Security surplus since FY 1960. As a result of two years in a row of budget surpluses, the federal government has been paying off the national debt to the public for the past two years, and as a percentage of the economy the national debt is shrinking dramatically. Recent budget projections show an even larger (unified) surplus in FY 2000 and a small non-Social Security surplus, but in wrapping up the FY 2000 appropriations process Congress and the President spent all of the projected non-Social Security surplus and perhaps more. In order to keep their pledge of not touching the Social Security surplus in FY 2000, both sides are counting on economic conditions and government revenues to improve over the coming year.

As the federal investment in R&D and the federal budget surplus expand, and the national debt shrinks, there is also good news from U.S. industry. Once again, the total U.S. R&D enterprise continues to grow. Recently, the National Science Foundation (NSF) released its preliminary projections for total U.S. R&D in 1998 and 1999, including industry-funded R&D. NSF estimates that the total U.S. R&D effort in (calendar year) 1999 is $247 billion (see Figure 3 and Table 5). This represents an 8.8 percent or $20 billion increase over the $227 billion total in 1998, which itself was a 7.3 percent increase over 1997.

As shown in Figure 3, since 1994 total U.S. R&D has expanded dramatically due almost entirely to substantial increases in R&D funding from industrial firms. In 1999, U.S. industry is expected to spend $169 billion on R&D with its own funds, an increase of 12 percent, far outstripping the more modest growth in federal R&D. As Figure 3 shows, industry has consistently expanded its share of total U.S. R&D over the past four decades, and now funds two-thirds of total U.S. R&D. Other funding sources for R&D, though far smaller in dollar terms, are also expected to increase their R&D spending.

These increases in U.S. R&D spending are for all character of work categories. Despite worries in the mid 1990s that industry would cut back on its support of basic research, in 1999 industrial firms are expected to fund $12.7 billion of basic research, an increase of 11.6 percent. This increase is far higher than the increase in federal support of basic research (up 4.1 percent), although the federal government continues to be the majority sponsor of basic research in the U.S. with $21.0 billion. Total applied research and total development in the U.S. are also expected to grow.


Figure 3 (click on image to download full-size PDF chart).

Because growth in total R&D is expected to exceed growth in the U.S. economy as a whole as measured by the Gross Domestic Product (GDP), NSF estimates that total U.S. R&D will reach 2.79 percent of GDP in 1999, up from 2.67 percent in 1998 and the highest share since 1967.

If R&D continues to grow faster than the economy as a whole, as it has since 1994, in 2000 the U.S. R&D/GDP ratio could exceed the all-time high ratio of 2.87 percent in 1964. A survey by the Industrial Research Institute (IRI), an organization whose members include the largest R&D performing companies, indicates that industry plans to increase its R&D spending in 2000, though at a slower rate than in the past three years.

Go to Tables 1-5

Publication Information

The AAAS publication Congressional Action on Research and Development in the FY 2000 Budget, from which this preview report is excerpted, will be available in mid-December from AAAS. The full report, and supplementary material including detailed agency funding analyses, historical tables, and charts illustrating recent R&D funding trends, is available on-line. Ordering information is as follows:

Congressional Action on Research and Development in the FY 2000 Budget, Kei Koizumi, Albert H. Teich, Stephen D. Nelson, Joanne Padrón Carney, 1999. $10.95; $8.75 to AAAS members.

We are accepting advance orders for the report. Please send a check or purchase order and mailing information directly to AAAS Science and Policy Programs, 1200 New York Ave., NW #823, Washington, DC 20005 to receive the report as soon as it is published. The publication will be mailed automatically to all participants in the 24th Annual AAAS Colloquium on Science and Technology Policy (April 1999). After publication, the report may be ordered from the AAAS Distribution Center. Address: AAAS Distribution Center, P.O. Box 521, Annapolis Junction, MD 20701. For VISA / Mastercard orders call 1-800-222-7809 (8:30 AM - 5:00 PM ET). Fax orders to 301-206-9789. For shipments to CA and DC, add applicable sales tax. For shipments to Canada, add the GST. Please allow 2-3 weeks for delivery. Please add $4.00 for postage and handling per order. Orders must be prepaid by check or accompanied by purchase order payable to AAAS. Inquiries may be directed to AAAS (see below).

- November 22, 1999

AAAS R&D Budget and Policy Program
American Association for the Advancement of Science
1200 New York Ave, NW
Washington, DC 20005
(202) 326-6607
science_policy@aaas.org
http://www.aaas.org/spp/R&D

Go to Tables 1-5

 

 

American Association for the Advancement of Science