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National Institutes of Health in the FY 2009 Budget Kei Koizumi, AAAS |
| Highlights - In 2009, there would be fewer new research grants, the real size of the average research grant would shrink for the fifth year in a row, and the success rate for grant competitions could fall to a new low of 18 percent. - After peaking in 2004, the NIH budget has declined every year in real terms, and if enacted the 2009 request would leave NIH funding 8 percent below 2004 after adjusting for economy-wide inflation and 13 percent below 2004 after adjusting for NIH's own calculations of biomedical research inflation. - With the budget freeze, there would be few new initiatives. A rare growth area would be the NIH Common Fund (NIH Roadmap) in the Office of the Director with a $534 million request (up 7.7 percent; see Table II-10). - R&D in the other Department of Health and Human Services
(HHS) agencies combined would rise 14.6 percent to $1.3 billion because of a $250
million request for biomedical countermeasures R&D for the Biomedical Advanced
Research Development Authority (BARDA) in the Office of the Secretary, more than
double the $102 million 2008 allocation (see Table
II-8). The
FY 2009 NIH budget of $29.5 billion would be exactly the same as the recently
finalized 2008 budget (see Table II-9). A year
ago, the Bush Administration requested $28.9 billion for 2008, but Congress added
$600 million to the request for a 1.1 percent increase over the previous year. NIH
funding would lag well behind inflation in the economy as a whole, projected at
2.0 percent next year (see Figure 1). The 2009 NIH budget would be 7.7 percent
below the 2004 peak after adjusting for inflation. But NIH would fall even further
behind in its own calculations of biomedical research inflation. NIH calculates
a Biomedical Research and Development Price Index (BRDPI), an index that attempts
to calculate the inflation rate for goods and services purchased by the NIH budget.
Recently, NIH projected the BRDPI increase for FY 2009 to be 3.5 percent, the
same rate as 2008. In recent years, the BRDPI inflation rate has outpaced the
economy-wide inflation rate by close to 2 percentage points a year. Using BRDPI,
the 2009 budget would be 13 percent less than the 2004 budget in biomedical inflation-adjusted
terms. (AAAS and the federal government generally use the economy-wide GDP deflator
to adjust R&D dollars for inflation.) In the FY 2009 budget, nearly all IC's would see their budgets remain flat for the fifth year in a row. Among the 20 independent institutes, none would see an increase greater than 0.5 percent, and nearly all would receive only $1 or $2 million more than the current year. 16 of the 20 institutes would have less money in 2009 than in 2005 even before inflation is factored in. Among NIH's other accounts, only the National Center for Research Resources (NCRR) would see any increase, and even then just a modest 1.0 percent to $1.2 billion (see Table II-9). The NCRR would invest $452 million in Clinical Research, up $12 million from 2008, with an emphasis on clinical and translational science awards and general clinical research centers. Trans-NIH initiatives in the NIH Common Fund (or the NIH Roadmap for Medical Research), now centralized in the Office of the Director (OD), would climb $38 million or 7.7 percent to $534 million to become one of the few growth areas in the 2009 budget. OD funding of R&D on nuclear, radiological, and chemical countermeasures would be another, growing $19 million to $113 million. The overall OD budget would fall $52 million or 4.7 percent to $1.1 billion because the increases above would be more than offset by the proposed cancellation of the National Children's Study, which received $111 million from Congress in 2008. Because of stagnant and declining funding in recent budgets
and the 2009 request, all NIH IC's, except the Office of the Director, have lost
ground significantly in inflation-adjusted terms (see Figure 1). The largest institute,
the National Cancer Institute (NCI), would see its budget remain at $4.8 billion
in 2009, 11 percent below the 2004 funding level in real terms. The National Heart,
Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) would have $2.9 billion in 2009, an 11 percent
inflation-adjusted loss compared to 2004. The other NIH institutes would see similar
losses. (The losses would be even greater if calculated with the biomedical research
BRDPI inflation index.) The majority of NIH's budget is distributed to external performers through Research Project Grants (RPG's), which are investigator initiated, peer reviewed, and competitively awarded throughout the NIH budget. NIH projects a decline in the number of RPG's in 2008, from a high of 37,060 in 2004 down to a projected 36,516 next year (see Table II-10 and Figure 2). NIH expects to offer just 9,757 new (competing) RPG's in 2009, below the 10,000+ new grants awarded in 2003 and 2004. (RPG's last 3.8 years on average, and nearly all are funded a year at a time in successive budgets.) Total funding for RPG's would be $14.9 billion
in 2009, down from both 2007 and 2008 (see Table II-10).
RPG funding has declined steadily in real terms after peaking in 2004. Not only
have RPG numbers declined, but the average RPG continues to lose ground to inflation
(see Figure 2). In the 2009 budget, NIH once again warns researchers that they
are unlikely to see any inflationary adjustments for the second or later years
for their grants. In real terms, the average RPG of $408,100 would be 9 percent
smaller in 2009 than in 2004, and even smaller if adjusted for biomedical research
inflation. NIH also distributes about 10 percent of its budget through R&D contracts (see Table II-10). Funding for R&D contracts would continue to increase, by 1.0 percent to $3.3 billion in FY 2009. NIH funding of research centers would also continue to grow modestly in FY 2009, by 0.7 percent to $3.0 billion, for support of 1,417 centers. These multi-year multidisciplinary commitments of funds, mostly to universities, have grown in importance over the past decade. The institutes also operate
an enormous federal research enterprise, mostly in Bethesda, MD. Intramural research
would total $3.1 billion in 2009, continuing the flat funding trends of recent
years. A new program to encourage new investigators,
launched last year, would expand in FY 2009. Pathways to Independence, started
with $15 million last year and increasing to $71 million in 2009, would provide
up to 5 years of support for scientists just beginning their research careers.
These awards, which combine research and training support, are designed to transition
scientists from mentored research to independent research and would go partway
to alleviating the great difficulty that new investigators have in winning their
first full NIH grants. In FY 2009, some of the first cohort of these investigators
should graduate to being funded by RPG's. Within OD, there would also be $91 million
(up slightly from $90 million) for the NIH Director's Bridge Award, which provides
'bridge' funding to investigators without other support who may be between grants. Within the Roadmap, funding for Research Teams of the Future would fall again, by $9 million down to $142 million because of cuts in interdisciplinary training. Funding for the Director's Pioneer Awards, which are five-year awards to individual investigators to encourage high-risk basic research, would remain steady at $36 million. The Director's New Innovator Awards, similar to the Pathway to Independence program in that it supports new investigators, would receive a flat $56 million in 2009. The goal of Re-engineering the Clinical Research Enterprise, focused on enhancing clinical research training and clinical research networks, would decline $13 million to $103 million, mostly because total awards for Clinical and Translational Science would fall from $90 million down to $83 million, although similar funding in NCRR would increase. The New Pathways to Discovery theme would increase 5.6 percent to $242 million for its diverse portfolio of programs, ranging from funding of molecular libraries to nanomedicine to computational biology, all centered on cutting-edge research to build biological databases and other research tools that could benefit all biomedical research. The big increases in 2009 would go genomics-related activities. There would also be $47 million in new money for new Roadmap initiatives in new focus areas that have yet to be finalized. Among other research areas, an area small in funding but large in policy
interest is embryonic stem cell research. Since President Bush's announcement
in August 2001 that NIH would fund human embryonic stem cell research only on
stem cell lines that were created before that date and approved by NIH, there
has been ongoing controversy over how the policy might limit progress on stem
cell research. A bill to greatly expand stem cell lines eligible for federal funding
has been vetoed twice by President Bush. In the meantime, NIH reports that its
funding of human embryonic stem cell research using the pre-August 2001 approved
stem cell lines is $42 million this year. | |
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