Office of Science and Technology Policy
For Immediate Release
Contact: 202/456-6108 |
June 15, 2000 |
FACT SHEET
NEW COMPREHENSIVE STATE-BY-STATE
REPORT DETAILS HOW FEDERAL
R&D INVESTMENTS DRIVE U.S. ECONOMIC PROSPERITY AND
PRODUCTIVITY
President Bill Clinton
June 15, 2000
The Federal government invests
over $80 billion in research and development each year. Our partners in
the national S&T enterprise industry and academia have roots
in virtually every community across the nation. That is where we put
Federal R&D investments to work. We have long known that
publicly-funded R&D activities have enormous payoffs at the national
level. These investments enable our nation to compete successfully in the
global marketplace, protect our environment and manage our natural resources in
a sustainable manner, safeguard our national security from emerging threats,
and spur the technological innovation that has contributed so much to our
economic prosperity and quality of life.
We see the fruits of Federal R&D innovation every day. Many of the products and services we have come to depend on for our way of life in America the Internet, the Global Positioning System (GPS), lasers, computers, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), teflon and other advanced materials and composites, communications satellites, jet aircraft, microwave ovens, solar-electric cells, modems, semiconductors, storm windows, genetic medicine and biotechnology, and many others are the products of Federal R&D investments made over the past 50 years. These innovations also mean jobs and economic prosperity for America. This unique report provides clear evidence of the payoffs that R&D investments have at the state and local level, as well as how they ripple through regional and local economies and spur the growth of high technology start-up companies and improvements in local schools. |
Research and Development in the 50 States. At the request of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, RAND has prepared the most comprehensive and detailed information to date on the nature, magnitude, and location of the individual activities that comprise the Federal government's R&D portfolio. Discovery and Innovation: Federal Research and Development Activities in the Fifty States, District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico is an extraordinarily comprehensive 650 page report that taps the RaDiUS (Research and Development in the United States) database to put a human face on the Federal R&D enterprise. This groundbreaking effort identifies the individual laboratories, R&D centers, universities, and companies where people actually create new knowledge and develop innovative new technologies. It enhances our appreciation of the local and regional significance of Federal R&D activities. To ensure the comparability of all of the data used in the report from the most aggregate to the most detailed level of analysis, the most recent data available is from 1998, the baseline fiscal year used throughout the report.
For eight years in a row, President Clinton and Vice President Gore have proposed increased R&D investments. For FY 2001, the civilian R&D request is $43.3 billion, an increase of 6 percent ($2.5 billion) over FY 2000. Civilian R&D now constitutes 51 percent of the overall R&D budget of $85.3 billion up 43 percent since 1993. The budget boosts funding for basic research by 7 percent, a $1.3 billion increase up 52 percent since 1993. R&D support to universities increases 8 percent, a $1.3 billion increase up 53 percent since 1993. Perhaps most important, this budget presents a balanced R&D portfolio which recognizes the interdependence among the scientific disciplines gains in one field are often dependent on advances in others. These investments will enable Federal agencies to achieve the President's goals for science and technology, namely to: promote long-term economic growth that creates high-wage jobs; sustain a healthy, educated citizenry, harness information technology; improve environmental quality; enhance national security and global stability; and maintain world leadership in science, engineering, and mathematics.
What's new and important in this report:
· For the first time in one
document, there is a full and accurate accounting of all Federal R&D
expenditures in each of the 50 States, the District of Columbia, and Puerto
Rico.
· It makes it possible to
correlate Federal R&D investments with improvements in local economies and
local schools.
· On a
state-by-state, unit-by-unit basis, it provides detailed budget information for
each of the individual laboratories, research centers, universities, and
companies that perform R&D.
· It provides descriptions of the substantive
nature of the research, rather than simply categorizing research expenditures
by broad scientific discipline.
The value of such new detailed information:
· The Executive Branch can use the
information to improve coordination and better assess performance and results
of our R&D investments. RaDiUS has enabled researchers in different
agencies to learn of work on related R&D problems being tackled by other
agencies. Such information can help Federal agencies plan intelligently
and better leverage R&D investments. It also adds a new dimension
impacts on State and local economies to measuring the
effectiveness of the Federal R&D investments that typically emphasize
support of government missions and advancement of knowledge across the
scientific frontiers.
· Congress
can use the information to improve its oversight of the Federal R&D
portfolio; detailed descriptions of research projects make it possible to
better examine the R&D portfolio.
· State and local officials can use the
information to identify new opportunities for State-Federal S&T
collaboration, and to target regional and community economic development
efforts.
How this report differs from others:
· RaDiUS is the first data system
that systematically links the high-level R&D information presented annually
in the President's budget to the hundreds of thousands of actual studies,
experiments, and analyses conducted by scientists with Federal R&D
funds. As a result, RaDiUS provides the most complete picture of Federal
activities involving the conduct of R&D ever available.
· The National Science Foundation's (NSF)
annual Survey of Federal Funds for Research and Development provides highly
aggregated data at the national and international levels and limits
descriptions of research to general academic fields of science or
engineering.
· The American
Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) series, The Future of Science
and Technology in the States, describes some activities in selected states,
relying heavily on the NSF survey results.
The bottom line:
· Every State in the nation has seen
a boost in its economy and improvements in local communities from jobs
to schools as a result of Federal investments in science and
technology. This report shows how and why it happens, and underscores why
the United States is in the front ranks of research and innovation, thereby
enhancing our ability to shape and improve our nation's and the
world's future.
Stakeholder Interests in this Report
· Half of all states each receive half a billion or more Federal R&D dollars yearly. While there is substantial regional concentration (fifteen states receive about 80 percent of Federal R&D investments), for many smaller states, Federal R&D support is a significant percentage of the total Federal non-entitlement funding coming into those states. Similarly, for many smaller states, Federal R&D funding on a per-capita basis is higher than in larger states with a greater level of R&D expenditures.
· Analysis shows little overlap in Federal R&D portfolio. When the Federal R&D portfolio is examined by task or research focus, as RaDiUS permits, rather than by discipline, the full scope of Federal activity is shown. While many Federal agencies may share a common interest in particular areas of R&D, there is little duplication among Federal agencies; instead, various agencies are tackling different aspects of a common problem.
· The Executive Branch and Congress will find this report valuable. The elements of the Federal R&D portfolio span 24 Federal agencies and annually account for approximately 14 percent of all discretionary government spending. Discovery and Innovation adds a new dimension local and regional economic and educational improvements to the assessment of Federal R&D performance which has historically emphasized support of specific government missions and the overall advancement of science and technology in the United States. This report shows American taxpayers how, where, and why their public investments in R&D are made. Such detailed information helps our elected officials guide investments and ensure accountability.
· State and local officials will also benefit. Discovery and Innovation is the first comprehensive effort to better inform States and local communities about the Federal R&D programs within their boundaries, and will help improve Federal-State cooperation in science and technology. Currently, 19 states in areas that historically have received lesser amounts of Federal R&D funding participate in the Experimental Program to Stimulate Competitive Research (EPSCoR) designed to strengthen the research capability of their colleges and universities, and thus to increase our total scientific potential.
Why R&D Is Important to the Nation
The credit for America's record-breaking performance in the current world economy really goes to the powerful system we have generated to create new knowledge and develop it into technologies that drive our economy, guarantee our national security, and improve the health and quality of life. We have come to rely on technology and take it for granted in our everyday lives. But the marvels of today are really the fruits of research seeds planted decades ago investments that have not only given us new technologies, but have helped educate generations of engineers and scientists who now form an essential component of our workforce. The very fact that these advances required decades of investment stands as a warning against complacency in our future investment strategy. The government and the private sector must work together to ensure that today's investments in R&D are sufficient to yield similar payoffs to society in the 21st century.
Last spring, Federal Reserve Chairman
Alan Greenspan repeatedly cited an unexpected leap in technology as primarily
responsible for the nation's sparkling economic performance. In
particular, a technology-based surge in productivity appears to be contributing
substantially to our economic success. Our military strength built
on a foundation of high technology has enabled the United States to keep
America safe from aggression, defend our allies, and foster democracies across
the globe. New technologies also improve the quality of our lives.
Medical research in pharmaceuticals, biotechnology, and medical devices
promises us a healthier life. Environmental research offers cleaner air,
water, and soil through better monitoring, prevention, and remediation
technologies. Advanced monitoring and forecasting technologies
from satellites to simulation help save lives and minimize property
damage cause by hurricanes, blizzards, and other severe weather.
Agricultural research yields a cornucopia of safer, healthier, and tastier food
products. Automobile research leads to cars that are safer, cleaner, more
energy-efficient, and more intelligent. Energy research delivers cleaner
fuels and reduces American dependence on foreign resources. Information
and telecommunications technologies enable instantaneous communications across
the globe.
The largest R&D budget in history for FY2001. President Clinton's FY2001 S&T budget includes a $2.9 billion increase in the "Twenty-First Century Research Fund," including a $1 billion increase in biomedical research at the National Institutes of Health and double the largest dollar increase for the National Science Foundation in its 50 year history. These investments will ensure that science and technology will continue to fuel economic growth and allow Americans to lead longer, healthier lives. These investments also will enable America to continue to lead in the 21st century by increasing support in all scientific and engineering disciplines, including biomedical research, nanotechnology, information technology, clean energy, and university-based research.
Fully half of our economic productivity in the last century is attributable to technological innovation and the scientific research that supported it. The knowledge-based society of the 21st century only increases the importance of research, innovation, and human capital as our principal strengths. By sustaining our investments in research, we ensure that America remains at the forefront of scientific capability, thereby enhancing our ability to shape and improve our nation's and the world's future.
R&D investments pay rich dividends to the Nation. It is no accident that our country's most productive and competitive industries are those that benefited from sustained Federal investments in R&D computers and communications, semiconductors, biotechnology, aerospace, environmental technologies, energy efficiency. From satellites, to software, to superconductivity, the Federal government has supported and must continue to support exploratory research, experimentation and innovation that would be impossible for individual companies or even whole industries to afford. These partnerships in pursuit of innovation enable the private sector to generate new knowledge and adopt novel technologies that ultimately lead to commercial success, increased jobs, and healthier and more productive lives for all Americans.
Investments in Federal R&D have extraordinarily high rates of return. Economists estimate that private rates of return on R&D spending average about 24 percent. But societal rates of return on R&D spending the economic benefits that accrue to the entire society are about 66 percent! As much as half the return on an individual firm's R&D investment goes to other companies and competitors not to the investing company. This spillover effect means that private industry cannot and will not commit the level of resources to R&D that is best for society. As a consequence, public support for R&D had been a critical element of Federal policy for more than 200 years, and it has kept our nation at the forefront of technological and industrial success.
American prosperity in the 21st Century. With rapid growth, increased productivity, and rising standards of living, the U.S. economy is thriving, in large part because of our technological leadership. Science and technology have become the engine of America's economic growth: information technology alone accounts for 1/3 of U.S. economic growth, and is creating jobs that pay almost 80 percent more than the average private-sector wage. Many of the technologies (such as the Internet) that are fueling today's economy are the result of government investments in the 1960s and 1970s.
Longer, healthier lives for all Americans. In the last 100 years, the life expectancy of the average American has increased by almost 30 years, as a result of breakthroughs such as antibiotics. Today, we are on the verge of even greater scientific advances, and continued investment in health-related research could lead to greater life expectancies and better quality of life.
Educating America's high-tech workforce. The President's investment in university-based research will help spur innovations in new technologies and treatment, while preparing the next generation of leaders in science, engineering and technology.
Cleaner energy for a cleaner environment. Research can help America create cleaner sources of energy and energy-efficient technologies, such as fuel cells that emit only water, cars that get 80 miles per gallon, and bioenergy derived from new cash crops.
New insights into the world around us. Increases in funding for science-based research can lead to amazing breakthroughs in our understanding of the world around us and beyond.
Discovery and Innovation: Federal Research and Development Activities in the Fifty States, District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico is available at: http://www.whitehouse.gov/WH/EOP/OSTP/html/radius.html and at: http://www.whitehouse.gov/cgi-bin/good-bye.cgi?url=http://www.rand.org/publications/MR/MR1194
For questions about the R&D report, please contact Donna Fossum at RAND at 703/413-1100, Ext. 5602.
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