Academic Funding

NSF Escapes Attention in First Draft of Trump Budget Academic Funding
The first page of Donald Trump's budget proposal sounds familiar themes from his campaign.

NSF Escapes Attention in First Draft of Trump Budget

March 16, 2017 1460

First page of Trump budget plan

The first page of Donald Trump’s budget proposal sounds familiar themes from his campaign.

The first swipe at a federal budget from the Donald Trump White House does not mention the National Science Foundation, which is the largest single funder of university-based social science in the United States. Given the cuts seen for many other federal science agencies, such as the Environmental Protection Agency and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, some have seen the omission in the budget outline released today as a blessing.

As Jeffrey Mervis termed it at the Science website, “NSF wonders if budget’s silence is golden.”

Such a view is understandable, given the pain doled out to other federal agencies that aren’t related to the military or law enforcement. As The New York Times summarized:

The budget would cut the Environmental Protection Agency by 31 percent, the State Department by 28 percent and Health and Human Services by 17.9 percent. Funding to several smaller government agencies that have long been targets of conservatives — like the Legal Services Corporation, the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, the National Endowment for the Humanities and the National Endowment for the Arts — would be axed entirely.

In his article, headlined, “A grim budget day for U.S. science,” Science’s Mervis suggested that line-item type cuts not seen in today’s budget request may yet be in store when a full budget appears in May:

NSF is not mentioned in the 62-page document, so it’s impossible to know what the new president thinks about its broad $7.5-billion portfolio of research and education. Presumably, the agency is one component of a single line labeled “other agencies” that is scheduled for a 10% cut. But NSF never received a “landing team” from the incoming Trump administration and had no interactions with White House budget officials as the so-called skinny budget was assembled over the past few weeks.

While the Trump administration may not have targeted social science, that isn’t true in all quarters of the Republican majority. On March 10, the head of the House Science Committee called for favoring physical and technological science grants over social and environmental spending in a letter sent to the House Budget Committee. Such letters are something all authorizing committees do to make their budget priorities known to the Budget Committee, which uses this input to help formulate its overall budget resolution.

The head of the Science committee, Texas Republican Lamar Smith, asked that 70 percent of the funding for the NSF’s various directors be sent to four of the directorates: the Mathematical and Physical Sciences; Computer and Information Science; biological Sciences; and Engineering. The net effect of this prioritization is to substantially cut the traditional levels of spending seen in the Social, Behavioral and Economic Sciences and Geosciences directorates. Such picking and choosing among the various directorates is not unknown but is unusual and generally unwelcome by scientists, and has been a hallmark of Smith’s tenure as committee chair.

Smith’s letter also resurrects Smith’s focus on ensuring science grants reflect the “national interest,” which the science community often sees as a back-door for future attacks on social science. This latest letter buttresses those interpretations, as Smith writes, “Throughout its history, the NSF has played an integral part in funding breakthrough discoveries in fields as diverse as mathematics, physics, chemistry, computer science, engineering and biology.” Given that NSF-funded work in the social sciences has had an outsize impact on policy, its exclusion in this list is telling.


Related Articles

Social, Behavioral Scientists Eligible to Apply for NSF S-STEM Grants
Investment
December 3, 2021

Social, Behavioral Scientists Eligible to Apply for NSF S-STEM Grants

Read Now
With COVID and Climate Change Showing Social Science’s Value, Why Cut it Now?
Impact
September 3, 2021

With COVID and Climate Change Showing Social Science’s Value, Why Cut it Now?

Read Now
Testing-the-Waters Policy With Hypothetical Investment: Evidence From Equity Crowdfunding
News
September 9, 2020

Testing-the-Waters Policy With Hypothetical Investment: Evidence From Equity Crowdfunding

Read Now
Compendium of Research Funders’ Impact Requirements
Academic Funding
April 23, 2020

Compendium of Research Funders’ Impact Requirements

Read Now
Congress Seeks Immediate Research Ideas for Stimulus Legislation

Congress Seeks Immediate Research Ideas for Stimulus Legislation

mmittee of the U.S. House of Representatives wants to make sure that all sciences continue to play a role in fighting the coronavirus, and asks for ideas on how the next economic stimulus package in the United States can support research.

Read Now
Ken Prewitt Wants to Retrofit The Social Sciences

Ken Prewitt Wants to Retrofit The Social Sciences

“In a world facing many complex, formidable problems,” Kenneth Prewitt asks, “how can the social sciences become a decisive force for human […]

Read Now
NYU’s Social Science for Impact Forum

NYU’s Social Science for Impact Forum

Each year, NYU researchers analyze New York State Medicaid, New York City Department of Education, and New York City subsidized housing data to discover new patterns of family experiences and outcomes and inform new approaches to fighting poverty, reducing inequality, and expanding opportunity in our communities.

Read Now
0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments