Title : Academic S&E Support from Federal Agencies Rose by 8 Percent in FY 1994 Type : 1996 Data Briefs NSF Org : SBE / SRS Date : May 31, 1996 File : SDB96305 Note: The companion binary file to this text file is an Adobe Acrobat.PDF (Portable Document Format) file. In order to view and print this file, you must use the Adobe Acrobat Reader. The Acrobat reader is available from Adobe via Ftp. Ftp to ftp.adobe.com anonymous <------User email name <------Password Change the directory to: pub/adobe/applications/acrobat/Windows <----Windows reader or pub/adobe/applications/acrobat/mcintosh <----MacIntosh reader or pub/adobe/applications/acrobat/unix <----Unix reader Download the relevent Acrobat Reader file, entitled ACROREAD.EXE. You may freely distribute the reader program. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Science Resources Studies Division DATA BRIEF Vol. 1996, No. 2, May 31, 1996 Academic S&E Support from Federal Agencies Rose by 8 Percent in FY 1994 Federal agencies’ obligations for science and engineering (S&E) activities at universities and colleges increased 8 percent (6 percent when adjusted for inflation) in fiscal year (FY) 1994, to a new high of $13.7 billion. This increase followed last year’s slight decline in Federal academic S&E funding but is consistent with the average annual 9-percent current-dollar increase between 1973 and 1992. This information is based on the latest data from the National Science Foundation’s (NSF’s) Survey of Federal Support to Universities, Colleges, and Nonprofit Institutions. Categories of Support There are six academic S&E funding cate-gories: (1) research and development (R&D); (2) fellowships, traineeships, and training grants (FTTG); (3) R&D plant; (4) facilities and equipment for instruction; (5) general support for S&E; and (6) other S&E activities. R&D support ($11.8 billion in FY 1994) continued to account for $6 of every $7 of academic S&E funding and increased nearly 8 percent in FY 1994 (table 1). Over one-half of all academic R&D obligations ($6.4 billion) and over nine-tenths of its total increase were from Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) programs, mostly National Institutes of Health (NIH) projects in the biological and medical sciences. Four of the other five academic S&E categories showed increased support levels, with three (FTTG, facilities and equipment for instruction, and general support for S&E) increasing at rates higher than inflation. FTTG funds rose by over 20 percent in current dollars to a new high of $634 million; most of the increase was provided by HHS and the Department of Education (ED). Funds for instructional facilities and equipment grew by 53 percent to a record $49 million, most of the increase coming from the Department of Defense (DOD). General support for S&E, following a steep decline, more than doubled from FY 1993 levels with NIH and the National Oceanic and At-mospheric Administration (NOAA) of the Department of Commerce responsible for most of the growth. (Table 1. Federal academic S&E support, by Type of activity: Fiscal years 1993-94 appears here in printed and Adobe Acrobat versions.) Agency Sources HHS, NSF, and DOD collectively accounted for nearly four-fifths of the FY 1994 academic S&E obligations. Each of the three agencies showed increases that when adjusted for inflation were 12 percent, 7 percent, and 1 percent, respectively. The Department of Agriculture (USDA), the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), and the Department of Energy (DOE) were responsible for nearly four-fifths of the remaining academic S&E funding. Of those three agencies, only NASA reported a current-dollar increase although its support level failed to exceed the 2-percent inflation rate. University Shares The Johns Hopkins University (including its Applied Physics Laboratory) continued as the leading recipient of Federal academic S&E support (table 2); four-fifths of its $764 million total was for R&D programs that were funded largely by DOD and HHS. As in the prior year, the top 20 universities, ranked by Federal S&E obligations, accounted for 36 percent of the academic S&E total. Nineteen of the top 20 university S&E recipients in FY 1994 were also among the top 20 in FY 1993, with the University of Southern California being the new entrant (now 19th). A full 48 percent of DOD’s academic S&E support went to these 20 leading university recipients in FY 1994, as did 40 percent of all academic S&E funds from HHS. By contrast, a somewhat smaller 31 percent of NSF’s academic S&E funding went to the top 20 recipient universities nationwide. User Notes The Federal Support data presented in this Data Brief were obtained from the 15 Federal agencies that provide virtually all academic R&D support and that participated in the FY 1994 Survey of Federal Support to Universities, Colleges, and Nonprofit Institutions. The annual survey also includes statistics on Federal obligations by funding category, type of institution, S&E discipline, institutional ranking, geogra-phic distribution, and type of institutional control. (Table 2.Federal academic science & engineering (S&E) support to the top 20 universities: FY 1994 appears here in printed and Adobe Acrobat versions.) Selected data items for individual doctorate-granting institutions and schools with S&E departments that grant a master’s degree are available on computer-generated Institutional Profiles. Institutional Profiles contain data from this survey and from NSF’s other two academic S&E surveys: the Survey of Scientific and Engineering Expenditures at Universities and Colleges and the Survey of Graduate Science and Engineering Students and Postdoctorates. Data from these three surveys also are available via the www, STIS (see “Elec-tronic Dissemination,” p.1) and the Computer-Aided Science Policy Analysis and Research (CASPAR)database system, a user-friendly tool on CD-ROM for retrieval and analyses of statistical data on academic S&E resources. For more information, please contact Richard J. Bennof, Project Officer, at the following address: Division of Science Resources Studies National Science Foundation 4201 Wilson Boulevard, Suite 965 Arlington, VA. 22230 Phone: (703) 306-1772, ext. 6938 Internet: rbennof@nsf.gov For free printed copies of SRS Data Briefs, write to the above address, call 703-306-1773, or send e-mail to srspubs@nsf.gov. -end--