The cost of setting up newly hired science faculty members with laboratory
space and equipment is sapping an increasing portion of US university budgets.
That fact, coupled with the federal policy of granting fewer dollars for
overhead research costs, means that US schools are now shouldering a
significantly greater share of the costs of scientific research, a
new
study reports.
"The question is, if they didn't have to bear these costs, what would they do
with the money?" said Ronald G. Ehrenberg, lead author of the study presented
Tuesday (May 20) at a Cornell Higher Education Research Institute conference in
Ithaca, New York.
Ehrenberg and colleagues surveyed 572 faculty department chairs about the
costs of setting up a laboratory for new faculty. Start-up costs for junior
faculty in biology departments ranged from $403,000 to $437,000 at private
universities and from $308,000 to $430,000 at public ones. Costs for senior
faculty in biology ranged much higher, from $957,000 to $1.5 million for private
universities and from $651,000 to $856,000 at public institutions.
These costs have been escalating since the 1970s, according to the study by
Ehrenberg, Irving M. Ives Professor of Industrial and Labor Relations and
Economics at Cornell, graduate student Michael J. Rizzo, and George H. Jakubson,
an associate professor of labor economics at Cornell.
From 19701971 to 19992000, research expenditures per faculty member
increased from $70,000 to $140,000 at the 228 universities surveyed by the
authors. And in that period, the portion of those expenditures paid for by
universities rather than federal grants roughly tripled. The percentage of
research expenditures per faculty member paid out of universities' pockets rose
from 11.2 to 20.7%, the study found.
In the past 30 years, the US government has sought to reduce the amount it
gives universities for overhead costs such as maintenance, utilities, and
administrative oversight. These "facilities and administration" (F&A) costs also
include items such as researchers' salaries, reagents, travel, and certain
equipment.
In most federal grants, for every dollar granted for research, another 55
cents is added to cover these costs. But this "indirect cost rate" of 55% has
been steadily decreasing since 1983, when the figure was about 60% for private
universities. On average, private universities are receiving 8.3% less money
than they did in 1983. At public universities, the indirect cost rate was
historically much lower because states often contributed to infrastructure
costs, but over the past 30 years, many states have withdrawn a substantial
amount of support for their universities.
Surprisingly, the study found that the new burden has had only a small
negative impact on facultystudent ratios and the substitution of lecturers
instead professors to teach undergraduate classes. But Ehrenberg noted of the
universities' additional outlay, "If we spend more on the indirect costs of
research we can't give stipends to as many undergraduate and graduate students
or pay for extracurricular activities."
A
study by the RAND Corporation in 2000 found that 10 to 30% of universities'
spending for F&A costs is not being reimbursed by federal grants. Some of the
slack is being taken up by corporate matching funds,
donations, and endowments. But increased reliance on
corporate funding of research raises questions about how this funding is
changing the nature of research goals.
Universities are concerned about the lack of federal dollars. "Our
institutions seek fair reimbursement for the cost of doing research," said
Richard Turman, director of foreign relations for the Association for American
Universities, an organization representing 63 top North American research
universities.
Links for this article
R.G. Ehernberg et al, "Who bears the growing cost of science at
universities?" Cornell Higher Education Research Institute Working Papers,
April 7, 2003. http://www.ilr.cornell.edu/cheri/wp/cheri_wp35.pdf
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