Title: The American Competitiveness Initiative
1The American Competitiveness Initiative
- Dan Byers
- Deputy Chief of Staff
- Office of Science and Technology Policy
- Executive Office of the President
- BESC-CoFARM March 14, 2006
2U.S. Is the World Leader in Science and Technology
- By nearly every relevant metric, the U.S. leads
the world in science and technology. - President Bushs FY07 Budget brings the total
Federal RD investment to a record 137 billion,
an increase of over 50 percent since 2001. - U.S. RD spending of over 300 billion is as much
as the rest of the G-8 nations combined. - With only about five percent of the worlds
population, the U.S. employs nearly one-third of
all scientists and engineers and accounts for
approximately one-third of global RD spending.
3Keeping America Competitive
- America's economic strength and global leadership
depend on our ability to generate and harness
scientific and technological developments. A
comprehensive strategy of related investments and
policies will help to strengthen innovation
capacity and economic competitiveness, including - Federal investment in basic research and
scientific facilities that enable discovery and
development - A system of education that equips each new
generation of Americans with the educational
foundation for future study in technical
subjects, and which inspires and sustains their
interest - Institutions of higher education that provide
American students access to world-class education
and research opportunities in mathematics,
science, engineering, and technology - Immigration policies that continue to attract
the best and brightest - A favorable environment for private sector
investment in research and development - An efficient system that protects intellectual
property and - A business environment that stimulates and
encourages entrepreneurship.
4American Competitiveness Initiative (ACI)
The American Competitiveness Initiative commits
5.9 billion in FY 2007 for research, education,
and tax incentives. Over ten years, the ACI
commits to increase funding for research by 50
billion and RD tax incentives by 86 billion.
Specifically, ACI includes
- Doubling, over 10 years, funding for
innovation-enabling research at key Federal
agencies that support physical science and
engineering the National Science Foundation, the
Department of Energys Office of Science, and the
National Institute for Standards and Technology
within the Department of Commerce -
- Modernizing the Research and Experimentation tax
credit by making it permanent and working with
Congress to update its provisions to encourage
additional private sector investment in
innovation - Strengthening K-12 math and science education by
enhancing our understanding of how students learn
and applying that knowledge to train
highly-qualified teachers, develop effective
curricular materials, and improve student
learning - Promoting workforce training programs that train,
retrain, and provide professional development
opportunities for the science, engineering, and
technology workforce and - Increasing our ability to retain the best and
brightest high-skilled workers from around the
world.
5ACI Research and Development
- The centerpiece of the American Competitiveness
Initiative is President Bush's commitment to
double, over 10 years, investment in key Federal
agencies that support basic research programs in
the physical sciences and engineering. This
amounts to a total of 50 billion in new
investments in fundamental research. - For the sixth straight year the budget includes
making the Research and Experimentation (RE) tax
credit permanentan effort that will cost 4.6
billion in FY 2007 and 86.4 billion over ten
years. Â The President is also committed to
working with Congress to simplify and modernize
the credit to make it even more effective.
6The Advanced Energy Initiative
- Americas energy challenges require continued
action. For the sake of our economic and national
security, we must reduce our dependence on
foreign sources of energy including on the
natural gas that is a source of electricity for
many American homes and the crude oil that
supplies gasoline for our cars. -- President
Bush, February 20, 2006 -
- To achieve this objective, we will take
advantage of technology by changing the way we
fuel our vehicles and changing the way we power
homes and businesses. The Advanced Energy
Initiative provides for a 22 percent increase in
funding for clean-energy technology research at
the Department of Energy. - Advanced Energy Initiative Goals Fueling Our
Vehicles - Develop advanced battery technologies that allow
a plug-in hybrid-electric vehicle to have a
40-mile range operating solely on battery charge. - Foster the breakthrough technologies needed to
make cellulosic ethanol cost-competitive with
corn-based ethanol by 2012. - Accelerate progress towards the Presidents goal
of enabling large numbers of Americans to choose
hydrogen fuel cell vehicles by 2020.
7Overall RD Budget
- In the Presidents 2007 Budget, total Federal RD
investment is a record 137.2 billion, an
increase of 3.4 billion (2.6 percent) over this
years (2006) RD funding level and a 50
increase compared to 2001s 91.3 billion. - Real five-year growth in the conduct of RD
budget has exceeded 40 for each of the last two
years, the first time five-year inflation
adjusted RD outlays have topped 40 since 1967
and the Apollo era. - Basic research funding is 28.2 billion in 2007,
up from 21.3 billion in 2001 - a 32 percent
increase. - While the Presidents 2007 Budget does not
increase overall non-defense discretionary budget
authority, a 1.9 increase in the non-defense RD
budget is requested.
8Total RD by Agency FY07 proposed
Agriculture
NSF
Energy
Defense
NASA
HHS
9Total Non-Defense RD FY07 proposed
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12Interpreting RD Budgets
- Earmarks, accounting changes (re-baselining), and
program changes complicate RD budget
comparisons. - For example, while the Federal Science and
Technology (FST) budget is cut by 1 percent in
FY 2007, this figure is distorted by earmarks
that are not included in the request (2.7
billion) and the transition of NASAs Crew
Exploration Vehicle from applied research into
development (approx. 450 million). After
accounting for earmarks, the FST budget is
actually increasing by 3.5 percent. - Another way to compare budgets without earmark
distortion is to use request-to-request levels.
Using this method, the FY07 request is 1 percent
above the FY06 request. - AAAS estimates that RD earmarks have increased
63 percent since 2003. The Presidents budget
states that earmarking is rarely the most
effective use of taxpayer funds. In the case of
science programs, the practice signals to
potential researchers that there are acceptable
alternatives to creating quality research
proposals for merit-based consideration.
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