About CRA |
Membership |
CRA
for Students |
CRA
for Faculty |
CRA-Women |
Computing Community Consortium (CCC) |
Awards |
Projects |
Events |
Jobs |
Government Affairs |
Computing Research Policy Blog |
Publications |
Data
& Resources |
CRA Bulletin |
What's New |
Contact |
Home |
|
<<
Back to May 2006 CRN Table
of Contents
[Published originally in the May 2006 edition
of Computing Research News, Vol. 18/No. 3]
Innovation, Competitiveness Plans Advance, But
Hurdles Ahead
Washington Update
By Peter Harsha
Some high-profile legislative efforts to bolster U.S. competitiveness
by fostering greater U.S.-based innovation have begun to move in
Congress, putting the spotlight on the importance of increasing federal
support of fundamental research, improving education efforts, and
addressing needs in federal tax policy and workforce and immigration
issues. But despite the positive action, there are a number of
obstacles to enactment of these innovation plans including, most
seriously, a perceived lack of support from the House Republican
leadership.
Two legislative packages have received the most attention and the most
action in the Senate. A bipartisan package of three bills called the
“Protecting America’s Competitive Edge” Acts (PACE),
introduced by Senators Pete Domenici (R-NM), Jeff Bingaman (D-NM),
Lamar Alexander (R-TN), and Barbara Mikulski (D-MD), has attracted 66
Senate co-sponsors. The PACE acts (S. 2197, 2198 and 2199) are based
largely on a 2005 National Academies report, Rising Above the Gathering
Storm, that included 20 recommendations—from increased research
funding to immigration changes that would help the U.S. recruit and
retain the world’s best talent—aimed at ensuring that the
U.S. retains its competitive edge.
The other package receiving attention is the “National Innovation
Act” (NIA) (S.2109)—and a related piece dealing only with
the commerce-related provisions (S. 2390)—which was introduced in
December 2005 by Senators John Ensign (R-NV) and Joseph Lieberman
(D-CT), and has since attracted 23 co-sponsors. The NIA is modeled on
the conclusions of the December 2004 Council on Competitiveness report,
Innovate America: Thriving in a World
of Challenge and Change,
in which a panel of preeminent academic and industry leaders offered 60
recommendations for improving America’s competitiveness.
Though both packages of bills have been referred to the Senate
committees with jurisdiction, it appears the PACE bills have the most
momentum behind them. The PACE legislation is broken into three
parts:
- PACE Energy (S. 2197)—includes provisions
for bolstering the federal investment in energy science, including
doubling the DOE Office of Science budget over 7 years; creation of a
new “DARPA-like” agency within DOE called ARPA-E; and
support for math, science and engineering education through DOE.
- PACE Education (S. 2198)—includes a series
of provisions aimed at increasing the production and supporting the
professional development of K-12 teachers in math and science;
increases support for NSF and NASA’s Early Career grants; directs
federal research agencies to devote 8 percent of their budgets to
“high-risk, high-payoff research;” authorizes the doubling
of the NSF budget over 7 years; creates a new “F-4”
visa category to encourage foreign students in the physical sciences,
math, computing or engineering to stay in the U.S. after receiving
their degrees; and authorizes the increase of DOD basic research (6.1)
by 10 percent a year over the next 7 years.
- PACE Finance (S. 2199)—provides a credit of
up to $500,000 annually to employers who provide qualified education to
maintain or improve employees’ knowledge in science or
engineering; doubles and makes permanent the research and development
tax credit.
The Senate has begun consideration of the PACE bills. In February,
both the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee and the Health,
Education, Labor and Pensions Committee held hearings on the PACE bills
under their jurisdiction (PACE Energy and PACE Education,
respectively). In March, the Energy and Natural Resources Committee
approved the PACE Energy bill in a markup, clearing the way for that
bill’s consideration by the full Senate. The PACE Finance bill,
which includes the costliest provision of the PACE proposals, the
R&D Tax Credit—extending the credit in FY 07 would cost $4.9
billion in federal revenue—is the only PACE bill that has not
received consideration so far. Its cost, and the general unwillingness
of the Finance Committee to consider making the R&D Tax Credit
permanent, makes it the least likely to see further action.
Passage of the original NIA even through the Senate, where it finds
many supporters, is likely hampered by its inclusion of a very broad
array of legislative provisions covering everything from research
funding to tax credits to workforce and immigration issues in one
single bill. This “omnibus” approach presents some
procedural difficulties, as every congressional committee that can
claim jurisdiction over a particular provision receives the bill in
referral. The bill cannot move to the full Senate without the approval
of every committee to which it has been referred. The PACE bills
sidestepped this issue by confining all provisions under a particular
jurisdiction under separate bills, resulting in single referrals for
each bill.
Nevertheless, the Senate Commerce Committee has begun hearings related
to the NIA on the need for continued and increased federal funding for
fundamental research. In March, Sen. Ensign used his Senate Commerce
Subcommittee on Technology, Innovation and Competitiveness to highlight
federally funded basic research, noting “basic research is the
key to innovation.” Even in tight budget years, Ensign said,
policymakers need to fund basic research and infrastructure priorities,
which are not a drain on the economy.
Both the NIA and PACE packages are primarily funding
authorizations—not actual appropriations—so they will not
necessarily result in any new funding. Unfortunately, there is great
reluctance among the members of the House leadership to support
“big ticket” authorization bills in the current budget
climate. House leaders, feeling the need to protect the GOP majority in
Congress in preparation for the 2006 congressional elections, are wary
of any new “perceived” spending increases that might
alienate the conservative voting base, which has been applying great
pressure to the leadership to cut discretionary spending since Congress
passed the massive emergency payouts in the wake of Hurricanes Katrina
and Rita. House staffers have indicated that both bills are unlikely to
get much consideration in the House.
Whether funding called for in any of the innovation plans will receive
appropriations in FY 2007 is still an open question, however. The
highest-profile endorsement of the belief that the Federal Government
needs to act now to ensure that the U.S. maintains its dominant
position in innovation came when President George W. Bush used his
January 2006 “State of the Union” address to announce his
American Competitiveness Initiative (see “President’s
Budget Includes Increases for Fundamental Research, Computing” in Computing Research News,
vol. 18, No. 2, March 2006, for more details of the ACI). The President
included funding for ACI—which would double the research budgets
of NSF, NIST and the Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science over
ten years—in the budget he submitted to Congress in February.
The Senate responded favorably to the ACI, including the
President’s requested funding for ACI in its version of the FY
2007 Congressional Budget Resolution. The House Budget committee,
however, was more parsimonious in its support, cutting the
President’s requested funding for General Science, Space and
Technology by $300 million (from $26.3 billion to $26.0 billion) in
their version of the budget resolution. [At press time, the full House
had not yet considered the budget resolution—for the latest
updates see: http://www.cra.org/govaffairs/blog.]
In contrast, the Senate included $100 million more than the President
requested for the same account.
Whether this slight by the House Budget Committee will impact the final
appropriations levels enacted by the Congress is not yet clear. While
the Congressional Budget Resolution does determine the total cap on
discretionary spending for the appropriators—the President
requested $873 billion for FY 2007, the House and Senate will have to
agree on a number—its impact on specific appropriations accounts
is less direct. Once the appropriators have the cap number (called the
302(a) allocation) they will work among themselves and with the House
leadership to determine the share of the total to be distributed to
each of the appropriations subcommittees (called the 302(b)
allocation). That 302(b) allocation will either enable or hamper
supporters of the ACI in appropriating the requested amounts to the key
agencies.
Unfortunately for supporters of increased federal funding for basic
research at NSF, NIST and DOE Office of Science, the House leadership
has not been very vocal in supporting that aspect of the
President’s ACI. In fact, the leadership has had two
opportunities to address the issue in recent days and has demonstrated
a decided lack of enthusiasm for incurring any extra spending. First,
in response to an event sponsored by House Democratic Leader Nancy
Pelosi (D-CA) to highlight the Democratic Innovation Agenda—an
agenda markedly similar to the President’s ACI—House
Majority Leader John Boehner (R-OH) released a statement slamming the
Democrats’ plan as “just more tax and spend”
government. Then, in introducing their own plan, the entire House GOP
leadership came together behind the House Republican High-Tech Task
Force to announce an innovation plan focused on tort reform, reforms to
education, and tax credits—without a mention of research funding.
There is a sense among supporters of the ACI that the House leadership,
though outwardly unsupportive of the various “big-ticket”
innovation authorizations, will come through with support for the
President’s request come appropriation time. House leadership
staffers have suggested that “ultimately, we’ll support the
President’s budget.” Supporters of the ACI should get their
first sign of the truth of that suggestion when the 302(b) allocations
are made known in mid to late April (after this issue of CRN has gone
to press). For the latest information on the outcome of this important
appropriations milestone, check CRA’s Computing Research Policy
Blog at http://www.cra.org/govaffairs/blog.
Copyright © 2007 Computing Research Association. All Rights
Reserved. Questions? E-mail: webmaster@cra.org.
|