NDSU President Dean L. Bresciani was among 165 presidents and chancellors of the nation’s leading universities who signed a letter expressing concern about major federal budget cuts to research and higher education. As President Barack Obama and Congress face critical budget decisions, the letter urges them to close what university leaders call the innovation deficit.
The letter was published as an advertisement in the influential Washington, D.C., publication, Politico, last week. Bresciani and his fellow university leaders wrote that closing the innovation deficit – the widening gap between needed and actual investments in research and education – must be a national imperative. The higher education leaders noted that investments in those areas lead to the types of innovation and new technologies that power the nation’s economy, create jobs and reduce the budget deficit while ensuring the U.S. maintains its role as global leader.
“Throughout our history, this nation has kept the promise of a better tomorrow to each generation,” Bresciani and his colleagues wrote. “This has been possible because of our economic prosperity based in large part on America’s role as global innovation leader. Failing to deal with the innovation deficit will pass to future generations the burdens of lost leadership in innovation, economic decline and limited job opportunities. We call upon you to reject unsound budget cuts and recommit to strong and sustained investments in research and education. Only then can we ensure that our nation’s promise of a better tomorrow endures.”
Economists agree that more than half of U.S. economic growth since World War II is a consequence of technological innovation, much of which results from federally funded scientific research conducted at U.S. universities. Such groundbreaking research, the university leaders noted, has led to life-saving vaccines, lasers, MRI, touchscreens, GPS, the Internet and many other advances that have improved lives and generated entire new sectors of our economy.
The university leaders pointed out that over the past two decades, China, Singapore and South Korea have dramatically increased their investments in research and higher education, having seen the enormous benefits such investments have had for the U.S. economy. The rate of growth of U.S. research and development investments has been outstripped by those of China, Singapore and South Korea by two to four times during that period.
The initiative comes as Congress faces budget decisions in the coming months. Annual funding bills, the debt limit and measures to eliminate or modify the deep across-the-board spending cuts forced by sequestration could all be taken up this fall. While the legislative path for those measures remains unclear, the presidents and chancellors noted that targeted investments in research and higher education can and should be made regardless of overall funding levels because they would be key sources of long-term economic growth and fiscal stability.
“Because the innovation deficit undermines economic growth it harms our nation’s overall fiscal health, worsening long-term budget deficits and debt,” Bresciani and his colleagues wrote. “Investments in research and education are not inconsistent with long-term deficit reduction; they are vital to it.”
The letter, available at www.innovationdeficit.org, was coordinated by the Association of American Universities and the Association of Public and Land-grant Universities. NDSU, North Dakota’s first land-grant university, is a member of the Association of Public and Land-grant Universities.
The Carnegie Commission recognizes NDSU as one of the nation’s top 108 public and private universities on Higher Education.