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Is this 'interesting editorial day' today and nobody told me? First the Nature editorial on anti-science movements in the US, now Bruce Alberts, Editor-in-Chief of the journal Science, writes in an editorial that current NIH practice provides too many incentives for US universities to 'gamble': loan money to build research facilities and then pay these loans off with the overhead funds from research grants. Alberts also laments that too many faculty members are reliant on such 'soft money' provided by grants. The incentives prevent universities from investing enough of their own money into staffing their institutions properly. I would speculate that these tendencies and incentives are also to blame for the sharp decline in tenured faculty in the last decades. Here are his suggestions for what may have to change:
What can be done? NIH Director Francis Collins has boldly stated that "it is time for NIH to develop better models to guide decisions about the optimum size and nature of the U.S. workforce for biomedical research." I agree. One possibility is for the NIH to require that at least half of the salary of each principal investigator be paid by his or her institution, phasing in this requirement gradually over the next decade. Alternatively, the maximum amount of money that the NIH contributes to the salary of research faculty (its salary cap) could be sharply reduced over time, and/or an overhead cost penalty could be introduced in proportion to an institution's fraction of soft-money positions (replacing the overhead cost bonus that currently exists).

Regardless of mechanism, here is my bottom line: A new NIH policy must make it unambiguously clear that expansion through laboratory building construction requires a substantial, nonreimbursable, long-term commitment of resources, including "hard-money" faculty support, by any institution that wants to increase its facilities and research staff. Although change will be painful, it is urgently needed to maintain a healthy biomedical research enterprise.
Posted on Friday 10 September 2010 - 01:23:45 comment: 0
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