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Peter H. Schuck, the former deputy dean of the Yale Law School, recently published the book, Why Government Fails So Often: and How It Can Do Better,1 a rather depressing explanation of how public regard for government has steadily declined since the 60’s and 70’s. After 10 chapters that detail why the US Federal Government fails and fails again, along comes Chapter 11. No, not a chapter on bankruptcy, but on “Policy Successes.” And one of the several policy successes he mentions include an agency that you and I are well familiar with… the National Institutes of Health. The author notes, “Even small-government advocates generally concede an important role to the Federal Government [in] basic research – the creation of knowledge – in areas where private actors lack incentives to invest.” NIH-funded research has yielded important discoveries that have led to new treatments; has enabled excellent institutions of learning to flourish; has created cutting-edge job opportunities; and has forged strong collaborations with the private sector. Yet, not all is well with the NIH extramural science enterprise. The growth of the NIH budget has stalled over the past decade2 and not kept pace with inflation, or our biomedical research purchasing power3. We live in a hypercompetitive environment, with a number of associated problems: a peer review system that must distinguish among many excellent proposals in light of restraints on resources and capacity4, 5, 6; unstable fu...
Source: NIH Extramural Nexus - Category: Research Authors: Tags: blog Open Mike General Source Type: funding