President’s FY 2021 R&D Budget Proposal Prioritizes Industries of the Future

By IEEE-USA Staff

The White House released its FY 2021 budget proposal to Congress on 10 Feb., including a proposed $142.2 billion investment in Federal research and development. The President’s budget places a high priority on funding artificial intelligence and quantum information science as the foundations for U.S. leadership in “Industries of the Future,” along with increased investment in NASA space exploration programs designed to lead to an eventual manned mission to Mars.

The $142.2 billion request represents an 8.8% decrease ($13.8 billion) from the estimated $156 billion in federal R&D approved by Congress in FY 2020. That decrease would hit non-defense R&D spending (down -11% in the request) harder than defense R&D spending (down 6.3% in the request). Assessed by function, the budget request proposes a 6.5% decrease to basic research, an 11.7% decrease to applied research, and a nearly 40% decrease in funding for R&D facilities.

Artificial Intelligence (AI): The President’s FY 2021 budget includes a significant increase designed to double U.S. investment in AI R&D to approximately $2 billion by 2022. Highlights of the AI request by agency include:

Quantum Information Science (QIS): President Trump’s FY 2021 budget greatly bolsters Federal QIS R&D funding by nearly 50%, putting QIS R&D on the path to double to over $860 million by 2022. Agency highlights include:

Space Exploration: The Trump budget request would increase NASA’s budget by almost 12 percent, with nearly all new funding going to NASA’s exploration technology and systems budgets supporting the Artemis lunar exploration program. To help fund the exploration priority, NASA’s science directorate would be asked to absorb an 11% cut ($762 million) including funding for the Wild Field Infrared Survey Telescope (WFIRST). NASA’s $120 million STEM education budget would also be zeroed out.

To offset these priorities, the budget proposes a number of sharp cuts to agency R&D programs including:

Next Steps

The budget resolution passed by Congress in 2020 extends through 2021 and sets guidelines for FY 2021 budget appropriations that are more generous than the President’s request. Expect Congress appropriators to move quickly on their FY 2021 appropriations bills this Spring. However, being an election year with party conventions starting in July, it is unlikely that their work will be substantially completed before Congress goes into its pre-election recess. A continuing resolution or series of resolutions to fund government operations at current levels is likely by the end of the fiscal year in late September, with the potential for an omnibus appropriations bill to move in a post-election legislative session.

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