Science Board Concerned About Declines in Public Research University Funding

Decade of diminishing funding could impact research and education.

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Declines in state funding threaten the ability of major public research universities to educate new scientists and engineers, recruit and retain the best faculty and students, and continue performing top-quality research, according to a new report released today by the National Science Board, the governing body of the National Science Foundation. The NSB said it is concerned with the long-term financial health of these institutions.

State per-student funding for the nation's 101 major public research universities declined by an average of 20 percent in inflation-adjusted dollars between 2002 and 2010, with 10 states experiencing declines ranging from 30 to as high as 48 percent. National Science Board  

State per-student funding for the nation's 101 major public research universities declined by an average of 20 percent in inflation-adjusted dollars between 2002 and 2010, with 10 states experiencing declines ranging from 30 to as high as 48 percent. In addition to the declines in state funding, increases in enrollment contributed to this national trend. Enrollment grew nationally by 13 percent--or nearly 320,000 more students--between 2002 and 2010.

The top ten states that had the largest per-student state funding cuts for their major public research universities were:

State (#universities)

% change in per student state funding, 2002-2010

Per student state funding, 2010

% increase in enrollment, 2002-10

Colorado (2)

-48%

$3,417

6%

Rhode Island (1)

-47%

$3,692

15%

South Carolina (2)

-38%

$6,565

19%

Illinois (3)

-37%

$7,566

6%

Georgia (3)

-37%

$8,447

16%

Virginia (5)

-34%

$4,987

19%

Oregon (2)

-32%

$4,331

20%

Michigan (3)

-31%

$6,889

6%

West Virginia (1)

-30%

$7,231

27%

California (9)

-30%

$11,228

14%

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