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March 9, 2001
Science and Surpluses
By D. ALLAN BROMLEY

 NEW HAVEN
When President Bush spoke to Congress and the nation on Feb. 27, he
outlined three cardinal goals: a $1.6 trillion tax cut, a first-class education
for every child and a restructured military that confronts emerging post-
cold-war threats. The next day, he announced a budget that jeopardizes
the nation's ability to achieve any of these truly laudable goals.
Both the tax cut and the spending that would support educational and
military buildups depend upon an estimated $5.6 trillion surplus over the
next 10 years. Where is all that money coming from? There are several
sources, but the major driver of our nation's economic success is
scientific innovation. And the Bush budget includes cuts, after
accounting for inflation, to the three primary sources of ideas and
personnel in the high-tech economy: the National Science Foundation is
cut by 2.6 percent, NASA by 3.6 percent and the Department of Energy
by an alarming 7.1 percent.
Economists, including Alan Greenspan, attribute much of America's
1990's boom to increased productivity stemming, in large part, from
scientific research. Two simple discoveries — the transistor and the
fiber optic cable — are at the root of it. Anyone skeptical of this should
turn off the computer for a day and see how much work gets done.
The 21st century economy will continue to depend on scientific innovation. Economists estimate that innovation and the application of new technology have generated at least half of the phenomenal growth in America's gross
 domestic product since World War II. Keeping that economic source productive is critical to both national prosperity and federal revenues. (And where defense is concerned, basic scientific discovery also has a more direc
t role: it leads to the applied science that eventually provides advances
in defense hardware.)
Technological innovation depends upon the steady flow of discoveries
and trained workers generated by federal science investments in
universities and national laboratories. These discoveries feed directly
into the industries that drive the economy. It's a straightforward
relationship: industry is attentive to immediate market pressures, and the
federal government makes the investments that ensure long-term
competitiveness.
The proposed cuts to scientific research are a self-defeating policy.
Congress must increase the federal investment in science. No science,
no surplus. It's that simple.
D. Allan Bromley, a professor of nuclear physics at Yale, was science
and technology adviser to President George H.W. Bush from 1989 to
1993.

http://www.nytimes.com:80/2001/03/09/opinion/09BROM.html

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