The Trump Administration’s Fight To Fund Scientists

By Paul D. Thacker

The panic and outrage were palpable last February when President Trump announced plans to trim reimbursement rates for government-funded scientific research.

“This is going to decimate U.S. scientific biomedical research,” Northwestern University biologist Carole Labonne told Bloomberg. “The lights will go out, people will be let go, and these [medical] advances will not occur,” David Skorton, CEO of the Association of American Medical Colleges, told PBS. “The goal,” University of Washington biologist Carl Bergstrom warned on BlueSky, “is to destroy U.S. universities.”

The sky has not fallen on American research in the 10 months since. The National Institutes of Health (NIH) is still paying the same 50% to 70% in indirect costs – the premium added on top of grants meant to reimburse universities for providing labs and other research infrastructure – because lawsuits have frozen the president’s proposed policy. One Trump official admits this is unlikely to change because the administration will almost certainly lose in court. The current system, which provides the lion’s share of billions of dollars each year for often-unspecified overhead costs to universities, has the backing of Congress. As it stands, there appears to be no momentum, even among Republicans, to reform the practice.

“It’s basically a slush fund,” one NIH official told RealClearInvestigations. “We just don’t like to call it that.”

A RealClearInvestigations analysis of these indirect payments reveals a long, largely forgotten history of concern about taxpayer-sponsored research. Although many researchers have cast Trump’s proposal as an attack on science, this issue isn’t the need to fund research activities that sometimes lead to beneficial discoveries, but whether some of the billions that support the necessary infrastructure and equipment are actually being shifted to purposes such as staffing and buildings that have little or no direct connection to the actual research. 

In the late ’80s, Stanford faculty revolted against the university’s high overhead charges for diverting research dollars to a bloated administration and a campus building frenzy. Those concerns are still voiced by some.

“If the universities truly believe that it takes 60-70% of a research grant to provide facilities, utilities, and other basic support, then that is easy to prove by opening the books,” said Sanjay Dhall, a research physician at the University of California, Los Angeles. “I suspect however, that opening the books would reveal that a significant chunk of these funds, or even the majority, are paying an army of unnecessary administrators.”

At a time when the value of college is being challenged because of exorbitant tuition and fees, and the federal government is struggling to rein in debt, the story of indirect funding offers a window into the history of runaway costs and the growing power of college officials. RCI has also learned that NIH Director Jay Bhattacharya has been selling a new plan that makes the grant process more competitive for institutions that were overlooked in the past. 

Indirect Costs Hard To Define

Distributing over $37 billion in grants every year, NIH is the largest funder of biomedical research on the planet, far exceeding the European Commission, which spends around $12 billion, and dwarfing the Gates Foundation’s $1 billion. 

Every NIH grant a university researcher receives provides two categories of funding: direct and indirect costs. The direct costs include all items the researcher submitted as part of the project’s budget, from laboratory equipment to a percentage of salaries.

Indirect costs are harder to define. The funding goes to administrators, and how they use it is shrouded in mystery. What’s more, indirect rates vary from university to university for reasons that few understand and can explain. 

While institutions charge private foundations like Gates a mere 10% and Rockefeller 15% for indirect costs, they charge the NIH much higher rates – 69% for Harvard, 67.5% for Yale, and 63.7% for Johns Hopkins. 

“How do you think Harvard built all those buildings?” one NIH official, a graduate of Harvard Medical School who insisted on anonymity, told RCI. “NIH indirect costs paid for that.”

When Trump first proposed the 15% cap in 2016, Harvard president Drew G. Faust told the student newspaper in late 2017 that she flew to Washington, D.C., to lobby Republicans in both the House and the Senate to stop it. “We’re bringing in quite a bit of money through federal contracts which provide money for a lot of buildings and other infrastructure that makes possible what we do going forward,” a Harvard dean told the student newspaper. “So if that was to all go away, we’d have to sit down and look at that.”

The Trump administration’s proposal to cap overhead at 15% would cost university administrators billions of dollars that they control. Among the many critics was Holden Thorp, editor-in-chief of the flagship journal Science and a former university administrator. He wrote an editorial last February titled “A Direct Hit” that described the cap as a “ruthless takedown of academia.”

“The scientific community must unite in speaking out against this betrayal of a partnership that has enabled American innovation and progress,” he wrote.

In response to questions from RCI, Thorp said any change to NIH overhead funding should be done in partnership with the scientific community. “Indirect costs are used to secure debt on research facilities and were treated as very secure by banks and the rating agencies,” Thorp said. “Pulling all of that abruptly – without following processes with decades of precedent – is certainly betraying a partnership by putting the universities in difficulty with their lenders and bond ratings.” 

Inexorable Rise in Charges

It turns out that concerns over universities possibly misusing federal grant money date back more than half a century, according to Thorp’s own publication. In 1955, the federal government almost doubled the 8% premium paid for university overhead. A decade later, Science reported that Congress lifted the overhead ceiling to 20%, maintaining a flat rate to assure more taxpayer dollars were targeted at scientific research, and less spent on constructing new buildings. Some members of Congress believed that “the universities need not accept the grants if they can’t afford them.” Elected officials also worried that indirect costs would not go to research but to support other university efforts.

“You might be surprised if you read the list of money being spent for research in various universities,” one senator said in a 1963 Science news story. “Not only to pay the teachers, but also to construct buildings and facilities around the school.” 

Despite these concerns, lobbyists convinced the government in 1966 to remove all caps, empowering universities to negotiate directly with federal agencies to set their own overhead rates. In 1966, overhead consumed 14% of NIH grant expenditures. By the late 1970s, it consumed 36.4%. When the federal government attempted to backpedal in 1976 to bring “spiraling indirect cost rates under control,” it failed. 

Both Republicans and Democrats have long championed increasing NIH budgets, partly because grants for research land in congressional districts scattered across the nation. Republicans have often been the NIH’s biggest supporters. Fifteen years ago, Congress launched investigations into the NIH’s poor monitoring of grants that were awarded to research physicians with undisclosed ties to the pharmaceutical industry. Despite the unfolding scandal, Republican Sen. Arlen Specter pushed through a 34% increase in the NIH’s budget in 2009. During the 2013 government shutdown, the NIH was one of the few agencies that Republicans pushed President Obama to keep open. Two years later, Republicans cut many parts of Obama’s proposed 2015 budget, yet gave the president even more money than the increase he requested for the NIH.

Like some elected officials, academics have also long complained that high overhead harms academic scientists by diverting NIH funding to administrators. In 1981, a University of California researcher published a study in Science, which showed how “Funding has thus been markedly reduced, and this has become a critical factor limiting research support in the United States.”

By 1983, indirect costs accounted for 43% of the NIH grant budget. In response, then-NIH Director James B. Wyngaarden pushed to make more money available for scientists by paying administrators only 90% of what they claimed in overhead. 

“[L]egislators tend to sympathize with the investigators who are more interested in seeing federal money spent for equipment and researchers’ salaries in their labs than for light and heat and the services of typists and bookkeepers,” reported Science at the time. 

However, Science reported that Wyngaarden was met with stiff opposition from university officials and their allies in Congress.

When Wyngaarden tried to deal with the matter by sending a report to Congress, Science reported, officials from several university lobby groups shut the report down, calling it not “acceptable.”

One of Wyngaarden’s biggest critics was Stanford President Donald Kennedy, whose school was then charging one of the highest rates for indirect costs. Kennedy convened a group to attack cost-saving proposals, stating in a letter, “The NIH proposals to reduce reimbursement of those costs … will directly damage the research effort as a whole.” 

This effort appeared to succeed until Kennedy himself became ensnared in a scandal that showed Stanford’s indirect costs charged to the NIH paid for a bevy of personal goods and upkeep on a yacht. 

Stanford’s Taxpayer-Funded Yacht

Stanford’s yacht, the Victoria, was valued at $1.2 million and became a symbol of excess, with walnut and cherry paneling, brass lamps, marble counters, and lavish woodwork. Administrators used the yacht as a fundraising venue to wine and dine campus bigwigs. NIH money had paid for overhead to maintain it. 

As Congress and federal investigators dug into Stanford’s accounting, they discovered that administrators had also redirected NIH research overhead to pay $2,000 a month for flowers at President Kennedy’s home, $7,000 for his bed linens, and $6,000 to provide him with cedar-lined closets. Another college official had hosted Stanford football parties and charged the NIH $1,500 for booze.

Humiliated in the media, Stanford was forced to lower the indirect rate it charged the NIH from 78% to 55.5%, and federal agencies launched audits of overhead charges at dozens of other universities, resulting in millions of dollars returned to the NIH. 

With the politics and the media on his side, Michigan Congressman John Dingell launched reforms to indirect charges. Stanford and other institutions were forced to halt expensive building campaigns. President Clinton proposed a cap on indirect costs in a “concerted effort to shift national spending from overhead to funding research.” As in the past, universities opposed the change, and the White House buckled.

“One way or another, I’ve been involved in controversy about indirect cost rates for about 30 years,” a chancellor at the University of Maryland told The Baltimore Sun in 1994. 

Kennedy resigned from the Stanford presidency, as did several of his administrators. Kennedy later joined Science as editor-in-chief – a predecessor to Thorp – while universities’ charges for indirect costs to the NIH eventually snapped back to their former pricing, which continues to this day.

RCI spoke with several academic researchers at institutions scattered across the U.S., working at both private and public-funded universities. None wished to be named about their concerns about how their administrators spend NIH indirect funding, with one professor noting that administrators determine your career, so it makes no sense to criticize their spending habits.

While university presidents say administrators strictly account for NIH indirect funds, the reality appears to be different. Professors who bring in large sums of NIH money, sometimes referred to as heavy hitters, can complain and get some of the indirect costs back from the administrators for their own research and even personal use. At some institutions, department heads can get a cut of the indirect costs to set up slush funds, monies they can dole out to favored professors, or even divert to their own labs.

Professor Dhall said that after he published a March letter in the Wall Street Journal that supported Trump’s cap on indirect rates, he was contacted by colleagues across the country. “They congratulated me on going public and vehemently agreed, in private,” he said. 

A congressional staffer who has spent decades investigating problems at the NIH said that nobody truly understands how universities negotiate their NIH overhead rates. And once that money gets to the university, it disappears into a byzantine accounting system that seems designed to confuse government auditors, who rarely inspect university books.

“It’s a complete black box,” he said. “I wish someone could explain it to me.”

Trump’s Play To Change the Game

The Trump administration will lose the fight to cap indirect costs at 15%, a senior HHS official told RCI, because of the universities’ outsize influence. During the first Trump administration, universities caught wind that Trump planned to cap overhead rates. As they had done for over half a century, university lobbyists ran to Congress to complain, only now they sought an alliance with the pharmaceutical industry.

Responding to lobbying pressure, Republicans in the House and Senate inserted a provision into the appropriations bill in 2018 to block Trump’s attempt to change universities’ indirect cost rates. That provision has been included in every succeeding appropriations bill.

While it does not seem likely that Congress will strip the schools in their states and districts of billions of dollars in funding, NIH Director Bhattacharya has been floating his own proposal to revamp indirect payments to make them more equitable in private talks with members of Congress and university leaders. Shortly before Thanksgiving, Bhattacharya gave a dinner talk to the Republican Main Street Caucus, a group of 85 GOP members of Congress who are critical behind-the-scenes players among Republicans now running the House. 

A dinner participant recounted to RCI that Bhattacharya noted that more than half of the NIH’s money goes to 20 universities located on both coasts. These elite universities win a lion’s share of the grant money, including indirect costs, because they have the money to attract excellent scientists, in part because NIH money helped them build great infrastructure. 

This creates a vicious cycle that guarantees NIH will continue to fund institutions that have already won past NIH money – and which charge high indirect costs. To end this cycle, Bhattacharya wants to break off indirect costs into a separate category of infrastructure grants that universities can compete to win.

During the talk, Bhattacharya said that all the universities in the entire state of Florida now get as much money as Stanford. Yet, there’s no reason Florida could not become a hub for scientific research if the federal government invested in its scientific infrastructure. 

If Florida can provide lab space at a lower cost than Stanford, he said, they should get the money. Bhattacharya also wants to make it easier for academics to take their grant to different universities. If a Harvard researcher is offered more space or better facilities at a university in Kansas, because building costs there are cheaper, that professor should be able to transfer his grant. 

The NIH already provides specific grants for infrastructure, and the hope is that spreading the billions in indirect costs across the country will gain political support. 

“He wants to get this money out to the middle of the country, not just the coasts,” said Congresswoman Mariannette Miller-Meeks, Republican from Iowa. Dr. Miller-Meeks is one of the few physicians in Congress and said she was impressed with Bhattacharya’s talk at the Main Street Caucus dinner. However, she is uncertain whether Democrats would embrace the new proposal in today’s polarized environment.

“I would think there are members from the center of the country that would like to see more money in their district,” she said.

A spokesperson told RCI that NIH remains focused on ensuring that funding is used efficiently and that direct and indirect costs contribute to scientific productivity. “Bhattacharya’s proposal represents one of several ideas being discussed publicly about how to structure federal support for research infrastructure,” the spokesperson said. “NIH looks forward to continuing to work constructively with Congress on this issue.”

This article was originally published by RealClearInvestigations and made available via RealClearWire.

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Scissor
December 30, 2025 8:15 pm

Just think educated Somalis.

Bob
December 30, 2025 9:22 pm

Why should we trust or respect the education system? It appears the higher the accolades the less reason to respect the university. I am tired of my money being pissed away by overeducated fools. It is past time for a grant making holiday and have a complete review of this stinking mess. Lying and cheating isn’t okay especially these pompous entitled fools.

Bruce Cobb
December 31, 2025 2:20 am

Yikes. NIH funding sounds like a rat’s nest of waste, fraud and abuse.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Bruce Cobb
December 31, 2025 6:03 am

While there appears to be a preponderance of waste, fraud, and abuse, the actual research in most cases is important.

We need to gut the government bloat and that includes getting higher education off the government teat.

Reply to  Bruce Cobb
December 31, 2025 11:08 am

Where is DOGE when we need it?

December 31, 2025 5:25 am

I don’t have much against NIH funding research, however, the makeup of the entities needs to be totally revised. Universities do not need to provide the buildings, administrators, and other and various jobs in research. If the government is providing the money, then the government should establish a separate and transparent organization to administer these tasks. The grants themselves can be handled by the universities and administered by the NIH. But, the university must also do the work to include the overhead expenses that could also include leasing or renting buildings. No buildings could be built using the grant funds by a university. If they wish to host the space, then they must use their own capital to create that space.

December 31, 2025 5:33 am

Academics and bureaucrats! We could use less of both- my experience with both is that they’re close to useless.

rtj1211
December 31, 2025 5:57 am

Part of the reason that overheads increased was that the quality of buildings that scientists did research in improved.

I started a PhD in the mid 1980s and there were plenty of places where research was done that wouldn’t pass Health and Safety inspections these days. Back in the old days, science labs were a bit like dodgy construction sites. Plenty of potential for dangerous adverse events because no-one was obsessed with risk avoidance.

One rather amusing incident occurred when the guy working on a bench opposite to me subconsciously did his best to create a fire hazard whilst being a designated a ‘fire safety officer’.

He’d made up a batch of concentrated acrylamide solution, which he used pretty much daily to make gels for separating proteins and nucleic acids. I’m not sure of the chemistry involved, but one day I noticed the plastic container in which it was stored starting to spontaneously expand before my eyes (it was on a shelf between our two desks). A quick touch with fingers suggested a rather exothermic reaction was now taking place.

Not being of great experience at that time and knowing little of what was in the container, I pootled off to the Chief Technician of the Institute and asked him to come take a quick look. It was in a contained area within 15 seconds!!

Far from sending the ‘designated fire officer’ home on gardening leave, most scientists ruefully admitted that they’d have not known any better either. Some jovial ribbing over coffee for a couple of days was about all the disciplinary measures involved…..

Nowadays, they’d probably spend $50,000 on some risk averse civil servant saying it’s too dangerous to have a slash during working hours as you might accidentally try to circumcise yourself with your fly zip.

We call it ‘progress’……

Sparta Nova 4
December 31, 2025 6:01 am

Defense contracts have limits on profit and G&A (overhead) that are much lower than the numbers presented for the NIH grants. Defense contracts have laws they must comply to, one of which is the FAR.

Reply to  Sparta Nova 4
December 31, 2025 11:18 am

Plus US defense contractors are not allowed to recover the cost of capital. My former employer was using DOD-owned facilities for manufacturing.
I once had lunch with some folks from the Government Accountability Office. I asked them if the DOD and it’s contractors were really so bad at accounting. They said no – because of the regulations and audits, the DOD and it’s contractors were about the best across the USG. Says an awful lot about grants to universities and non-profits in Minnesota.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Retired_Engineer_Jim
December 31, 2025 12:13 pm

It does.

22GeologyJim
December 31, 2025 6:28 am

. . . and that’s how you get to $38 Trillion national debt
Reread Eisenhower’s farewell address about the dangers of government-funded research and it’s cancerous damage to independent thought – he nailed it.

Reply to  22GeologyJim
December 31, 2025 9:36 am

Government, in partnership with anything, is set for corruption. The role of government should always be limited or eliminated entirely.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Mark Whitney
December 31, 2025 12:14 pm

The primary role of government is to protect the people FROM the government.

December 31, 2025 10:46 am

Overhead is real! Every business has legitimate overhead costs. A consulting business or engineering/design/construction company easily has a 1.5 to >3.0 labor multiplier to cover indirect costs. A university is no different. Historically, a major problem is that universities have not been run like a for-profit business. If they had been forced to, most would have long ago been bankrupt. However, research costs and overhead are also confounded by the other university missions and responsibilities – education, housing, food services, police and security, recreation, sports, marketing, insurance/risk management, utilities, transportation, etc. Universities are much like a military base, in that they own and are responsible for everything within their boundaries. This is further complicated for state schools by the gradual withdrawal of public funding for higher education.

Reigning in this hot mess, the answer is really quite dull and mundane – contracts, accounting practices and accountability. Universities must be forced by contract to disentangle these costs to make research grants stand on their own (e.g., Researchers must keep timesheets, and equipment/supplies billed and used for specific projects). They must run like a for-profit business, but for state universities with 0% profit.

On the other hand, universities can accomplish many things at lower cost than a business. One clear example is labor costs. Much of the research is conducted by low-paid or unpaid students (“slave labor”). University staff, instructors, and many non-tenure track faculty don’t even earn a living wage.

Having worked in higher education for over two decades, one that has set a course for running lean and businesslike, I have seen great improvements but with far to go.

Trump’s mistake is that he is from the development / construction trade, which has an entirely different cost structure than research. When I did federal contracting, our company had provisional overhead rates, and contracts and the business as a whole were audited annually. Government and universities must be prepared to require accountability and must demand performance.

Unfortunately, this article describes the current conflict but offers no diagnosis or pathway to a cure.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  pflashgordon
December 31, 2025 12:18 pm

Yes. University research has overhead costs.

Yes, universities must preform legally correct accounting and must submit to review and, as you added, must demand performance, although research is not a % complete per hour.

And yes, when fiscal malfeasance is uncovered, legal action must be taken.

hdhoese
December 31, 2025 12:39 pm

There ought to be some sort of a limited ratio of administrators to teachers and researchers. Teachers come out short because their important and necessary effect is way down the road and even then difficult to economically evaluate but may help explain current incompetence and lack of homework. Administrators are sometimes the result of pushed up with unspoken ‘….you wouldn’t want them teaching.’ This can be another example of centralization potentially moving the decisions away from the action. I suspect that this is part of the climate and other similar runs, despite the obvious but difficult to understand final measurements.

The National Science Foundation was founded not long after WWII, but didn’t grow much until Sputnik in 1957. Logic was that putting talent to work on a problem without unnecessary upper control usually works. As it evolved it added great research numbers to the pool which became more unnecessarily specialized and subject to political interference and what was called running with the “ruling theories” by the geologist Chamberlin in 1897. Important discoveries are often out of the area grants specifically fund, so it doesn’t make sense to limit researchers as too many administrators are not always justifiably wont to do. It does proliferate paperwork.

Billyjack
January 1, 2026 7:15 am

The Church of Warming is all you need to know about government “science” as Ike warned.

Akin to, and largely responsible for the sweeping changes in our industrial-military posture, has been the technological revolution during recent decades. In this revolution, research has become central; it also becomes more formalized, complex, and costly. A steadily increasing share is conducted for, by, or at the direction of, the Federal government. Yet, in holding scientific research and discovery in respect, as we should, we must also be alert to the equal and opposite danger that public policy could itself become the captive of scientific-technological elite.” Dwight Eisenhower