Billionaire science is booming, the New
York Times said today, and it is raising serious concerns along with
a hearty huzzah for the infusion of increasingly scarce cash for
research.
The lengthy piece by William Broad was
headlined,
“Billionaires with big ideas are privatizing American science."
Broad wrote,
“American science, long a source of national power and pride, is increasingly becoming a private enterprise.
“In Washington, budget cuts have left the nation’s research complex reeling. Labs are closing. Scientists are being laid off. Projects are being put on the shelf, especially in the risky, freewheeling realm of basic research. Yet from Silicon Valley to Wall Street, science philanthropy is hot, as many of the richest Americans seek to reinvent themselves as patrons of social progress through science research.
“The result is a new calculus of influence and priorities that the scientific community views with a mix of gratitude and trepidation.”
The trend has implications for
California's $3 billion stem cell agency, which will run out of cash
for new awards in 2017. It is currently engaged in what it calls a
“sustainability” effort, which simply means it is searching for
ways to raise more money. One possibility is another state bond
measure, which would require voter approval and an expensive ballot
campaign. Another more likely prospect is some sort of private
funding arrangement, including creation of a nonprofit organization
to accept donations from the very sort of billionaires, plus
businesses, that the Times discussed.
The list in the Times is relatively
long and includes Bill Gates of Microsoft, Eric Schmidt of Google and
Larry Ellison of Oracle. Also mentioned was Eli Broad, who has made
large contributions to stem cell efforts in California. Not
mentioned, oddly enough, was Denny Sanford, who last fall donated
$100 million for stem cell research at UC San Diego.
The Times article said the “personal
setting of priorities is precisely what troubles some in the science
establishment.” Also raising concerns is the enrichment of elite
universities at the expense of poorer ones.
Nonetheless, reporter Broad wrote that the
influence of billionaire donors is likely to grow given their wealth
and the national budget wars. One study cited in his piece shows
that at the 50 leading science research universities, private
donors already account for roughly 30 percent of the schools' research money.
One of the priorities of the private
donors is translational research, the type currently being emphasized
by California's stem cell agency, which some fear could lead to the
neglect of basic research. The Times cited an effort begun in 2000 by
the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. The Broad story said,
“With great skill, it used the money to establish partnerships across industry and academia, smashing through the walls that typically form around research teams. By early 2012, the financial surge produced the first treatment for an underlying cause of cystic fibrosis.”
The timeline on that treatment is not
too different than what might be considered the timeline set in Prop. 71, which created the California stem cell agency. The ballot measure provided for 10 years of funding via money
borrowed by the state. Although the measure was passed in 2004, legal
battles delayed issuance of the bonds, meaning that the agency's
financial clock has not yet completely run out. As for commercial
cures built on agency research, no one at the agency is publicly
predicting their entry into the market place within the next three
years.