Abstract

The Reagan administration's commitment to increase federal research and development spending substantially for national defense and the physical and engineering sciences has been parlayed by Congress — in a broadly bipartisan fashion — into a rationale for granting medical research an increase far larger than that sought by the President. In the process of crafting a fiscal 1985 budget for the National Institutes of Health (NIH) that exceeds the administration's request by more than $500 million, Congress reaffirmed its long-standing commitment to medical research and sharply increased funding for investigator-initiated research grants — long the lifeblood of the agency. The . . .

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