Science policy of the United States

The science policy of the United States is the responsibility of many organizations throughout the federal government. Much of the large-scale policy is made through the legislative budget process of enacting the yearly federal budget, although there are other legislative issues that directly involve science, such as energy policy, climate change, and stem cell research. Further decisions are made by the various federal agencies which spend the funds allocated by the United States Congress, either on in-house research or by granting funds to outside organizations and researchers.

At the beginning of Donald Trump's second term in 2025, head of DOGE, Elon Musk, initiated a rapid reorganization of the federal scientific infrastructure, dismissing thousands of employees—particularly those involved in public health and climate research, including NOAA weather forecasters.

The US is losing leadership of most critical technology to China, according to the Australian Strategic Policy Institute.

Nathan Rosenberg, one of the pioneers of technological innovation research, pointed out that industrial research laboratories, if not the most important institutional innovations in institutional innovation in the 20th century, are also one of the most important institutional innovations. Although not the first invention of the United States, this system has a wider spread and stronger influence in the US economy than in other countries.

The United States devoted 2.8% of GDP to research and development (R&D) in 2012. The private sector contributed two-thirds of the total. The Obama administration had fixed a target of a 3% ratio by the end of his presidency in 2016.