MIT says research fell 10% in year after cuts

Summary

MIT said its research activity dropped 10% in a year as federal cuts, taxes, and enrollment declines affected the school.

Why this matters

MIT is one of the nation’s leading research universities, and changes in its funding and enrollment can affect scientific research, innovation, and the training of future scientists. The dispute also highlights how federal policy changes can shape higher education operations.

The Massachusetts Institute of Technology said Wednesday that its research activity had fallen 10% over the past year following cuts by the Trump administration.

Last year, MIT was the first school to publicly reject the Trump administration’s “Compact for Academic Excellence in Higher Education,” a 10-point memo sent to nine institutions that proposed broad campus changes.

Among the proposed changes were limiting foreign student enrollment to 15%, freezing their effective tuition rates for five years, posting the earnings of graduates with certain majors, and expanding opportunities for service members.

After MIT declined the proposal, the Trump administration sought to cut the school’s funding, though most efforts were blocked in court.

MIT also said a higher federal tax on endowments was weighing on the school, which reported a $27.4 billion endowment last year.

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