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Harvard Medical School Is Facing a Deficit. Under Trump, Some Fear It May Get Worse.
I'm guessing that's Harvard Medical School in the picture. It's not as if I'd know.
HMS Is Facing a Deficit. Under Trump, Some Fear It May Get Worse.
Harvard Medical School administrators and professors are already worried about the schools tightening budget and declining federal research funds. Trumps reelection adds a whole new level of risk.
By Veronica H. Paulus and Akshaya Ravi
17 hours ago
Harvard Medical School's existing financial woes could worsen under Trump's second administration. By Jonathan G. Yuan
Despite its $5 billion endowment from about 1,400 school-specific gifts, Harvard Medical School will run a deficit this year. ... Only slightly more than a quarter of HMS operating revenue comes from endowment income made available for operations, per the Medical Schools official news publication. ... Of the remaining sources, 38 percent comes from sponsored support, 11 percent from education revenue, 8 percent from gifts for current use, and 15 percent from other.
According to an HMS Office of Finance document obtained by The Crimson, despite the optics of the Medical Schools endowment, HMSs budget is perpetually underfunded. ... Deficit spending is an increasing problem at HMS, reads the document, which details the schools deficit spending policy.
At the schools 2024 State of the School address, HMS Dean George Q. Daley 82 announced that the school was facing a $37 million shortfall due to a perfect storm of negative financial headwinds. ... According to HMS officials, the deficit is the result of National Institute of Health funding not keeping pace with compounding cost inflation, increased labor and construction costs, and poor endowment returns and with former U.S. President Donald Trumps reelection, money issues may only worsen.
{snip}
HMS professor Jonathan C. Kagan also points to the naturally sinusoidal nature of scientific funding. ... Funding rates will go up and theyll go down, Kagan said, but overall, the work being done at the Medical School and affiliated hospitals is going to continue. ... History usually teaches us that during elections, a lot more extreme optimism or negativity is magnified, Kagan said. Change in America occurs at a glacial pace.
Staff writer Veronica H. Paulus can be reached at veronica.paulus@thecrimson.com. Follow her on X @VeronicaHPaulus.
Staff writer Akshaya Ravi can be reached at akshaya.ravi@thecrimson.com. Follow her on X @akshayaravi22.
Harvard Medical School administrators and professors are already worried about the schools tightening budget and declining federal research funds. Trumps reelection adds a whole new level of risk.
By Veronica H. Paulus and Akshaya Ravi
17 hours ago
Harvard Medical School's existing financial woes could worsen under Trump's second administration. By Jonathan G. Yuan
Despite its $5 billion endowment from about 1,400 school-specific gifts, Harvard Medical School will run a deficit this year. ... Only slightly more than a quarter of HMS operating revenue comes from endowment income made available for operations, per the Medical Schools official news publication. ... Of the remaining sources, 38 percent comes from sponsored support, 11 percent from education revenue, 8 percent from gifts for current use, and 15 percent from other.
According to an HMS Office of Finance document obtained by The Crimson, despite the optics of the Medical Schools endowment, HMSs budget is perpetually underfunded. ... Deficit spending is an increasing problem at HMS, reads the document, which details the schools deficit spending policy.
At the schools 2024 State of the School address, HMS Dean George Q. Daley 82 announced that the school was facing a $37 million shortfall due to a perfect storm of negative financial headwinds. ... According to HMS officials, the deficit is the result of National Institute of Health funding not keeping pace with compounding cost inflation, increased labor and construction costs, and poor endowment returns and with former U.S. President Donald Trumps reelection, money issues may only worsen.
{snip}
HMS professor Jonathan C. Kagan also points to the naturally sinusoidal nature of scientific funding. ... Funding rates will go up and theyll go down, Kagan said, but overall, the work being done at the Medical School and affiliated hospitals is going to continue. ... History usually teaches us that during elections, a lot more extreme optimism or negativity is magnified, Kagan said. Change in America occurs at a glacial pace.
Staff writer Veronica H. Paulus can be reached at veronica.paulus@thecrimson.com. Follow her on X @VeronicaHPaulus.
Staff writer Akshaya Ravi can be reached at akshaya.ravi@thecrimson.com. Follow her on X @akshayaravi22.
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Harvard Medical School Is Facing a Deficit. Under Trump, Some Fear It May Get Worse. (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
Dec 2
OP
jimfields33
(19,317 posts)1. 5 billion endowment
Hardly needs to change anything.
slightlv
(4,441 posts)2. This isn't the first time I've read that phrase
about change in America... and it was on a completely different subject. To me, that makes it a basic, foundational, system issue that should addressed before addressing the symptoms. Obviously that would happen via our combined government working for the good of the whole of America. And THAT is a pipedream!
C0RI0LANUS
(1,871 posts)3. $5 billion endowment may not be enough for Harvard Medical School?
Lincoln College, Illinois (Photo: Google Earth 2022)
Lincoln College, a HBCU, closed in 2022 after 157 years because of a lack of funding and effort to save the school. The college closure was ultimately effected by a cyber security attack. Lincoln College survived the Spanish Flu, the Great Depression, and WWII, needing $53m to keep going. This is pocket change for billionaires like Elon Musk or Bill Gates.
And Harvard Medical School with its $5bn endowment may have trouble making ends meet under Trumpf?
Lincoln College just needed slightly over 1% of Harvard's endowment fund to survive. Now Lincoln College is gone with the wind forever.
Sources:
https://lincolncollege.edu/home
https://www.npr.org/2022/05/10/1097855295/lincoln-college-closes-157-years-covid-cyberattack