Support For NASA Spending Depends On Perception of Size of Space Agency Budget
MarkWhittington writes "Alan Steinberg, a post doctorate fellow in political science at Sam Houston State University, conducted a study surrounding the vexing problem of how to motivate more people to support increased levels of funding for NASA. In an October 14, 2013 piece in The Space Review, Steinberg announced the results of a study conducted with a group of college students. Steinberg's approach was based on the findings of a study by Roger Launius conducted in the late 1990s that suggested that the American public believe that NASA spending takes up about 20 percent of the federal budget. It has in fact never exceeded four percent, which it enjoyed at the height of the Apollo program, and is currently about .5 percent. Steinberg was testing a notion advanced by Neil deGrasse Tyson that if people knew the true size of NASA's budget they would be more likely to support increasing it."
The public has no idea about the level of US spending. They need to know things like Air Conditioning The Military Costs More Than NASA's Entire Budget. Until they understand that NASA does so much for so little they will never want to expand its budget.
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Spoiler alert - popup, autoplay video and noisy tab within.
And if you want to know the results, you'll have to RTFA. Submitter must be new here.
October 14, 2013
Alan Steinberg, a post doctorate fellow in political science at Sam Houston State University, conducted a study surrounding the vexing problem of how to motivate more people to support increased levels of funding for NASA. In an October 14, 2013 piece in The Space Review, Steinberg announced the results of a study conducted with a group of college students.
Steinberg’s approach was based on the findings of a study by Roger Launius conducted in the late 1990s that suggested that the American public believe that NASA spending takes up about 20 percent of the federal budget. It has in fact never exceeded four percent, which it enjoyed at the height of the Apollo program, and is currently about .5 percent. Steinberg was testing a notion advanced by Neil deGrasse Tyson that if people knew the true size of NASA’s budget they would be more likely to support increasing it.
“As part of a larger survey administered at the University of Houston in two waves, November of 2011 and June of 2012, college students were initially asked to identify their feeling towards the current level of federal spending on NASA as either ‘too much,’ ‘about right,’ or ‘not enough.’ These were coded –1, 0, and 1 respectively. Initially, 84 respondents felt that spending was too much, 219 about right, and 126 not enough. The initial mean level of support for all respondents was 0.098 with a standard deviation of 0.0693.
“Subjects were then asked to identify NASA’s budget as a percentage of the federal budget. They were given these choices: 0.1%, 0.5%, 1%, 5%, 10% and 25%. In the initial round of assessment, 294 respondents (68.4 percent) overestimated NASA’s budget as a percent of the federal budget by at least double the actual value, of which 224 respondents (52.1 percent) overestimated NASA’s actual budget by at least tenfold. This implies that people think NASA is getting a much larger slice of the federal pie than it actually is. While these findings are as expected, the question becomes, what can be done about it?
“Survey respondents were later told the words Neil deGrasse Tyson has said time and time again: ‘NASA’s budget is currently 0.6 percent of the federal budget, i.e., about half a penny per tax dollar.’ Following this fact they were then asked how they felt about the current level of federal spending on NASA using the same metrics. In this post-treatment round 61 respondents felt space spending was too much, 206 about right, and 162 not enough. The post treatment mean was 0.237 with a standard deviation of 0.682.”
The results clearly show a significant shift away from believing that NASA spends too much money toward the belief that it doesn’t spend enough. The conclusion is that anyone who suggests more spending for NASA in order to do things like send human astronauts back to the moon and on to Mars must also educate the public about the true size of NASA spending.
The gubernmint does not have any business in space exploration. This, like everything else, would be best done by private free market enterprise.
In the hope that the principles in this study are correct, I made this little micro-site to quickly answer the question: "Why spend money on space when there are problems here at home?" http://www.ridingwithrobots.org/earth
Saddle up: Riding with Robots
Almost every federal project is a tiny fraction of the budget, and the same study can be performed on all of them, and since we want clean air, clean water, nice federal parks, more knowledge of the ocean, fewer turtles poached, etc, etc, etc, the results will come out just the same no matter what agency you look at.
"I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
A successful one-up of NASA by the Chinese space agency would be a powerful motivator for Congressional funding efforts.
Capcha - "mandarin"
The problem is NASA's obsession with manned spaceflight. The best work is done unmanned, and it's way less expensive. Toss the astronaut suits and use the whole budget for unmanned missions.
Manned spaceflight only makes sense with a huge breakthrough in propulsion. Otherwise, there is no where to go where a human being would be useful enough to make it worthwhile. As it stands, manned flight serves only to fulfill fanboy Star Trek fantasies.
Until then, I will be a techie steadfastly against more NASA spending. Its not just the general public you need to convince, its at least some of the STEM people too.
It's never been about spending or how much - it's always about value, plain and simple ROI. NASA has always appeared needy, these days more than ever, and when someone gets noisy about needing funding, people get suspicious.
Why is it NASA always wants just a bit more and their promised discovery is right around the corner? They get used to being funded and hate updating resumes for the private sector. No surprise there and no surprise tax payers mistrust funding them without end.
If it had 20% we'd be on Mars already. Then again I think the continuous push for private contractors doing things for Nasa is brilliant. The only reason defense spending is so much is because of lobbyists, if the same pressure can be applied for the space industry we'll have a huge portion going towards space in no time! Now that I think about it, a huge amount of scientific research should be privately contracted as well. Imagine what we could do with hundred of billions in contracted research. Even if two thirds is utterly wasted we'd still have a lot more done than we do today.
The public has no idea about the level of US spending.
Here is a breakdown on where out money goes.Defense, SS, Medicare, Medicaid, and CHIP - where 2/3rds goes to Medicare.
The perception is that our tax money is wasted on Space, Welfare Queen's Pink Cadillacs and other entitlement programs which I take to be code words for giving money to "lazy (Black) poor people" from folks who want to appear to be PC.
When the truth is we are wasting money on wars and transferring wealth to the old.
And I find it laughable and sad that the Teapartiers are mostly old white people and if they REALLY wanted what they think they wanted, they'd have to shoot themselves in the pocketbook and give up this notion the the US of A has to have a superior military and go off fighting "evil".
Cut military spending to post WWII levels. Stop this one man show when containing roque nations - we need more UN involvement; which is a whole other bugaboo with the Teaparty people and most conservatives.
Elon Musk would depend on all of NASA's past work, and the NSF, and DARPA, and, etc. etc.
Seriously, if anything ISN'T an island endeavor, it's space travel.
Lastly, you provide nothing to back blowing money. How about giving some examples?
> the American public believe that NASA spending takes up about 20 percent of the federal budget
Bright as always
The people I know who are opposed to funding NASA don't care about how much money NASA currently gets. They don't want it funded, period.
The person on the street may feel differently, but they probably aren't giving a crap about NASA either way.
I would never have guessed that it was that HIGH.
The Federal budget is massive and 5% of that is massive.
I would like to see the NASA budget LOWERED
The problem lies with information about funding. And the main source for this information is the media. And the media seems to have it in for NASA. Every time a space mission is mentioned in the news its price tag is mentioned with it. Which gives the perception that the space craft or mission is very expensive. When was the last time your heard the price tag of the Seal raids in Somalia or Lybia or on Bin Laden's compound? How much did the NSA's PRISM program cost? If the mass media told everyone the price of all the other government activities as they were reporting them then, by comparison the NASA prices wouldn't seem like much at all.
20%? They're probably confusing it with the NSA.
When you have to bum rush Wally World to eat. Trickle down taxation killed the middle class and its jobs. No jobs no money for NASA pretty god damn simple. I hate having to explain this shit to rocket scientist.
A repost of a Google+ post I wrote a year and some change ago:
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From today forward, all federal government expenditures will be priced in "Iraq War Days" (IWD) or "Iraq War Years" (IWY). For quick reference:
Source: "United States Federal budget, 2012" and "Mars Science Laboratory" pages on Wikipedia for budgets, google.com/publicdata for US population, National Priorities Project via "Cost of War" Wikipedia page for IWD exchange rate.
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Something I didn't note in my original post that's probably worth mentioning in passing: Social Security is huge, "bigger than the National Defense budget" huge, but it's basically self-funding because it's a retirement investment paid for by payroll taxes (modulo population bumps, e.g. the post-WW2 "baby boom"). Person A pays in, person A cashes out, theoretical net cost to taxpayers $0.
Range Voting: preference intensity matters
If people knew the budget for the military, would they support it less?
$220B on debt interest, something that shouldn't exist. End the Federal Reserve.
I'd really like to see someone start OSSEA, the Open Source Space Exploration Association. Get Neil Degrasse Tyson as the spokesperson and a few other space and science luminaries and use kickstarter or similar to find each project. Accept volunteers. Put all data collected online.
No idea if it would work but I use would be neat to see them try. I'd donate money and possibly donate time as well being open source
Just ask people how much money should NASA get. If perceived size is the problem, they will probably answer 1-5%. That of course would double the current budget in the worst case.
And it's not likely that teaching them will help, considering the contempt that "facts" are held.
Sorry for the cynicism, but I'm having a hard time believing that an American public that believes in a 6000-year-old Earth, a secret Islamic president, and that climate change doesn't exist would ever accept or even understand the true nature of the government's budget.
Thats nothing more than a feel-good brochure - what, are you in marketing or something?
Quantify the benefit derived from the expense; if you cant, then it shouldnt be done.
Perfect timing!
http://www.geek.com/science/a-decade-after-its-first-manned-space-flight-china-is-becoming-a-power-in-the-skies-1573891/
Remember NASA was originally created through the cannibalization of military programs such as the X-15. Also recall that NASA actively discouraged the development of commercial space launchers to drum up business for its space shuttle. It purposely delayed permits for the commercial sales of Atlas and Titan rockets. I personally worked on reusable launchers and cheap satellites only to be told on multiple occasions to cease work or my company would never receive another NASA contract. If you're a space company, NASA was the only game in town. TRW created a million pound thrust engine for $40K (it had limited re-use -- they fired it 3 times on the San Juan Capistrano test stand). It went nowhere because of NASA.
Now also note that NASA's management and culture is incompatible with space exploration. We lost two space shuttles through wishful thinking and shortcuts. In this case it is hard to distinguish treason from incompetence.
Given NASA's history of actually impeding the development of space, their demonstrated incompetence, and our national debt, we're past due selling NASA off. We need to beef up other means of funding space research. Think of the Ansari X prize. NASA exists to perpetuate itself without regard to benefits to the nation.
Bullshit.
Follow links, dig, think. All that you command is out there and for the most part easily found.
The burden is not upon the site's maker to do your bidding. Rather, it is upon you, to get your mind off its couch and do something to help - and you know you could, if you wanted to. It's up to you, to carp from the sidelines or to put your efforts to something.
You may have reason to know that it's easy to sneer and harder to build.