984 resultados para United States. Energy Research and Development Administration.
Resumo:
"August, 1976."
Resumo:
Title from cover.
Resumo:
Errata sheet inserted.
Resumo:
Prepared for the ERDA Integrated Assessment Program.
Resumo:
"June 1976."
Resumo:
"Prepared for the U.S. Energy Research and Development Administration under Contract W-31-109-Eng-38"--Cover.
Resumo:
Description based on: 2.
Resumo:
Vols. 7, 9 and 15, issued in 1974, prepared for the U. S. Atomic Energy Commission; vols. issued 1975- prepared for the U. S. Energy Research and Development Administration.
Resumo:
On cover: Fossil energy.
Resumo:
"TID-26500/R1. Distribution category: UC-2."
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.
Resumo:
This paper is a review of recent trends in United States expenditures on research and development (R&D). Real expenditures by both the government and the private sector increased rapidly between the mid-1970s and the mid-1980s, and have since leveled off. This is true of both overall expenditures and expenditures on basic research, as well as funding of academic research. Preliminary estimates indicate that about $170 billion was spent on R&D in the United States in 1995, with ≈60% of that funding coming from the private sector and about 35% from the federal government. In comparison to other countries, we have historically spent more on R&D relative to our economy than other advanced economies, but this advantage appears to be disappearing. If defense-related R&D is excluded, our expenditures relative to the size of the economy are considerably smaller than those of other similar economies.