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by nn3
483 days ago
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It is hard to say what the effect will be: If it's true that these indirect costs only contain expenses closely related to the actual research then they can just move to the actual grant with somewhat more accounting overhead. I suspect the universities are doing that accounting already for their internal purposes so it won't be that big a change. But if it's true that a significant part of them are not related there would need to be significant changes in budgets, and whoever benefits will have a problem. I suspect the truth is somewhere inbetween. In any case it's a good opportunity for these organizations to figure out how to become more cost effective. |
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Today there are usually only a handful of overhead rates for the entire university. Accounting only needs to be precise enough to attribute the spending to the right categories. Nobody needs to know which departments or labs benefit from that particular spending.
But if everything needs to be attributed not just to a specific department and a lab, but to a specific grant, things get complicated. Maybe one lab in a department only uses offices and meeting rooms. Another runs a bunch of servers somewhere on the premises. And a third has a wetlab and works with hazardous materials. Sometimes things go wrong and the entire building needs to be evacuated. Which means there is a need for all kinds of protocols and trainings and responsible personnel. And maybe also for more security guards at night.
Expect fun department politics when the PIs argue who needs to pay what for the infrastructure and who gets to spend more on actual research.