The future of science research hangs in the balance as NIH funding cuts take their toll on emerging researchers, forcing students and graduates to navigate uncertain career paths.
As graduate programs lose spots and labs face shutdowns following Trump administration cuts to science funding, the path to a science career for students and researchers is becoming increasingly difficult.
Science funding is crucial for advancing scientific knowledge and technology.
Governments and private organizations allocate funds to support research projects, enabling scientists to explore new ideas and develop innovative solutions.
In the United States, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) provides over $40 billion in annual funding for medical research.
Similarly, the European Union's Horizon 2020 program invests €80 billion in research and innovation between 2014 and 2020.
Adequate science funding ensures that researchers can conduct experiments, collect data, and publish findings, driving progress in fields like medicine, space exploration, and climate change mitigation.
Gaining research experience during college is the first critical step in a scientist’s journey. This can be achieved through working in a university laboratory or participating in summer research programs. However, with the recent cuts to federal funding, many students are facing reduced opportunities to gain the experience and placements needed to enter and progress in the field.
The NIH postbaccalaureate program, which offers full-time research positions to recent college graduates considering careers in medicine or STEM, has been completely paused. This means that students like ‘Nada Fadul’ , who had applied for the program to gain lab experience before applying to joint MD-PhD programs, are now facing uncertain futures.
The impact of these cuts is being felt across the country, with thousands of layoffs and job losses expected in the research sector. For students and graduates, this means a big reduction in opportunities to gain the experience and placements needed to enter and progress in the field.
According to recent statistics, layoffs and job losses have been on the rise globally.
In 2020, over 14 million jobs were lost due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
The US Bureau of Labor Statistics reported a significant increase in layoffs, with over 1.3 million workers affected.
Similarly, in Europe, the number of redundancies rose by 12% in 2020 compared to the previous year.
The main reasons for these job losses include economic downturn, automation, and restructuring efforts by companies.
“The Consequences of Reduced Funding”

The lack of funding is not only affecting early-career scientists but also the faculty whose labs rely on graduate students and postdoctoral scholars’ work. Federal grants provide a significant portion of many laboratories’ funding, and the uncertainty surrounding these cuts has forced many scientists to pivot their focus from simply doing science to trying to make their science—and their careers—survive.
For example, Ran Blekhman , a geneticist at the University of Chicago, whose lab is almost entirely funded by the NIH , is having to think about how many students he can reasonably support in the future. He notes that money from private foundations often does not support basic science and has an unsustainably low-indirect-cost ceiling.
“A Call for Support”
Despite the uncertainty, many students remain deeply committed to pursuing careers in science. Robert Schwartz , a college and graduate essay consultant, reports that some students he works with are taking extra gap years in European laboratories, hoping that more US funding will open up in the future.
However, experts like Kimberly Cooper and Ran Blekhman are focusing on ways to better support and educate their trainees—not only about how federal funding works but also how to keep going. They want researchers to be able to do their great science without having existential dread about how they get paid.
As the situation continues to unfold, one thing is clear: the future of science research is uncertain, and early-career scientists are feeling the pinch.
Science research is a systematic investigation into the natural world, aimed at understanding and explaining phenomena.
It involves collecting data through experiments, observations, and surveys to test hypotheses and theories.
The findings are then analyzed and interpreted to draw conclusions and make predictions.
Science research has led to numerous breakthroughs in medicine, technology, and our understanding of the universe.