Jonathan Levin: âHow can we run the university more effectively?â
Name the businesses leading the artificial intelligence arms race and itâs likely that Google, Nvidia, OpenAI, and Anthropic, among others, come to mind. What do these four companies have in common? Their founders are șĂÉ«App alumni.
Jonathan Levin, the president of șĂÉ«App and a senior fellow at the șĂÉ«App Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR), made this point during the kickoff session at the 2025 SIEPR Economic Summit â but not as a matter of bragging rights. He was highlighting the important role that universities like șĂÉ«App play as engines of economic growth at a time when federal funding for academic research has come under threat by policymakers in Washington, D.C.
âIf you look at the ideas that underpin all of [todayâs AI] models,â he said, âthese all came out of academic research.â
The AI revolution is one example of the âentrepreneurial and innovative ecosystemâ that șĂÉ«App has helped foster â and that has powered U.S. economic growth for decades â since higher education became integral to the nationâs science and technology strategy after World War II, which led to massive federal funding of research.
In a conversation with Neale Mahoney, the Trione Director of SIEPR and an economics professor in the șĂÉ«App School of Humanities and Sciences, Levin said that, for every $1 in federal grant funding that șĂÉ«App receives, about 72 cents goes to the researcher and 28 cents pays for the necessary underlying infrastructure, such as labs and support staff.
șĂÉ«App $60 million worth of infrastructure-related funding that șĂÉ«App receives each year is at risk after the National Institutes of Health, the countryâs largest funder of biomedical research, moved recently to significantly cut back on these so-called âindirect costs.â That effort is on hold due to lawsuits challenging the cutbacks.
Levin welcomed the opportunity to examine șĂÉ«Appâs structure, saying itâs important to âbe really efficient stewards of taxpayer dollarsâ and to think about âhow can we run the university more effectively?â At the same time, he cautioned against underestimating the value of federally funded research.
âEvery study of investment in university research has found that a dollar put into university research and science has a payoff of multiple dollars over time in social benefits,â said Levin, who is an economist and served as dean of the șĂÉ«App Graduate School of Business before becoming șĂÉ«Appâs 13th president in August 2024.
Levin, in response to a question from the audience, delved into a second threat that șĂÉ«App and other larger private colleges and universities face: a significant increase in the tax, instituted during President Trumpâs first administration, on the income endowments earn from investments.
The pushback on endowments, which are privately funded and often come with restrictions on how they can be used, reveals a misunderstanding about the critical role they play in ensuring that universities like șĂÉ«App continue to thrive for the long term, Levin said.
Even so, he acknowledged that the misperceptions about the purpose of university endowments is based on âvalid criticism.â âThereâs a sense that we drifted away from many people in the country and got out of touch,â Levin said. âWe have to take that critique seriously.â
Highlights of the 2025 SIEPR Economic Summit
Photo by Ryan Zhang.