Helpful Hint Lists for Proposal Preparation : Budget Terms in Plain English
The purpose of this page is to give a working definition of budget terms that turn up in pre- and post-award administration. These are not the "legal" definition! If there are terms you would like to suggest adding or if a link to the "legal" definition would be helpful, please send an email to Heather Offhaus.
Sponsored Research v. Gifts: Although alphabetically this isn't first, this is one of the first distinctions to be made. Sponsored Research is auditable. In exchange for the money sent to you to do research, the sponsor expects it to be used for a particular project with certain restrictions on spending, a financial report due, services in return, or some auditable promises were made from the university. A gift is a sum of money with no strings attached. They aren't specific on what research you have to use it, they aren't interested in more than a blurb for their financial offerings, and there is no commitment of how funds might be spent. Sponsored research can be broken down into several categories such as grants, contracts, clinical trials, material transfers, other sponsored activity, etc.
A-21 Items: This is a peculiar term for certain budget items. The Office of Management and Budget (Federal Government) publishes rules and conditions for use of federal moneys. One of their circulars was numbered A-21 and it directly impacts institutions of higher education that conduct research. In it, they spell out that certain costs cannot be charged to a grant unless they are specific to the project. Most of the components are costs that would normally be covered under the Administrative portion of the F&A rate (see below.) For instance, if you want to charge a sum of money to a grant for copying charges, it has to be justified in the application as project specific (i.e. why do you need it?) for it to be allowable (Copy charges are requested to cover disseminating data results to the 3 subcontract sites). If it is not justified and approved, the charges cannot hit a federal account. This applies mainly to federal proposals. See Cost Accounting Standards for the implications on non-federal sponsors.
Conflict of Interest (COI): Many institutions now ask you to declare long before award if you will or will not have a conflict of interest. At UM it is the following statement (Yes/No): Do the Project Investigator, Participating Investigators, or other key investigators has significant financial or management interest in the proposed project that may constitute the basis for a conflict of interest?
Cost Accounting Standards: Although it has many issues involved, the basic ideas are that all sponsors should 1) be treated equally and 2) be able to audit for university support "promised" in a proposal. The first of the two basically means that the government wants us to be consistent in how we account for items. If someone non-federal gets a "break" for something, in the same way the government should get that break. Whether it be an indirect cost rate, how we charge out salaries, or allowable costs on grants. Conversely, if the government guidelines limit us, we should also be limiting what we charge other sponsors. So, A-21 items, although a government requirement, should be a non-federal guideline. This isn't to say that you cannot charge certain A-21 costs to a proposal, but should try to be consistent on the allowable charges. As far as the 2nd principle, see Cost Sharing. The term most synonymous with Cost Accounting Standards might be consistency.
Cost Sharing: This easily could be also termed Resource Sharing. Any time we commit effort, supplies, space or other item to a sponsor as indication of support for the project within the university, we have to account for how that commitment will be matched. If you represent that a faculty member will be on a grant 10% effort, it is assumed that the agency awarded the project taking that into consideration. At any time they can come and ask us if the resource (in this case salary) is being provided and audit us for this cost. At UM it is extremely important to account for where that support will come from before submission of a sponsored research project. There are two types of cost sharing. The definitions vary from institution to institution, but UM has a fairly mainstream understanding.
Mandatory Cost Sharing - Any time the resource is quantifiable, it is considered mandatory (and auditable.) This would be an effort level (which is translatable into dollars), a specific amount for a piece of equipment or supply, or anything else you can put in terms of dollars.
Voluntary Cost Sharing - consists of things that are nonquantifiable. This may be a statement in the justification that says: "The PI will provide other necessary supplies to this project." or "The tuition will be paid from departmental funds." Another instance is when the sponsor imposes a limit. The NIH salary cap is congressionally set. Any time a person's academic base exceeds that amount, the department has to voluntarily cost share the amount over the imposed cap. (Current cap is available here).
Direct Costs: These are the dollars directly associated with research investigations. It could be professional salary, travel, consulting fees, or equipment (among others). The cost must have a direct benefit to the project.
Indirect Costs (or Facilities and Administrative Costs - F&A): These are what in the business world would be considered overhead. Facilities charges include lights, water, electricity, network hook-ups for the computer, telephone lines. A good rule of thumb is anything behind the wall. Administrative costs are secretarial support, general office supplies, and the cost of people that administer sponsored projects. A rule of thumb here is anything "common" that does not directly benefit a specific project.
Fees: These come under a variety of names. They are costs that have to borne in certain circumstances under a university's accounting/charging system. They all have separate rules and will vary by institution. We bring them up so that you know the types of fees to look for and examples of what they might do. Examples:
Institutional Review Board Fee (IRB Fee): UM charges $1,800 (no Indirects) for the IRB committee to review protocols for industry sponsored projects with human use. This is a type of charge that is specific to a university and if you have a industry project that involves other sites, you should check into before submitting an application.
Patient Care: Many times, institutions that have clinical care as part of research charge less for certain procedures on a research proposal. In these cases, you need to find out if the prices include the F&A/Indirect charges already. If they do, you can't charge a sponsor for the F&A associated since it is built in and charging would constitute "double-dipping."
We have a clinical pricing tool which allows research teams to retrieve current research rates of clinical procedures. Any charges represented on this tool are eligible to receive F&A (or indirect) cost recovery since they are discounted and do not include overhead.
https://www.umms.med.umich.edu/crprices/
Research Participation: There are several different titles of those who participate on a project. In many cases they are different shades of gray.
Project Director - the person who meets the eligibility requirements of the university and is responsible for the academic and budgetary performance.
Principal Investigator - the person who meets the eligibility requirements of the sponsor and is responsible for the academic and budgetary performance (usually the same person)
Co-Investigator - NIH defines this as people who contribute significantly to the scientific progress of the proposal.
Collaborators and Consultants - These terms are fairly interchangeable? The only distinction that has been explained is that Collaborators tend to be those who work in the field of the research and are willing to offer advice and consultation on the direction of the project. Consultants then would be outside the PI's realm of expertise that are willing to advise from a different professional perspective. Then again, the definitions have also been flipped.. NIH no longer recognizes/uses the term Collaborator.
Subcontracts: This is an agreement between another site (corporation, university, hospital) and the parent institution submitting the proposal to perform a component of the research. It is a subcontract if the site work involve specific people who impact the course of research. They would be subject to their own internal cost structures. Sometimes the term is confused with contracted services. If you have questions on the differences, please contact your department grant administrator.
