It depends on the type of research.
If your research is mathematical or involves a lot of engineering, you are building on earlier results. In many cases, your own results will depend on the correctness of earlier results in a measurable way. You end up replicating others' research without even trying.
Empirical research is harder. You cite earlier results, but there is no clear connection between their correctness and your results. Especially if effect size is small. Earlier research has more effect on the framework you use to interpret your results than on the results.
Academic researchers rarely replicate others' results, because it's expensive and not particularly interesting. People typically come to the academia because they want to work on something they personally find interesting. If you want to have experienced scientists working on something administrators tell them to do, you better pay industry-level salaries.