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Australian government R&D contribution hits all-time low

<ÁñÁ«ÊÓƵ class="standfirst">Figures indicate ¡®crisis point¡¯ for spending on science and innovation, learned academy warns
April 29, 2023
Parliament House, Canberra
Source: iStock

Canberra¡¯s spending on research and development has slumped to its lowest ever share of gross domestic product, in the first year of a Labor Party administration that has committed to a dramatic spending boost.

Australian government investment in R&D fell to 0.49 per cent of GDP in 2022-23, according to a forecast published in newly released science, research and innovation .

It is the first time that the figure has sunk below 0.5 per cent since records began in 1978, and about one-third lower than spending levels during a mid-1990s peak.

Investment on this measure has declined fairly steadily over the past decade, apart from a 2020-21 blip when the then government gave universities an extra A$1 billion (?528 million) of research funding as a Covid relief measure.

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The now governing party vowed to reverse this decline in a pre-election pledge to ¡°work with business, industry, universities and research institutes to boost Australia¡¯s investment in research and development. Labor believes Australia can be a global STEM superpower.¡±

The promise outlined an aspiration to lift overall spending ¡°closer to 3 per cent of GDP achieved in other countries¡±. The current figure is about?.

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Canberra¡¯s investment in R&D is dwarfed by the contributions from businesses and universities. And the Australian Academy of Science said the published figure excluded ¡°new and off-budget expenditures¡± such as Labor¡¯s National Reconstruction Fund and initiatives such as the former government¡¯s Australian Economic Accelerator programme.

Nevertheless, the academy said science spending had reached crisis point. ¡°We¡¯re not competitive anymore,¡± said chief executive Anna-Maria Arabia. ¡°Other countries, particularly after the pandemic, have all boosted their investment in R&D.

¡°Australia has been on a trajectory of decline for more than 10 years. In a world where STEM [science, technology, maths and engineering] skills and industries are growing, it¡¯s the wrong direction to be going. I don¡¯t think anyone is expecting some multibillion-dollar injection in the next budget cycle [but] there is an expectation that we meet the needs of the nation.¡±

Science minister Ed Husic said the tables showed that the government was investing A$12.1 billion in R&D in the 2022¨C23 financial year. ¡°We are also investing A$1 billion in other science, technology, research and innovation-related programmes and activities.

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¡°The government will continue looking for ways to expand Australian research and innovation opportunities, drive scientific breakthroughs and industry growth and create high-paying, sustainable jobs.¡±

john.ross@timeshighereducation.com

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