Australia’s Research System Ringing Alarm Bells As CSIRO Cuts Highlight Under-investment

Universities Australia today sounded a warning that the announced restructure and workforce reduction at Australia’s national science agency, the CSIRO, underscore the very real risks of chronic under-funding in the nation’s research system.

“When our national flagship science agency is forced to shed hundreds of jobs and narrow its research focus, it sends a clear message: Australia’s research engine is running short of fuel,” Chief Executive Officer Luke Sheehy said.

“This isn’t just a CSIRO issue – it’s a warning light for the entire research ecosystem.

“Australia is being outspent and outpaced by the world, Australia currently invests 1.69 per cent of GDP in R&D – well below the OECD average of 2.7 per cent and far behind innovation leaders like South Korea and Germany who invest over 3 per cent.

“If we continue to under-invest, we will lose the talent, infrastructure and breakthroughs that drive jobs, national security and technological strength.

“Research is not a cost it is critical national infrastructure.

“Whether it’s medical breakthroughs, clean energy technologies, defence capability, cybersecurity or agriculture, research is the backbone of national strength.

“Australia risks falling behind at a time we need to be moving faster.

“The government’s Strategic Examination of R&D is a crucial opportunity to fix these structural problems, but it must lead to real reform, not another layer of complexity,” Mr Sheehy said.

Universities Australia is calling for urgent action to:

  • lift investment to match global competitors or at least to the OECD average
  • simplify and coordinate the research system which is currently spread across 150 programs and 14 government portfolios
  • develop a whole-of-government research workforce strategy
  • support better collaboration with industry, and
  • support a coordinated approach to international collaboration including a commitment to join Horizon Europe.

“Australia doesn’t lack talent or ideas – we lack a system and investment level that match our ambition. This is the moment to fix that,” Mr Sheehy said.

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