Introductory Info
Date introduced: 2
December 2021
House: House of
Representatives
Portfolio: Education,
Skills and Employment
Commencement: The day
after Royal Assent
Purpose of
the Bill
The purpose of the Australian
Research Council Amendment Bill 2021 (the Bill) is to amend the Australian Research
Council Act 2001 (the Act) to apply an indexation rate to the current
appropriations for Australian Research Council (ARC) funding programs for the
financial years starting 1 July 2021, 1 July 2022 and 1 July 2023 and to insert
a funding cap for the financial year starting 1 July 2024.
Background
The ARC was established as an independent Commonwealth
entity under the Act.[1]
The ARC advises the Australian Government on research matters and has
responsibility for the Excellence in
Research for Australia (ERA) initiative, which compares Australian
university research against international benchmarks, creates incentives to
improve research quality and identifies key emerging research areas.[2]
The ARC also administers the National
Competitive Grants Program (NCGP), which supports fundamental and applied
research, as well as research training.[3]
The NCGP supports research across all disciplines except clinical
and most other medical research, which is primarily supported by the National Health and Medical Research Council.[4]
Part 7 of the Act outlines how the ARC funds research
projects and provides annual caps on the quantity of funds to be distributed by
the ARC. Amending the annual funding caps is the primary focus of the Bill.
NCGP grant funding is allocated via a ‘competitive peer
review process involving national and international assessors’.[5]
The NCGP is comprised of two programs:
- the Discovery Program
supports individuals and teams to undertake fundamental research. The Discovery
Program includes: the Australian Laureate Fellowships; Discovery Early Career
Researcher Award; Discovery Indigenous; Discovery Projects; and Future
Fellowships.[6]
- the Linkage Program
supports collaboration between university researchers and partners in business,
government, community organisations, and other public research organisations.
The Linkage Program aims to support the ‘transfer of skills, knowledge and
ideas as a basis for securing commercial and other benefits of research’. The
Linkage Program includes: the ARC Centres of Excellence; Industrial
Transformation Research Program; Linkage Infrastructure, Equipment and
Facilities; Linkage Projects; Linkage Learned Academies Special Projects;
Special Research Initiatives; and Supporting Responses to Commonwealth Science
Council Priorities.[7]
The Minister has responsibility for approving funding to
research projects.[8]
The Act, however, prescribes that the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of the ARC
must provide recommendations to the Minister on which research proposals should
be approved and the quantity of the funding that should be provided to
successful proposals.[9]
Typically, the Minister approves the proposals recommended by the CEO, but the
Minister may choose to reject recommended proposals. For example, in December 2021
the Minister rejected
the recommendation to provide grants to six research proposals in the
humanities.[10]
Reforms to the grant funding process
On 6 December 2021, a Letter
of Expectations (the Letter) was sent from the Acting Minister for Education
and Youth, Stuart Robert, to the ARC, outlining the actions the Government
expects the ARC to undertake to support relevant Government policy directions.[11]
The Letter identified four areas for reform to be
implemented by the end of 2022:
- supporting
national priorities
- strengthening
the National Interest Test (NIT)
- fast-tracking
implementation of recommendations from the review of the ERA and the Engagement
and Impact (EI) assessments
- enhanced
organisational governance.[12]
As part of the supporting national priorities reforms, the
Letter stated that at least 40 per cent of funding approvals by value should be
for proposals under the Linkage Program. Additionally, at least 70 per cent of
funding under the Linkage Program should be for projects that align with the
Government’s six National
Manufacturing Priorities.[13]
The Letter also asks the ARC to brief the Minister on
options to expand the pool of people who participate in the College
of Experts (who are involved in assessing grants) to include
representatives from industry and other end-user groups.[14]
Additionally, the Letter asks the ARC to establish an independently chaired
committee to assist the CEO that should include representatives from industry
and other research users. The committee should have ‘Terms of Reference (ToRs)
that support ongoing reform of ARC operations and a focus on driving impact
from publicly funded research in Australia's universities’.[15]
Some stakeholders have expressed concerns regarding the
impact of these proposed reforms. For example, the Australian Academy of the
Humanities stated
that the changes to the Linkage Program pose a ‘risk to the strength of the
broader research system by skewing ARC funding so substantively towards applied
research aligned to a narrow set of priorities’.[16]
The Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia (ASSA)
also expressed
concerns with the changes to the Linkage Program, highlighting that other
funding programs already provide significant support to research aligned with
the National Manufacturing Priorities.[17]
The ASSA also questioned the value of adding non-academic members to the
College of Experts, stating:
Perhaps the most serious concern is the proposal to alter
(and potentially dilute) the long-established mechanism of peer-review by including
non-research experts through membership of the ARC College of Experts.
Academic research throughout the world is built on a
foundation of review of research outputs and funding applications by those best
able to evaluate the methodology, the knowledge context and the research
claims.
Non-experts – even highly qualified and experienced
researchers in different fields – simply lack the knowledge required to
evaluate such research and, in the context of funding applications, to
determine whether it is appropriately designed and resourced, and whether it
adds appropriately and usefully to the existing body of knowledge.[18]
Committee
consideration
Senate Standing Committee for Selection of Bills
At the time of writing, the Senate Standing Committee for
Selection of Bills had deferred
consideration of the Bill to its next meeting.[19]
Senate
Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills
At the time of writing, the Senate Standing Committee for
the Scrutiny of Bills had not yet reported on the Bill.
Policy position of non-government parties/independents
At the time of writing, non-government parties and independents
do not appear to have commented on the Bill.
Position of
major interest groups
At the time of writing, major interest groups such as
Universities Australia, Science and Technology Australia, and the academies
representing science, humanities, social sciences, and technology and
engineering do not appear to have commented on the Bill.
Financial
implications
The Bill results in an additional appropriation of $843.67 million
over four years.[20]
The majority of this funding ($811.17 million) is due to the addition of
the financial year commencing 1 July 2024 to the forward estimates.[21]
The remainder of the additional appropriation is due to increases in the
funding caps for the three financial years commencing 1 July 2021, 1 July 2022
and 1 July 2023 (a total increase of $32.5 million).[22]
The additional appropriation does not affect the substance
of the Act, nor give extra money to a government agency; it only adds to the
special appropriation administered by the ARC for the purpose of funding
research. The proposed changes in funding are detailed in Table 1.
Table 1: Proposed changes to appropriation caps
Financial year (starting date) |
Current Appropriation Cap ($million) |
Proposed Appropriation Cap ($million) |
1 July 2021 |
804.411 |
815.271 |
1 July 2022 |
804.442 |
815.288 |
1 July 2023 |
801.410 |
812.207 |
1 July 2024 |
Yet to have been set |
811.169 |
Source: Australian Research
Council Act 2001, section 49 and Australian
Research Council Amendment Bill 2021, Schedule 1.
Statement of Compatibility with Human Rights
As required under Part 3 of the Human Rights
(Parliamentary Scrutiny) Act 2011 (Cth), the Government has assessed
the Bill’s compatibility with the human rights and freedoms recognised or
declared in the international instruments listed in section 3 of that Act. The
Government considers that the Bill is compatible as it does not raise any human
rights issues.[23]
The Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights had no
comment on the Bill as it considered it did ‘not engage, or only marginally
engage, human rights; promote human rights; and/or permissibly limit human
rights’.[24]
Key issues
and provisions
The Act is updated, usually annually, to apply indexation
to the funding caps and to add an additional year to the forward estimates
funding period. The Bill alters the administered special appropriations but
does not alter the substance of the Act.[25]
The proposed changes to the funding cap are outlined in Schedule
1 of the Bill. Item 1 adds the financial year starting 1 July 2024
to subsection 48(2) of the Act, while Item 5 provides the funding cap
for that year. Items 2 to 4 outline the proposed changes to the funding
caps for the years starting 1 July 2021, 1 July 2022 and 1 July 2023, as
detailed in Table 1.