Register For Our Mailing List

Register to receive our free weekly newsletter including editorials.

Home / 655

Australia was once a world leader in innovation, now the system is ‘broken’

Australia’s research and innovation system is “broken” and needs “bold reform”, according to a major new independent report released on Tuesday.

Titled “Ambitious Australia”, it’s the culmination of a strategic examination of research and development in Australia, commissioned by the federal government in December 2024. It was led by Tesla chairwoman Robyn Denholm.

Ambitious Australia joins a long line of reports stretching back to the Hawke-Keating era in the 1980s and 1990s, when public spending on science, research and innovation gained a substantial boost.

By the end of the 1990s, the fastest-growing component of Australia’s export mix was high-value, complex, finished products. Correspondingly, Australia’s rate of productivity growth was running well above the OECD average.

We are now in a very different world. As this new report shows, Australia has fallen behind its peers on many fronts.

Diagnosing the problem

If the report did nothing other than highlight how fragile Australia’s hard-won prosperity is, it would still have performed a valuable service. And on this point, it does not hold back.

The report notes Australia’s manufacturing as a share of gross domestic product (GDP) is the lowest among developed economies in the OECD.

Australia also has among the lowest share of spending on research and development in the OECD at 1.69% in 2023–24. This is from a peak of 2.24% of GDP in 2008-09.

And between 2010 and 2020, Australia’s productivity growth was the weakest it had been in six decades.

Of course, correlation is not causation. But in most countries, manufacturing is where businesses make the biggest commitment to research and development. It is hardly surprising that as manufacturing has declined, so, too, has spending on innovation.

Rethinking our reliance on resources

The economic concept of “comparative advantage” suggests a country should specialise in producing the things it can with a lower opportunity cost than its trading partners.

The problem is that in pursuit of comparative advantage, successive federal governments have allowed Australia’s resources exports – such as iron ore and coal – to crowd out high-value manufacturing.

The task of this review was twofold.

First, it had to think through the reconstruction of our entire research and innovation system. This includes neglected ‘blue sky’ research, which doesn’t have immediate practical use, but which has led to world-changing inventions.

For instance, work on black hole mathematics played a key part in the invention of WiFi at CSIRO.

Second, it had to ensure the system was ‘fit for purpose’ as part of broader industrial policy to build new areas of competitive advantage in global markets and value chains.

The report’s recommendations

After a lengthy consultation process, the report proposes a comprehensive “plan for action”, with 20 recommendations, including:

  • better support for foundational research
  • consolidation of fragmented research and innovation programs
  • changes in the incentive structure for business research and development
  • improved startup and early-stage financing
  • embedding research and development in public procurement.

Echoing previous reviews, Ambitious Australia also called on the federal government to establish a new national innovation council. This body would set priorities and coordinate efforts to meet goals across six national innovation ‘pillars’ in:

  • health and medical
  • agriculture and food
  • defence
  • environment and energy
  • resources
  • technology.

Overall, the idea is to promote more efficient teamwork across these pillars between government, business, investors and researchers on ‘high-risk, high-impact’ challenges.

What could work better

The problem with this approach is that while the motivation is sound, the bureaucratic complexity of the new structure may prove a drawback. This is especially the case when it comes to getting industry involved.

As a number of submissions, including one from the Business Council of Australia, suggested, Australia should be following the lead of countries like Germany, the UK and US, which have built a network of collaborative research and innovation hubs in specific locations.

For instance, the UK Catapult centres bring together some of the UK’s top businesses, scientists, technical specialists and engineers to work side by side. In doing so, they bridge the gap between research and industry.

This is not a new idea. About 30 years ago, then-Prime Minister Paul Keating’s “Innovate Australia” policy statement favoured a similar model, with the CSIRO and universities as an engine for industrial transformation.

However, as with so many policy statements and reports, it became a casualty of a change of government. The Rudd-Gillard government’s Venturous Australia report suffered a similar fate.

Gaps to be filled

The recommendations in the report are mostly compelling. But there are still some significant gaps.

For example, the report offered no view on whether the current research and development tax incentive represented better value for taxpayer money than direct targeted funding.

Nor did it address the crucial role of management in improving productivity by engaging with workforces and building their capacity to adopt and adapt to new technology, such as embodied artificial intelligence in manufacturing.

And then there’s Australia’s regions. These can play a vital part in the research and innovation system because they address the related challenges of energy transition and economic diversification.

A separate report on the government’s Energy Industry Jobs Plan goes some way to filling this gap.

What’s next

Ambitious Australia outlines many recommendations whose time has surely come – especially given the federal government’s vision for a “Future Made in Australia”.

The challenge now is to work through the report in the lead-up to the 2027 federal budget and beyond. We must also ensure strategic intent is matched by transformative actions.The Conversation

The Conversation

 

Roy Green, Emeritus Professor of Innovation, University of Technology Sydney. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

 

  •   25 March 2026
  • 8
  •      
  •   
8 Comments
CC
March 26, 2026

Australia has become bogged down in obsession with property, property , property, high personal taxation, and lots of excessive OH&S and red tape at the expense of innovation and productivity growth

5
Dr David Arelette
March 26, 2026

The Stump-Jump Plow was not a Government innovation so for 150 years Government innovation has been largely an illusion. Access a Chinese solar panel plant which lives in a company village of young workers in dormatories (and great sports and living facilties) so it runs 24/7 to access the maximum scale and lowest price, one has 19 Chinese Directors with German engineering PhDs on their board who work in product development - tell me how the still imaginary Future Made in Australia panel plant is going to out innovate this model ? Open to take bets from believers in this illusion.

4
Steve
March 26, 2026

I hate the word because it has been totally bastardised but innovation is really a culture thing, and most of our business leaders have no idea. When you work in an innovative business everyone just knows it is a great thing, but often (too often) it is lead by one very talented person. Importantly they have top management support and respect, and are usually great mentors. You can see how fragile this can be. I agree with the earlier comment about taking on China at manufacturing but if we were to identify a possible area we could do better it might be secondary processing of our own minerals. Often this adds a zero to the selling price versus the raw ore. But such ventures often need cheap energy to be globally competitive and we can see the clash with our current policies in that one. I am not sure universities or government outfits are capable of addressing the issue, as mentioned previously they excel in bureaucracy but have little idea about productivity. A dismal outlook I'm afraid.

4
Errol
March 26, 2026

Australia has become a very uncertain place to do business (e.g. policy and taxation). Government is unpredictable and will support favoured businesses through subsidies or cripple those not meeting their ideology.

Add to that our non existent productivity improvements, overzealous unions, complex HR rules, comparatively high wages and it’s difficult to see how we can create an environment that fosters innovation. Our great medical breakthroughs over recent years prove that it can be done but in the main, these successes are outliers.

4
Steve
March 27, 2026

Agreed Errol. R&D/innovation are great, but the basic business needs to be viable in the first place. High costs (wages, energy, getting anything constructed etc) make us very uncompetitive. The best area for us to invest would be value-adding our own extensive mineral resources but our current energy policy will kill any dreams there - morally easier to import energy intensive products (like fertilizer, made from natural gas which we have plenty of!) than do it ourselves. Net zero difference to the climate whether we do it or Qatar of course. Just look at how Indonesia killed our entire nickel refining industry in a very short time. So even where we have a "natural advantage" we can't get it right. And then we're going to take on China making solar panels. Ludicrous isn't even scratching the surface.

2
Walter Flicker
March 26, 2026

A problem is that we don't have any Australian manufacturing companies any more - those that are left are foreign owned and foreign directed. We should follow the high growth Israeli model of nurturing clever startups - and we have tons of money to do this in the superannuation funds who fund foreign startups (through private equity, etc) rather than Australian firms. We have great scientists and engineers with great new technologies who can't get supported in this country.

4
David
March 26, 2026

Listened to Senator Tim Ayers at the National Press club the other day. His talk was right on this subject. Full of idealism. I hope he achieves something good, but history is against him. Australian business does not want to go down this path, unless there are government handouts, like the $2B to save the Boyne Aluminium Smelter. This is really to save jobs, and fair enough. But is the aluminium industry going the way of the car industry? Probably. It requires cheap 24x7 power and lots of it. A perfect match to coal fired power, but hopeless for renewables as things stand at the moment.

3
 

Leave a Comment:

RELATED ARTICLES

Smart automation provides competitive edge

banner

Most viewed in recent weeks

Want your loved ones to inherit your super? You can’t afford to skip this one step

One in five Australians die before retirement and most have not set up their super properly so their loved ones can benefit from all their hard work and savings. 

Indexation implications – key changes to 2026/27 super thresholds

Stay on top of the latest changes to superannuation rates and thresholds for 2026, including increases to transfer balance cap, concessional contributions cap, and non-concessional contributions cap.

Has Australia wasted the last 30 years?

The 20 years after Peter Costello left Treasury have been deemed wasted...by Peter Costello. The missed opportunities for Australia began long before.  

Super is catching up, but ageing is a triple-threat

An ageing Australia is shifting the superannuation system’s focus from accumulation to the lifecycle of retirement. While these pressures have been anticipated for decades, they are now converging at scale and driving widespread industry change.

The refinery problem: A different kind of energy crisis in 2026

The Strait of Hormuz closure due to US-Iran conflict severely disrupted global energy supply chains. While various emergency measures mitigated the crude impact, the refined product market faces unprecedented stress.

3 ways to defuse intergenerational anger

With the upcoming budget increasingly likely to include bold proposals to alter the tax code I’ve outlined three incremental steps with fewer unintended consequences.

Latest Updates

Investment strategies

War can’t be good, can it?

War brings immense human suffering and geopolitical chaos, but historically, equity markets have shown a certain detachment and resilience amid conflict, leading to increased profitability despite initial panic.

Property

Origins of the mislabeled capital gains tax ‘discount’

Debate over the CGT discount is intensifying amid concerns about intergenerational equity and housing affordability. This analysis shows that the 'discount' does not necessarily favor property investors.

Superannuation

Div 296 may mean your estate pays tax on assets your beneficiaries never receive

The new super tax, applying from 1 July, introduces more than just a higher rate on large balances. It brings into focus a misalignment between where wealth sits and where the tax on that wealth ultimately falls.

Investment strategies

There’s more to software than just code

AI-driven fears of collapsing software moats has triggered indiscriminate sell-offs. This has created mispricing opportunities as markets overreact to uncertainty and rising discount rates.

Economics

Europe: A new growth trajectory powered by reform and investment

Europe is undergoing a major transformation driven by security threats, US pressure, and a shift from austerity to growth. EU member states are taking proactive measures to enhance competitiveness and resilience.

Investment strategies

Orbital AI data centers prepare for launch

The new space race is driven by AI as data centers in space offer continuous solar power and reduced environmental impact. Orbital AI aims to speed data processing and ease Earth's resource strains.

Retirement

Little‑known government scheme can help retirees tap into $3 trillion of housing wealth

The Home Equity Access Scheme in Australia allows older homeowners to tap into their home equity for retirement income, yet remains underused due to lack of awareness and its perceived complexity.

Sponsors

Alliances

© 2026 Morningstar, Inc. All rights reserved.

Disclaimer
The data, research and opinions provided here are for information purposes; are not an offer to buy or sell a security; and are not warranted to be correct, complete or accurate. Morningstar, its affiliates, and third-party content providers are not responsible for any investment decisions, damages or losses resulting from, or related to, the data and analyses or their use. To the extent any content is general advice, it has been prepared for clients of Morningstar Australasia Pty Ltd (ABN: 95 090 665 544, AFSL: 240892), without reference to your financial objectives, situation or needs. For more information refer to our Financial Services Guide. You should consider the advice in light of these matters and if applicable, the relevant Product Disclosure Statement before making any decision to invest. Past performance does not necessarily indicate a financial product’s future performance. To obtain advice tailored to your situation, contact a professional financial adviser. Articles are current as at date of publication.
This website contains information and opinions provided by third parties. Inclusion of this information does not necessarily represent Morningstar’s positions, strategies or opinions and should not be considered an endorsement by Morningstar.