
- a history of confused and often conflicting messaging about what is meant by priority areas and national interest in determining research funding
- the government’s failure – after eight years in office – to achieve its aspirations for research commercialisation
- the government’s loss of trust in the ARC.
ARC CEO Sue Thomas will “step down before the end of her five-year term.”
— Jacqui Ramagge (@jacquiavelli) December 14, 2021
National priorities to be used as selection criteria; "at least 70 per cent of the [Linkage] grants to fall within one of the government’s six manufacturing priorities."https://t.co/JC1Ie0fs15
Looks a lot like government picking winners
The ARC administers the National Competitive Grants Program. This program invests about A$800 million a year in the highest-quality fundamental and applied research across all disciplines other than clinical and medical research, which is funded through the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC). Importantly, 40% of this allocation is committed through the ARC Linkage Program. This program funds collaborative projects between universities and industry and community organisations. The end game is to stimulate the transfer of skills and knowledge to deliver public benefit. The minister is now demanding that 70% of the Linkage Program funding goes to the government’s National Manufacturing Priorities. The six priorities were devised as part of the 2020 Make it Happen: the Australian Government’s Modern Manufacturing Strategy. A number of these already enjoy significant government support.#ARC commercialisation process outlined in full: https://t.co/7ZsFLBg9Z6 @ARC_Tracker
— Dr Elizabeth Buchanan (@BuchananLiz) December 15, 2021
Years of rhetoric for little return
By devaluing non-manufacturing-related research, the manoeuvre has unwittingly created possible disincentives within the broader research sector for undertaking collaborative research. Throughout its nearly decade-long concern with improving university-industry engagement to ensure researchers’ work translates to benefits for end users, the government has adopted motivational tactics. For example, the Research Block Grant, involving performance-based funding for universities, underwent a change of formula in 2015 to reward universities for securing industry and other such funding. And the ARC’s Engagement and Impact Assessment, announced as part of the 2015 National Innovation and Science Agenda, was meant to magically enhance engagement, even though outcomes do not translate to performance funding.Quick summary of Australian research funding:
— ARC Tracker (@ARC_Tracker) December 14, 2021
– 7000 research jobs gone.
– Edu. Minister stood down.
– ARC CEO standing down.
– Grants starting in 2 weeks not yet announced.
– No schedule for largest scheme to open.
Government's priority? "More translational research please"⁉️ https://t.co/ovhctSUuck
Playing the national interest card again
Another interesting demand in the minister’s letter is a strengthening of the National Interest Test (NIT). This includes expanding the College of Experts charged with applying the test and making recommendations to the minister. The National Interest Test itself is a ministerial invention devised to exonerate the foolhardy actions of a former minister. It was hastily cobbled together in 2018 following a controversy over the rejection by the then education minister, Simon Birmingham, of 11 ARC-approved grants.Some questions for Simon Birmingham, from two researchers whose ARC grant he quashed https://t.co/4k40QIiX6I via @ConversationEDU
— Sharon Pickering (@ProfSPickering) October 29, 2018