All the tech within the 2021 Australian Budget

Here's a summary of the Australian government's digital economy strategy, as 
well as the rest of the tech-related investments made as part of the 2021-22 
federal Budget.

By Asha Barbaschow  |  May 11, 2021 -- 22:36 AEST  |  Topic: Innovation
https://www.zdnet.com/article/all-the-tech-within-the-2021-australian-budget/


The federal government officially released its 2021-22 Budget on Tuesday, after 
teasing the masses with a handful of pre-released initiatives in the weeks 
leading up to Treasurer Josh Frydenberg's third Budget night speech.

The big-ticket tech item was the digital economy strategy, to which the 
government has pledged nearly AU$1 billion.
(https://www.zdnet.com/article/budget-2021-digital-economy-strategy-gets-nearly-au1-billion/)

Describing the investment as "delivering a modern and digital economy to drive 
Australia's future prosperity", the strategy covers cybersecurity, artificial 
intelligence, digital skills, drones, data, SME digitisation, investment 
incentives, and enhancing government service delivery.

As cybersecurity, safety, and trust "are the keystone of our digital economy", 
the Budget is pledging:

AU$31.7 million to secure future connectivity using 5G and 6G mobile networks;
Improved standards for trusted identities that underpin the digital environment;
Strengthen Australia's data security settings through the development of a 
National Data Security Action Plan;
The piloting of Cyber Hubs, which government hopes will see Canberra's biggest 
IT shops help to "improve resilience and cyber security maturity of government 
agencies";
and AU$16.4 million over three years for the Peri-Urban Mobile Program to 
improve mobile phone connectivity in the bushfire prone areas of the peri-urban 
fringe of Australia's major cities.

The government is funding AI to the tune of AU$124.2 million:

AU$53.8 million over four years to create the National Artificial Intelligence 
Centre, housed within CSRIO's Data61;
AU$33.7 million over four years for initiatives that support Australian 
businesses in partnering with government to pilot projects for "AI‑based 
solutions to national challenges";
AU$24.7 million over six years to be given to the Next Generation Artificial 
Intelligence Graduates Program to attract and train "home-grown, job-ready AI 
specialists";
and over a period of five years, AU$12 million to be spent on "catalysing the 
AI opportunity in our regions" by co-funding up to 36 competitive grants to 
develop AI solutions that address local or regional problems.

Digital skills as a "key to productivity" will see:

AU$10.7 million to be shared by the "Digital Skills Cadetship Trial" to deliver 
work-based learning opportunities for in-demand digital jobs;
AU$22.6 million for the "Next Generation Emerging Technology Graduates Program" 
that will provide more than 200 scholarships in emerging technologies;
and $43.8 million for the expansion of its Cyber Security Skills Partnership 
Innovation Fund to fund additional innovative projects to quickly improve the 
quality and quantity of cybersecurity professionals in Australia.

There was also a focus on emerging aviation tech, such as drones, through:

A two-year, AU$32.6 million investment in an Emerging Aviation Technology 
Partnerships program to "support the use of emerging aviation technologies to 
address priority community, mobility, and cargo needs in regional Australia";
A pledge to work on a new the National Emerging Aviation Technology Policy 
Statement to set the framework for managing new aviation technologies;
The creation of a framework for a Drone Rule Management System, to be developed 
alongside state and territory governments to result in a consistent framework 
for drone operating restrictions to be submitted, assessed, and implemented;
and the development of a National Drone Detection Network.

Under the "data and the digital economy" banner, the government is hoping its 
Data Availability and Transparency Bill 2020 passes through Parliament. In 
addition, it is :

Developing an Australian Data Strategy to "create a data-driven economy through 
better data use";
Ear-marking AU$16.5 million for a pilot program to make the government's data 
assets discoverable and support whole-of-economy reuse;
Allocating AU$111.3 million to support the acceleration of the Consumer Data 
Right rollout, including to the energy and telco sectors;
and pledging AU$40.2 million to deliver the Digital Atlas of Australia, which 
is aiming to make better use of over 90,000 open datasets to create a secure, 
dynamic, location-based and collaborative public data platform".

Under "SME digitisation", AU$28 million will be spent on two initiatives:

AU$12.7 million to provide independent advice to Australian small businesses to 
help them build their digital capabilities through the "Digital Solutions – 
Australian Small Business Advisory Services program";
and AU$15.3 million to enhance the value of electronic invoicing to help 
businesses reduce costs and increase productivity.

Investment incentives in this year's Budget are:

Providing a "digital games tax offset" for qualifying Australian games 
expenditure to eligible businesses, which will see the introduction of a 30% 
refundable tax offset for eligible businesses that spend a minimum of 
AU$500,000 on qualifying Australian games expenditure;
The ability for taxpayers to self-assess the effective life of certain 
depreciating intangible assets;
and the announcement the government would be undertaking assessment review of 
the venture capital tax concessions to ensure they are achieving their intended 
objectives.
In a bid to enhance government service delivery, and make good on its promise 
to bring government services online by 2025, the digital economy strategy also 
pledges AU$200.1 million to enhance myGov -- a single portal to access all 
government services -- to deliver a "simpler and more tailored experience for 
Australians based on their preferences and interactions". This will include a 
digital assistant or chatbot.

Also in the Budget is AU$301.8 million for enhancing the My Health Record 
system, adding support for COVID-19 testing and vaccinations, connecting 
residential aged care facilities and connecting specialists in private 
practice, and delivering improved telehealth, emerging virtual healthcare 
initiatives, and digitised support.

Outside of the digital economy strategy, Canberra has also opened the purse to 
continue a handful of existing projects, such as funding for Services Australia 
and the Department of Finance to support its work on building and delivering 
"modernised government technology" for managing accounts, resources, and the 
Australian Public Service, through its shared enterprise resource planning 
technology platform, GovERP.

The government will also provide funding, but it has not disclosed how much, to 
support the continuation of the Cashless Debit Card (CDC).

The government will also provide AU$2.6 million over four years from 2021-22 to 
support Australian business participation in Commonwealth procurement.

Changes to Employee Share Schemes were also made to help Australian companies 
to engage and retain the talent they need to compete on a global stage.

This was accompanied by a "patent box" to drive research in medical and biotech 
technologies, and support skilled jobs by encouraging companies to base their 
R&D laboratories in Australia.

The Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO), meanwhile, has been 
given a 10-year funding boost as part of the 2021 federal Budget, walking away 
with AU$1.3 billion of the AU$1.9 billion allocated to enhancing Australia's 
national security capabilities.

The funding also includes a handful of measures for three yet-to-be-passed 
security Bills: The Security Legislation Amendment (Critical Infrastructure) 
Bill 2020, Telecommunications Legislation Amendment (International Production 
Orders) Bill 2020, and the Surveillance Legislation Amendment (Identify and 
Disrupt) Bill 2020.

A AU$387 million, 10-year pledge to meet Australia's commitments to co-host the 
Square Kilometre Array (SKA) Observatory was also made.

AU$301.4 million will be used for the construction and operation of the Square 
Kilometre Array Observatory; AU$64.3 million has been allocated to the data 
processing centre, which will be located at the Pawsey Supercomputing Centre in 
Western Australia; and the remaining funding will go to site readiness and 
fibre optic connections.

The space sector will also get a boost, with the provision of an additional 
AU$13.3 million over four years from 2021-22, and AU$3.3 million per year 
ongoing, to the Australian Space Agency to increase its regulatory and 
technical advisory capacity under the Space (Launches and Returns) Act 2018 and 
support the growth of the industry.

The government will also be investing AU$204.6 million into telehealth, 
renegotiating the AU$114 million promise to extend the services that were 
introduced initially in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, until the end of the 
year.

AU$111.2 million over four years, meanwhile, will be used to expand and enhance 
the nation's digital mental health services to provide Australians with easier 
access to high quality digital mental health services.

The Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA) will get AU$4.2 
million to "support the implementation and administration" of the News Media 
and Digital Platforms Mandatory Bargaining Code.

The federal government also announced it would be ploughing an additional 
AU$130 million into the "hugely popular" Regional Connectivity Program (RCP).

The funding has been broken down into AU$106 million for a second round of the 
RCP, of which AU$45.6 million has been "quarantined" for Northern Australia, 
and almost AU$25 million for additional "shovel-ready" projects in round one.

The Budget papers also revealed the extent to which NBN has met its loan 
obligations.

"The Australian government has provided a loan of AU$19.5 billion to NBN Co, on 
commercial terms, which was fully drawn in July 2020. The loan was established 
in December 2016 and must be repaid in full by 30 June 2024," it said. "AU$3 
billion was repaid in December 2020 and a further AU$2.6 billion was repaid in 
May 2021, with an outstanding balance of AU$13.9 billion expected as at 30 June 
2021."

Under the headline of "Building Australia's Resilience", the federal government 
has set aside AU$1.2 billion over four years to improve how Australia prepares, 
responds, and recovers from natural disasters.

A small portion of that funding, AU$2.2 million over two years, will be used to 
design a "cell broadcast national messaging system" that is intended to 
"provide information to the Australian public concerning events of national 
significance".

---
_______________________________________________
Link mailing list
[email protected]
https://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link

Reply via email to