Major manufacturing and clean energy projects will be funded in the upcoming federal budget as Anthony Albanese flags a possible tightening of foreign investment rules.
The prime minister unveiled the Future Made in Australia Act on Thursday, which would advance manufacturing and safeguard the nation’s control over resources and critical minerals.
The plan has been likened to the Inflation Reduction Act in the US.
Mr Albanese said there would be new money in the May budget for the initiative.
“You will see new programs, new funding and new opportunities working with business,” he told ABC’s 7.30 on Thursday night.
“One of the things we have been doing is collaborating very closely with our scientists, with our researchers, with the opportunities which are there, but also with Australian-based businesses.”
However parts of the plan have drawn concern from the government’s own chair of the Productivity Commission, Danielle Wood.
“We risk creating a class of businesses that is reliant on government subsidies and that can be very effective in coming back for more,” she told the Australian Financial Review.
Danielle Wood is concerned about creating a business class reliant on subsidies. (Dean Lewins/AAP PHOTOS)
Opposition Leader Peter Dutton said the criticism from the chair represented a concern.
“The fact is that over the last two years, manufacturing businesses have gone into bankruptcy, it’s gone up by 300 per cent,” he told Nine’s Today program on Friday.
“We know the energy system is broken, the government’s renewables only policy is driving up the price of your electricity bill at home but it is for business as well and that’s what’s fuelling inflation.”
But government services minister Bill Shorten said there was a need to increase manufacturing in Australia.
“We need to be more sovereign in this country and sometimes that will involve government assistance,” he said.
“If you just leave it to the market, all this country will be will be a bank and a quarry.”
Mr Albanese said the policy aimed to secure “greater sovereignty over our resources and critical minerals”.
Asked if the government was considering strengthening foreign investment rules, Mr Albanese said Labor was prepared to.
“If it’s not working, we will always look for national sovereignty,” he said.
“We welcome, of course, support from foreign investment here in Australia.
“It will play an important role in this transition.”
Asked if Australia would implement Canadian-style restrictions on critical minerals, Mr Albanese said the government wanted to make sure the nation was not just exporting raw materials.
“There’s been investment in extraction but not investment in value-adding, creating jobs,” he said.
“Because that’s how you create jobs and that’s how you also protect our national sovereignty – by making sure we remain a country that makes things here.”
Critical minerals are needed for the clean energy transition and are used for electric vehicles and other technology.
The government’s plan has been welcomed by business groups urging careful consideration for investment.
Source: AAP
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