The forecast fall 鈥 calculated from Government figures in Budget papers 鈥 would see Government investment in R&D fall to just half a percent of GDP in 2018-19. That鈥檚 lower than in 1978.
The stark warning comes ahead of Monday鈥檚 mid-year Budget update, which is expected to outline the total size of cuts to Australia鈥檚 university research funding foreshadowed last month.
黑料老司机 Chief Executive Catriona Jackson urged the Government to rethink the research funding cuts anticipated in MYEFO and 鈥渕ake the right decision for Australia鈥檚 future鈥.
鈥淐uts to university research funding are cuts to Australia鈥檚 ability to deliver desperately-needed research breakthroughs, cures, treatments and life-changing programs,鈥 she said.
鈥淓very patient group, every family with a child falling behind at school, every farming community – indeed every single Australian 鈥 has a stake in keeping the uni research breakthroughs coming.鈥
鈥淚t鈥檚 folly for the Australian Government to cut uni research funding again when its own Budget data already forecasts a plunge to a four-decade low in its R&D investment as a share of GDP.鈥
Smart nations are lifting their overall investment in R&D 鈥 yet Australia鈥檚 has fallen to 1.88 per cent of GDP. The average is 2.36 per cent across the world鈥檚 advanced economies.
The dire forecast comes as a new campaign is launched today to tell the stories of everyday Australians whose lives have or will be transformed by Australian university research.
The campaign 鈥 #UniResearchChangesLives 鈥 features Australians talking about how their lives, and the lives of others just like them, have been improved.
It includes research breakthroughs that developed a vaccine to eradicate cervical cancer, simpler processes for family violence survivors in the courts, and ways to heal brain injuries.
Ms Jackson said the campaign would also encourage other Australians to share their stories of how university research has saved or improved their lives.
Family violence survivor Helen, who has told her story in one of the first videos of the campaign, said 鈥淚 think university research is absolutely critical鈥.
“It shines a light that demonstrates the need for change. We were the clever country, we need to continue to be the clever country,鈥 she said.
Stroke survivor and retiree Kevin English said if uni brain injury research had been available when he had his stroke, he would have had much better recovery from paralysis in his arm.
鈥淯niversity research is particularly good for fundamental research and working on things that don鈥檛 immediately have a commercial outcome,鈥 he said.
鈥淗aving the freedom to investigate things over a more extended period of time is very valuable.鈥
Watch the #uniresearchchangeslives videos聽.