Australia鈥檚 university workforce is more dedicated to research than ever before, but curiosity-driven research has become the smallest ever part of its mission.
A new report says the share of research spending channelled into pure basic research has halved over the past three decades. And outlay on basic research has declined in real terms over the past decade, even though research expenditure has risen substantially over that period.
Meanwhile, the proportion of academics with research-only roles has tripled since 1992, reaching 36 per cent of the university research workforce in 2021. The coronavirus pandemic intensified this trend, with most job losses in teaching-research positions.
The figures appear in the sixth edition of Australian National University policy analyst Andrew Norton鈥檚 series 鈥 the first since he left the Grattan Institute thinktank in 2019.
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Professor Norton said the 鈥渧ery strong push to meet industry needs rather than pursue more blue-sky research topics鈥 was part of a longstanding trend of policy shifts dictated by the demands of government and business rather than students or academics.
Broad-purpose block grants聽had declined in favour of 鈥渕ore specialised鈥 research funding streams, he said. 鈥淕overnment has become much keener to know what it鈥檚 getting for its money than it was in earlier times.鈥
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He said the shift to applied research was curious given universities鈥 declining reliance on public research grants. 鈥淕overnment is now a less important funder of research than it [was] 20 or 30 years ago. You would think that the universities have more of their own research funding聽that they can use as they please, but it hasn鈥檛 been used on the whole on basic research.
鈥淕overnment sets the lead even though it鈥檚 not dominating the funding. [It] has a greater influence on what [universities are] doing than the funding alone would suggest.鈥
The report speculates that the lion鈥檚 share of some A$5.7 billion (拢3 billion) of 鈥渦nexplained鈥 research expenditure is generated through teaching profits, mostly from international students. Professor Norton said this revenue stream had 鈥減ropped up鈥 a teaching-research employment model that was 鈥渘o longer supported鈥 by the funding system.
鈥淚f you go back to the early 1990s, most of the money came through an operating grant that was both for teaching and research. Over the decades, those two things have been split into two respective functions鈥ith no guarantee that these will align at university faculty or individual academic level.鈥
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This explained why the pandemic-induced decline in international enrolments had caused such steep job losses among teaching-research academics, even though student demand had risen in the early stages of the pandemic.
The report says the university research workforce declined by 4 per cent in 2021, 鈥渞eflecting financial losses from fewer international students鈥. Universities鈥 international tuition fee revenue declined by 6 per cent in 2020 and 8 per cent in 2021, according to institutional financial accounts.
The report shows that public confidence in Australian universities declined by 10 percentage points between 2019 and 2023, notwithstanding the sector鈥檚 contribution to the Covid-19 health response.
Professor Norton said this could reflect dissatisfaction with online learning, underpayment of casual academics or universities鈥 involvement in 鈥渃ulture war鈥 controversies. But he noted that similar declines in confidence had occurred in 2005 and 2016. 鈥淚t might just be some temporary period of negative publicity.鈥
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