| 9.1  | 
                        The most important role of government in  assisting a sector is to disseminate information, facilitate industry links and  provide advice within an overarching direction based on sound policy research.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 9.2 | 
                        The overriding view expressed in the inquiry’s  evidence was that government manufacturing policy needs to strike the right  balance between allowing the market to operate freely yet assisting where market  failure is recognised. Furthermore, there is a need to balance the pros and  cons of the form of assistance offered, as noted by Professor Mark Dodgson,  director of the Technology and Innovation Management Centre, University of  Queensland—appearing before the committee in a private capacity, in  reference to research and development tax concessions: 
You have the big, clumsy, relatively inexpensive to administer schemes  like R&D [tax concession] supports or you have the more targeted grant type  schemes, which are very expensive to administer. No-one has got the balance right.  No-one knows what the balance is.1                             | 
                      
                      
                        | 9.3 | 
                        Indirect support is not always effective. It may  just be a gift to companies for doing something they were doing anyway, rather  than encouraging an activity with benefits to the broader community.2                              | 
                      
                      
                        | 9.4  | 
                        Australian government grants aim to fulfil one  or more of the goals of the three pillars of current industry policy, namely,  global integration; Australian innovation; and to a lesser extent, investment.  The bulk of grants to the manufacturing sector are geared towards providing  innovation assistance.3 The Export Market Development Grants scheme (EMDG) administered by the  Australian Trade Commission (Austrade), and the Supplier Access to Major  Projects programme administered by the Industry Capability Network, are  designed to assist industry penetrate global markets or enhance import  competitiveness.                             | 
                      
                      
                        | 9.5  | 
                        The committee heard considerable evidence on the  merits and deficiencies of specific support programmes (discussed throughout  this report) as well as the overall effectiveness and accessibility of the  suite of programmes. This chapter will concentrate on the latter.   | 
                      
                                            
                      
                        | 9.6  | 
                        Appendix D lists the Australian Government’s suite  of industry support programmes applicable to the manufacturing sector while  Appendix H details the role of the Australian Government agencies that support  the manufacturing sector.   | 
                      
                      
                         | 
                          | 
                      
                      
                        Direct government support issues | 
                        
                      
                        | 9.7 | 
                        The committee heard input during the inquiry  about the problems associated with seeking, applying for and acquitting direct  government assistance, and how, at a high level, support programmes to the  sector could be improved.  | 
                      
                      
                         | 
                          | 
                      
                      
                        Paperwork and compliance burdens | 
                        
                      
                        | 9.8  | 
                        Applying for grants and meeting compliance  requirements can be extremely time consuming and costly, particularly for small  to medium manufacturers. However, when governments provide merit-based funding  on a transparent and accountable basis, some degree of paperwork and evaluation  is inevitable and necessary.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 9.9  | 
                        The Government’s objective of providing  equitable access to accountable and effective support programmes must be  balanced with a reasonable level of resources utilised by manufacturers to meet  programme requirements. Applying for support programmes should not unduly  divert resources away from manufacturers’ primary tasks.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 9.10 | 
                        The committee heard of application processes  being inordinately demanding on manufacturers’ resources. The Council of  Textile and Fashion Industries of Australia Ltd noted huge paperwork and  eligibility hurdles: 
                          This needs to also incorporate a  removal of the bureaucracy accompanying government assistance programs such as  70 page contractual agreements for small business grants of no more than  $50,000, quarterly reporting which takes more time to complete than the project  and access to effective assistance for companies seeking to complete an  application.4                             | 
                      
                      
                        | 9.11 | 
                        The Standing Committee  on Science and Innovation’s Pathways to  Technological Innovation report also highlights the difficulties and time associated  with navigating the innovation programme maze. The report cites Mr Johansson  from Gazelle Monitoring systems as saying: 
                          In May 2003, we applied for COMET [Commercialising Emerging Technologies  program] funding. We were told we were too early [the development of the  technology was not sufficiently advanced]...And it went on until September 2004  when we approached somebody who told us we were too advanced—this is six months  after we were told we were too early: ‘You are eligible for R&D Start but  that finishes this week; you will be eligible for Commercial Ready, which  starts in October.’ ... In October, the email arrives. I apply for Com-ready.  We were confirmed that we were too advanced for COMET, but we did not have  enough software development for Com-ready...We basically thought this was just  too hard, and we kept on going down the path of running our business without  government funding.5                             | 
                      
                      
                        | 9.12 | 
                        The Australian Electrical and Electronic  Manufacturers’ Association (AEEMA) discussed the considerable time spent in  responding to programme evaluation exercises: 
                          One could say that the processes that have been put in place with the  form filling and the KPIs [key performance indicators] that are created to  check it, make the programs very inflexible and make it very difficult for  people. So at the end of the period companies say, ‘Thank goodness that is over;  we can now do what we really need to do, rather than the box-ticking exercise  that was set by the public servants.’ ...a lot of the programs are based on  that and a lot of the companies do not have the resources to be able to  administer that level of detail.6                             | 
                      
                      
                        | 9.13  | 
                        Dr   Hadrian Fraval  of Science Industry Australia (SIA) remarked that small businesses may not have  the wherewithal to apply for a grant or assistance programme. In particular, he  noted that when the outlay to secure a grant is a very high proportion of the  eventual assistance they may receive, they may not even bother to apply: ‘The question is: is it worth the effort? ...  If it’s going to cost us $50,000 in order to get $70,000, is it really worth  it?’7                             | 
                      
                      
                        | 9.14 | 
                        This  was echoed by the Australian Steel Institute: 
                          I have heard quotes that it costs you $100,000 to get $95,000. There is  a balance between due diligence with government funds and getting it to the  right people.8                             | 
                      
                      
                        | 9.15 | 
                        The SIA submission referred to the Australian  Industry Group’s 2006 Manufacturing  Futures report which gave many examples of the administrative burden in  proving the grant’s aim had been met. Much of this amounted to proving ‘additionality’—that  but for the grant, the work or expenditure would not have been undertaken.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 9.16 | 
                        SIA  suggested reshaping innovation grant programmes into stepped processes so that  programme steps aligned with business stages or goals. By providing smaller  grants to align with business stages the success of the programme could be more  easily demonstrated and future funding could depend on earlier success. This is  an approach undertaken by US  support agencies. SIA contend that if application and evaluation processes were  streamlined with project stages, it would lead to productivity gains.9                              | 
                      
                      
                         | 
                          | 
                      
                      
                        Programme stability | 
                        
                      
                        | 9.17  | 
                        Assistance programme changes are unsettling and require  time to research and interpret. Sometimes a programme’s inherent budgetary  structure, like that of the EMDG, means that a grant outcome, irrespective of  meeting eligibility criteria, is uncertain. Consequently, the Committee heard that many businesses do not even  bother to apply for assistance given the effort and cost involved in  continually updating understanding of the programme requirements.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 9.18 | 
                        During the past twelve months the major  assistance programmes have undergone either eligible criteria changes (EMDG and  Industry Cooperative Innovation Programme) or have received annexed programmes  (Supplier Access to Major Projects Global). Others, like Commercial Ready, have  been re-branded in the last few years.10 In addition, the 2007 Industry Statement announced further changes including  Commercial Ready Plus, a scheme that is identical to the existing Commercial Ready  scheme but enables smaller grant applicants (up to $250 000) a more streamlined  application process.                              | 
                      
                      
                        | 9.19 | 
                        Many changes lead to reduced applicant  confidence. At a hearing in Melbourne, Mr Nixon Apple, formerly an Austrade board member  for 15 years, noted that the lack of programme continuity prevents businesses  from planning ahead: 
                          We [the Austrade board] would have reviewed the EMDG scheme about once  every two years. If you are the chief financial officer and your export manager  comes and tells you, ‘This is what I want to do and this is what I’ll get back  from the EMDG’, you will just shake your head at him because the rules of the  game will change in year three of his export plans. So continuity is a very  important criterion.11                             | 
                      
                      
                        | 9.20 | 
                        NEC agreed that lack of certainty in government  incentives means they do not factor these programmes into their business plans.  Instead, if they receive them they are an ‘after-the-act’12 bonus.                              | 
                      
                      
                        | 9.21  | 
                        The Australian Manufacturing Workers’ Union attributed continuity of government programmes as  being key to the success of manufacturing sectors in other countries: 
                          A key reason for the success of Ireland and Singapore in  capacity expansion by firms in knowledge intensive industries has been the  long-term continuity of the incentives provided. The need for bipartisan  support to keep the new arrangements in place for at least a decade is vital.13                             | 
                      
                      
                        | 9.22  | 
                        On the flipside, a positive aspect of frequent  programme changes is that industry’s concerns can be met as they arise. This  was reflected in evidence—early in the inquiry process the committee heard  industry concerns about aspects of programmes which, by the end of the inquiry,  had been addressed. Examples include the increase in the eligible turnover cap  in Commercial Ready and the changed guidelines for the Industry Cooperative  Innovation Programme which clarified its international focus. The Commercial  Ready change preceded a government response to the parliamentary report Pathways to Technological Innovation, which recommended this.  | 
                      
                      
                         | 
                          | 
                      
                      
                        Providers, programmes and portals | 
                        
                      
                        | 9.23 | 
                        A number of different government departments and  agencies administer grants for the manufacturing industry. Those most relevant  to manufacturing are administered by AusIndustry and Austrade and some through  the Australian Customs Service.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 9.24 | 
                        The committee heard that when grants are  administered by a variety of agencies it is not only confusing for manufacturers,  but leads to information gaps and lack of policy unity: 
                          Programs and agencies such as Austrade, the Export Market Development  Scheme, the Export Finance and Insurance Corporation, Tradex, Duty Drawback,  and improvements to the depreciation scheme are noted as examples of the  measures government has introduced to improve exporters’ ability to compete in  international markets. While these programs can be beneficial in isolated  instances, most are non-integrated, ad-hoc and hampered by bureaucratic and  administrative burdens for (generally) small companies that have neither the  time nor the resources to complete the prolix application processes...14                             | 
                      
                      
                        | 9.25 | 
                        The report of the House Standing Committee on Science and Innovation, Pathways to Technological Innovation, recorded  169 innovation programmes in existence across the Commonwealth, state and  territory governments. There are in excess of 20 ‘parent’ industry assistance  programmes in the Industry Tourism and Resources portfolio alone and a number  of these have supplementary or ‘subsidiary’ programmes. This may reflect the  culture of the department given the number one priority of its Strategic Plan 2006–09 is that of  ‘implementing new measures’. | 
                      
                      
                        | 9.26 | 
                        Further to the suite of programmes on offer,  individual programmes have various goals and eligibility complexities, making  it difficult for manufacturers to determine readily what is suitable for their  business. This is particularly so for small to medium sized manufacturers  (SMEs): 
                          SMEs have a more acute difficulty than larger and more sophisticated  firms in dealing with government and understanding what programs are available.15                             | 
                      
                      
                        | 9.27 | 
                        To address part of this issue the Australian Government,  with support from the states and territories, has initiated a one stop business  portal called the ‘Business Entry Point’16 (BEP), managed by Department of Industry Tourism and Resources (DITR). It is designed  to bring together all government requirements and assistance programmes for  business under one internet umbrella. It enables ‘eGovernment’ by providing  secure on-line application process for many business activities, covering all  three tiers of government. The site is clear and comprehensive and is an  excellent example of joined-up government reducing the transaction costs of  interacting with government.17                            | 
                      
                      
                        | 9.28 | 
                        However, the BEP is not manufacturing specific.  It focuses on the more administrative and regulatory aspects of starting, running  and expanding a small to medium business in any sector.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 9.29 | 
                        As has been discussed earlier in the chapter, AusIndustry  is programme‑centric and their website reflects this. AusIndustry has an export  focus in a further portal, the ‘Export Hub’, which is a joint initiative with  Austrade. The hub includes Austrade’s TradeStart and AusIndustry’s export  oriented programmes. Again, the Export Hub is not a self-contained site for  manufacturers. Interestingly, the link to the BEP and Export Hub are not on the  home pages of DITR, AusIndustry or Austrade websites.  | 
                      
                      
                        | 9.30 | 
                        In contrast, the UK has a specific manufacturing  advisory portal18 which serves a similar function to the BEP and Export Hub portals combined. The  UK  portal supports the Manufacturing Advisory Service (MAS) which, as was  discussed in Chapter 3, is centrally run with regional phone and face‑to‑face  contacts.                              | 
                      
                      
                        | 9.31 | 
                        The MAS portal is easy to use and contains a  sophisticated level of information about the manufacturing climate in the UK and how  government can assist manufacturers with this in mind. It goes beyond providing  links to assistance programmes and giving broad business‑oriented information.  Information covers issues such as process and systems improvements; materials  technology; management and logistics skills; utilising emerging manufacturing  applications and export strategy.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 9.32 | 
                        The US Government has a very similar portal to  the UK MAS, the ‘manufacturing portal’.19 There is no Australian equivalent. The DITR website does not have a  manufacturing webpage, nor does it contain a list of manufacturing relevant  programmes or action agendas.                             | 
                      
                      
                         | 
                          | 
                      
                      
                        Conclusions | 
                        
                      
                        | 9.33 | 
                        The committee concluded that the large number of  government industry assistance programmes creates unnecessary confusion. Many grant programmes relevant to the  manufacturing sector are of a similar nature and could be streamlined. Moreover, it is not easy to access  manufacturing specific policy information to assist manufacturers to help  themselves become more competitive and/or more globally oriented.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 9.34 | 
                        A number of inquiry participants reported that the  resources required to complete application and programme evaluation processes  were unreasonable. Programmes which demand proof of ‘additionality’ create the  most work. The committee accepts that merit-based grants require a high degree  of transparency and accountability—but should not unduly interfere in the operation  of businesses. It concluded that grant programmes which require laborious ex‑post  evaluations should instead introduce a staged funding approach which would  align with business milestones. This would negate the need for extensive  retrospective analysis.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 9.35 | 
                        In response to concerns that programme stability  is lacking, the committee noted that there is always inherent uncertainty in  grant application outcomes. However, business confidence in support programmes  is lost when eligibility criteria and processes are changed frequently.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 9.36 | 
                        Assistance programmes should be presented within  an overarching manufacturing strategy as discussed in Chapter 3. This would  make it easier for manufacturers to determine what industry programmes best fit  their circumstance. This approach provides manufacturing sector relevance to general  industry programmes; thus limiting the growth in programmes.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 9.37 | 
                        Despite the number of support programmes on  offer, manufacturers may experience difficulty accessing appropriate  information. Both the BEP and the Export Hub are valuable sector-generic sites,  albeit poorly promoted. The committee recognised a need for a manufacturing  webpage on the DITR site with a link to a stand-alone, user-friendly manufacturing  portal.   | 
                      
                      
                        | 9.38 | 
                        The portal would support the manufacturing-based  AIPC network, offering a comprehensive resource for manufacturers, beyond  programme information. Clear home page links to Austrade, Invest Australia, ICN,  BEP and the Export Hub should be on this site. The UK’s MAS portal and the US’s  Manufacturing portal both have good features that could be used as models for  site development.  | 
                      
                      
                        | 9.39 | 
                        Recommendation 20The committee recommends that the  Department of Industry, Tourism and Resources review assistance programmes with  a view to:
  - rationalisation, simplification and programme  stability;
 
   - dovetailing  programmes into a manufacturing sector strategic approach; and
 
                       - conducting grant programmes in consecutive  stages where evaluation of outcomes is more readily apparent.
    | 
                      
                      
                        | 9.40 | 
                        Recommendation 21
                          The committee recommends that a  dedicated manufacturing advisory portal be developed as the internet face of  the manufacturing-based Australian Industry Productivity Centres, linking to a manufacturing  webpage on the Department of Industry, Tourism and Resources website. Features  of this would include:
                              
                                - streamlining of other information portals so  there is a one‑stop‑shop for the manufacturing sector;
 
                                - prominent home page links to the industry  agencies and the generic ‘business entry point’ and ‘export hub’;
 
                                - an on-line venture capital information service; and
 
                                - a focus on sector specific issues beyond assistance  programme advice including information on production, process and  entrepreneurial developments; forums and key global issues.
 
                               
                          | 
                      
                      
                        |   | 
                         
                    The  Hon Bruce Baird  MP 
                              Chair 
                              12 July 2007                        
                         | 
                      
       
      
                      
                        
                          | 1  | 
                          Prof M Dodgson, private capacity, Transcript, 19 October 2006. p. 16. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 2  | 
                          Productivity Commission, Public Support for Science &  Innovation, 9 March 2007. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 3  | 
                          Innovation Investment Fund; Commercial  Ready; Commercialising Emerging Technologies; Industry Cooperative Innovation  and Intermediary Access discussed in Chapter 8. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 4  | 
                          Council of Textile and Fashion Industries of  Australia Ltd, Submission no. 17, p.  20. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 5  | 
                          House of Representatives Standing Committee on Science and Innovation, Pathways to technological innovation,  June 2006, pp. 52‑53. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 6  | 
                          Mr A Robinson, Australian Electrical and  Electronic Manufacturers Association (AEEMA), Transcript, 7   December 2006, p. 7. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 7  | 
                          Dr H Fraval, SIA, Transcript, 2   March 2007, p. 3. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 8  | 
                          Mr I Cairns,  Australian Steel Institute, Transcript,  29 August 2006,  p. 32. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 9  | 
                          SIA, Submission  No. 7, p. 7. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 10  | 
                          Formerly part of the ‘R&D Start  Programme’. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 11  | 
                          Mr N Apple, Australian Council of Trade Unions, Transcript, 22 November 2006, p. 15. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 12  | 
                          Mr B McManus, NEC, Transcript, 15   March 2007, pp. 26-27. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 13  | 
                          Australian Manufacturing Workers’ Union, Submission  no. 27, p. 26. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 14  | 
                          AEEMA, Supplementary  Submission no. 44, p. 3. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 15  | 
                          Mr G Evans, Australian Chamber of Commerce and  Industry, Transcript, 2 March 2007, p. 24.  Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 16  | 
                          <www.business.gov.au> Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 17  | 
                          The site won the 2006 United Nations  Public Service award for eGovernment. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 18  | 
                          The Manufacturing Advisory Service (MAS),  <http://www.mas.dti.gov.uk/>, viewed 11 May 2007.  The MAS is not only a web-based service but  also has regional face-to-face agency points-of-contacts. Back | 
                        
                        
                          | 19  | 
                          US Department of Commerce, International  Trade Administration, Manufacturing  Portal, <www.manufacturing.gov>, viewed 22 May 2007. Back |