Announced in the federal budget last night, the 21st century National Medical Industry Growth Plan will deliver $1.3 billion to support Australia as a global health innovation leader in medical technology, biotechnology and pharmaceuticals while improving health outcomes for all Australians.
BioMelbourne Network CEO Dr Krystal Evans said: “the announcements are a strong signal that Australia’s health innovation industry is key to future economic prosperity.”
“Australia is backing its vibrant biotechnology sector. This investment will see companies expand the pipeline of medical discoveries and accelerate the development of cures and therapies for the future” said Dr Evans.
The industry growth package includes $500 million for genomics initiatives, $240 million for frontier medical research and $94 million for biomedtech programs and industry-research collaborations.
“Melbourne is the capital city of Australia for health innovation and the Budget announcements will see biotechnology and medical technology companies lead the way into the future innovation economy.”
Changes to the R&D Tax Incentive were also announced, including a $4 million cap on the annual refundable R&D tax offset and setting the rate to a fixed 13.5% above the corporate tax rate.
Following extensive advocacy from the sector, clinical trials will be exempt from $4 million cap and no lifetime cap has been imposed on the refundable R&D Tax Incentive.
“It is terrific news for the sector that the Government has recognised the importance of clinical trials in Australia and excluded these from the cap” said Dr Evans. “This allows biotech and medtech companies to accelerate the clinical development of new drugs and medical devices, bring cutting-edge therapies to patients sooner.”
However, the new R&D intensity measures may negatively impact larger manufacturing businesses. The decrease in the level of R&D support for larger pharmaceutical and medical technology businesses will not encourage additional activity in Australia, and increased uncertainty over the scheme may drive current R&D offshore.
“It would be damaging to local industry growth to see Australian companies move R&D activities to New Zealand or Singapore due to more attractive R&D settings” Dr Evans added.
The Budget unveiled important measures for building Australia’s research capabilities, including a $2.4 billion investment in national research infrastructure and a $4.5 million boost for women in STEM, which will improve research productivity, create jobs and drive economic growth.
R&D Tax Incentive
$1.3 billion National Health and Medical Industry Growth Plan
Includes:
$1.9 Billion National Research Infrastructure Investment Plan
$275 million investment in Health and Medical Research
Includes:
Medical Research Future Fund
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For interviews, contact:
Andie Beattie, Communications Manager, BioMelbourne Network – 0437705332, abeattie@biomelbourne.org