The future of manufacturing in the country has been secured by the passing of the governmentâs reconstruction fund, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese says.
The $15 billion fund passed the Senate on Tuesday night, after the governmentâs signature investment vehicle secured the support of key crossbenchers.
It was rubber-stamped by the lower house on Wednesday morning.
Industry Minister Ed Husic said the fund would provide more secure work across multiple sectors.
âThe national reconstruction fund is about Australians backing Australians in terms of pursuing those ideas,â Mr Husic said in Canberra on Wednesday.
âItâs from the factory floor to the lab bench to the boardrooms of this country, making sure that weâve got that huge growth capital available, to unlock what is really important for the economy and jobs.â
The fund aims to drive investment in seven priority areas: resources, agriculture, transport, medical sciences, renewables and low-emissions technology and defence.
Mr Albanese said it would revitalise industries that had been allowed to lag.
âDuring the pandemic, our vulnerabilities at the end of supply chains were exposed for all to see,â he said.
âWeâve been very good at exporting our resources and should continue to do so, but where possible, we should be value adding, creating jobs here.â
Industry leaders have heralded the passing of the fund, which was a Labor election commitment.
Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry chief executive Andrew McKellar said the investment would help businesses diversify and boost the domestic economy.
âWith Australia now having the lowest manufacturing self-sufficiency in the OECD, itâs critical we redouble our efforts to encourage and stimulate new manufacturing and industrial investment in this country,â he said.
Tech Council of Australia chief executive Kate Pounder said the fund would unlock further capabilities for the country.
âThis is a long-term landmark investment that will help build Australiaâs tech industries in strategically important areas like quantum, AI robotics and cyber security,â she said.
âThereâs nothing revolutionary about this sort of role for government. Emerging industries and technologies have always been funded by a mix of private and public capital.â
The coalition opposed the legislation.
Opposition finance spokeswoman Jane Hume said the borrowing of the fund, combined with the governmentâs proposed $10 billion housing fund, would have an inflationary impact.
She told AAP the use of equity instead of grants would also stall productivity.
âA lot of these organisations need to be very nimble. If your co-owner is the government, that slows down your decision making dramatically,â she said.
âIt essentially nationalises so many of those organisations that the private sector would be keen to invest in. It crowds out the private sector.â
But the Greens backed the legislation after securing amendments to ensure the money wouldnât be invested in coal and gas projects.
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Andrew Brown and Dominic Giannini
(Australian Associated Press)