The cost of defence: ASPI Defence budget brief 2010-2011

31 May 2010

This report gives interested readers greater access to the complex workings of the Defence Budget and promotes informed debate on Defence budget issues.

This year’s federal budget contained few surprises for Defence. Consistent with the government’s overarching theme of fiscal discipline, there were no substantive new Defence funding measures beyond the routine supplementation for overseas deployments.  Moreover, Defence will have to absorb $912 million of the cost of enhanced force protection for our troops in Afghanistan, with most of the money coming from Defence’s existing capital investment program. It remains to be seen how exactly this impost will be accommodated because, in a marked departure with previous practice, the government has failed to signal which acquisition projects it plans to proceed with in the next twelve months. In the longer-term, further pressure on the Defence budget cannot be discounted, given the government’s promise of returning to surplus in three years’ time.

Noticeboard

13 January 2012

The Summer 2012 issue of Quarterly Access examines the recent East Asia Summit, bilateral alliances in the Asia Pacific, the future of Timor-Leste, women's participation in peace processes and more.

Read QA online: http://www.aiia.asn.au/qa/qa-vol4-issue1

02 December 2011

Applications are now open for a unique training opportunity for selected individuals develop the skills, networks and knowledge needed to be effective in forging a more sustainable future.

21 October 2011

Michael Wesley, director of the foreign policy think tank, the Lowy Institute, has won the third John Button Prize for writing on public policy.

Dr Wesley won the $20,000 award for his book, There Goes the Neighbourhood: Australia and the Rise of Asia.