New $38 billion plan to boost Australia's defence workforce to 100,000 people

Prime Minister Scott Morrison and Defence Minister Peter Dutton have announced their intention to boost the defence workforce to over 100,000.

Two Australian Defence Force personnel are seen standing at a port.

The Australian Defence Force workforce growth is estimated to come at a cost of at least $38 billion between 2024 and 2040. Source: AAP / CPL Brandon Grey/PR Image

Scott Morrison has outlined plans for the largest Australian Defence Force (ADF) personnel increase in peacetime, labelling the move as a significant step.

The expansion will mean an increase of more than 18,000 people to the defence force by 2040.

The prime minister said the expansion — estimated to come at a cost of at least $38 billion between 2024 and 2040 — was a vote of confidence in the work of the ADF.

"We don't leave our tasks of defence to others ... we take it up ourselves and that means we're a contributor," Mr Morrison told reporters in Brisbane.

"We're going to make sure that the Australian defence forces are a big contributor for generations to come as more and more people take up those careers in our defence forces."

The increase would be a rise of 30 per cent during the next two decades, bringing the total number of permanent ADF personnel to 80,000 by 2040.
The total defence workforce would grow to more than 100,000 by that time.

The plan to increase the ADF workforce was flagged as part of a 2020 force structure plan and was agreed to by the national security committee of cabinet in late 2021.

Mr Morrison said the additional workforce would be supporting future submarine operations, as well as airlift and air base capabilities, missile defence and cyber.

"We greatly appreciate the extraordinary work they have done to support us in civilian tasks but their first job is to defend this country," he said.

Defence Minister Peter Dutton said the ADF expansion was vital given the rising tensions in the Indo-Pacific region, along with conflicts in Europe.

"It is going to be necessary to supplement particularly in space, in cyber, in our naval assets, our underwater capability, our autonomous vehicles," he said.

"That provides a deterrence and makes us a more credible partner with the United Kingdom and with the United States and with NATO ... and if we are to rely on them, they need to rely on us."
Opposition defence spokesman Brendan O'Connor said Labor agreed with increasing the size of the ADF, but said the timing of the move by the government was a distraction from a slow response to the flooding crisis in NSW and Queensland.

"Having sat on a decision taken last year to boost ADF numbers, the Morrison-Joyce government has waited until the eve of an election to make yet another announcement that won't take effect for 18 years," he said.

"(The government) only met 90 per cent of permanent force recruitment targets in 2020/21 and have failed to meet 2016 defence white paper targets every year since 2015/16."
Tasmanian senator Jacqui Lambie, a former ADF member, said the defence boost was money well spent.

"We need to wake up here, what is going on around the rest of the world, we need to start making sure that our nation is secure," she said.

"They need to go back and see what they civilianised in the 90s and replace those jobs with people in uniforms. If they start from there, we will have a great result."

Opposition leader Anthony Albanese will also use a major foreign policy speech to the Lowy Institute on Thursday to say military spending would continue to rise under a Labor government.

"Let me be clear: Labor will ensure that Defence has the resources it needs to defend Australia and deter potential aggressors," he will say.

"We recognise this will mean Defence budgets beyond the two per cent benchmark."

He said a "frank assessment" of Australia's defence capabilities and pipeline would be required if Labor formed government at this year's election.

Share
4 min read
Published 10 March 2022 7:03am
Updated 10 March 2022 12:09pm
Source: AAP, SBS


Share this with family and friends