Skip to content
Defence, Government Federal

Explaining The Surge in Funding for Spy Agency ASD

Social Cyber Institute 2 mins read

The Social Cyber Institute today released a paper analysing the  motives of the Australian government for a massive surge in its funding for the country's cyber spy agency beginning in 2022 and escalating in 2024.

 

The paper’s author, Professor Greg Austin, called for greater public and parliamentary scrutiny of the agency, the Australian Signals Directorate (ASD), in the light of these massive increases in funding. 

 

The paper is available at https://www.socialcyber.co/_files/ugd/15144d_62fbe7d6d14f4aaeb94ec9c4ee273f33.pdf

 

Key points

 

  • The ASD annual budget tripled in size between FY2019-20 and FY2023-24. The corresponding growth rate in overall Defence Budget (of which ASD is a part) was only 23% over the same years. So the ASD budget growth rate outpaced overall defence budget growth by a factor of more than eight. This was a timely catch up by ASD with Australian allies, the US and the UK, in preparations of warfighting in cyberspace.

 

  • When the first phase of this spending surge was announced in 2022, the funding priorities were presented as a tripling of offensive cyber capability, a doubling of persistent cyber hunt activities, a gain of  1900 new posts in cyber operations over the decade, an ambition to have 40% of staff located outside Canberra, and a quadrupling of the global footprint.
  • The 2024 increases relate to capital investment, meaning significant upgrades of ASD technical systems.
  • The plans also explicitly provide for increased ASD operations inside Australia, continuing the decades-long blurring of the agency's traditional role as externally oriented -- collecting intelligence outside Australia

 

  • The paper assesses that main political motivation for this spending surge has been internal security against covert foreign influence.

 

  • Complementary motivations include imperatives of closer operational coordination with the US and the UK implied by the AUKUS agreement and disquiet about the deteriorating strategic environment. But the explosive character of the cyber surge stands in strong contrast to the very slow and protracted process of purchasing nuclear power submarines which are a major response of the government to China’s military posture.

 

  • The main motivation of the cyber surge was definitely not domestic cyber security (protecting government and corporate IT systems, including critical infrastructure, from cyber intrusions by criminals or data theft by foreign states) but the new spending will enable ASD to be far more effective on that front.

About us:

The Social Cyber Institute (SCI) creates new social science insights to complement technology in the fight for a more secure cyberspace. SCI is a non-profit organisation supported by the Social Cyber Group which offers advisory and training services in cyber policy.


Contact details:

Greg Austin

0405190323

[email protected]

More from this category

  • Government Federal, Research Development
  • 24/03/2026
  • 12:02
Monash University

Monash University welcomes historic Europe-Australia agreement on trade, national security, research and innovation

Monash University Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Research & Enterprise) and Senior Vice President, Professor Robyn Ward AM, has welcomed today's historic announcements by Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, and President of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen:the conclusion of the Australia EUFTA, the Security and Defence Partnership and fast tracking of Australia’s association with Horizon Europe. "Today's historic announcement about the Australia EU Free Trade Agreement, the establishment of an Australia EU Security and Defence Partnership, and progress toward Australia’s association with Horizon Europe represent a major strengthening of Australia’s partnership with Europe," Professor Ward said. "For Monash University, these outcomes will…

  • Defence, Information Technology
  • 24/03/2026
  • 08:00
Kompozition

Kompozition Appoints John Seagrott as Chief Product Officer to Scale Definition Operations Platform Globally.

Key Facts: Kompozition is an Australian technology company that helps organisations clearly define how their systems and operations should work, enabling better decisions, reducing risk, and saving time and money. John Seagrott appointed as Chief Product Officer at Kompozition as company expands into US market following strong growth in Australian Defence sector. Seagrott brings over 20 years of experience in software engineering and Defence systems, previously serving as Kompozition's Technical Director. Kompozition's Definition Operations platform helps organisations model and understand complex systems before implementation. The company has established a strategic partnership with the University of Canberra and the University of…

  • Gambling, Government Federal
  • 24/03/2026
  • 06:46
Alliance For Gambling Reform

1000 days of inaction on gambling reform must stop – 40 groups call on PM to take urgent action

A coalition of unions, community, public health, church, academic and advocate groups have signed an open letter to the Prime Minister calling for urgent action on gambling reforms – 1000 days since the government received a parliamentary inquiry report into online and is still yet to formerly respond. The letter – signed by Unions NSW and the Victorian Trades Hall Council, ACOSS, the Salvation Army (Richmond), Mission Australia, GetUp, the Public Health Association of Australia, Australian Preventative Health Association, the Menzies Schol of Health Research and the NSW Council of Churches – acknowledges the government’s work on its social media…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.