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Qld government announces new digital project governance bodies Child protection advocates call for faster action on digital duty of care laws Cyber resilience a key plank of new Nakamal Agreement between Vanuatu and Australia ACMA targets SMS scams, emergency services, and telco protections in 2026–27 compliance agenda Exclusive: Pauline Hanson’s One Nation party quietly deletes Labor hacking claims Privacy Commissioner rules Medmate and Monash IVF breached privacy law through tracking pixels Australia’s Department of Parliamentary Services has only “partly effective” cyber security stature, audit finds Australian government, Microsoft sign agreement strengthening cyber security Tony Burke announces ‘new program of work’ under Horizon 2 of the Australian Cyber Security Strategy AFCA to become Australia’s central scams complaints body under new prevention framework Pentagon’s new Department of Defense Cyber Defense Command could be a good model for Australia Be counted: Australia’s next census faces cyber security shortcomings Aussie government proposes automatic reimbursement for scam losses below $3,000 Op-Ed: Australia’s cyber law is stuck in the past – the Slay Review is our chance to fix it ACCC welcomes another year of funding for the National Anti-Scam Centre Australia strengthens cyber defence in multinational operation New Zealand announces new sanctions against Russian cyber actors, online support platforms Op-Ed: Australia’s next budget must treat cyber resilience as essential infrastructure Australian government establishes new Cyber Incident Review Board US Department of War launches cyber-focused apprenticeship program Australian government stands up new ‘tripartite forum’ to tackle AI challenges in the workforce Australian Army research paper advocates for Australian national cyber reserve force, volunteer cyber organisations ADF strengthens skills as Cyber Command marks 2 years of operation Op-Ed: Australia inspired the EU’s online age restrictions, now it’s time for us to learn from them Latitude Financial faces $3.96m fine over spam law breaches Kid stuff: Roblox to introduce safety improvements following Aus government warnings Report: Aussie youth increasingly turning to AI for mental health advice First draft of Children’s Online Privacy Code made public Kids’ stuff: OAIC releases exposure draft of Children’s Online Privacy Code Aussie telco consumer code to be replaced in favour of ‘stronger protections’ Government proposes 5 changes to SOCI Act in overhaul of ministerial directions powers Cyber, defence cooperation key plank of new EU–Australia partnership Q&A: ‘Just be mindful that people are interested in you,’ says Sarah Sloan Trump releases US National Cyber Strategy CISO for Department of Health and Aged Care retires FIIG Fined: Federal Court orders $2.5M penalty for cyber security failures US CISA in a bad way as a new acting head is appointed Who is on the frontline when it comes to AI policymaking in Australia? Australian government unveils 5-year deal with Microsoft to lock in pricing and support AI adoption Australia, Samoa sign memorandum of understanding on cyber cooperation
Budget 2026: Expectations around AI, SMB resilience, and national defence
David Hollingworth · 2026-05-12 · via Government

As Australia counts down the hours to Jim Chalmers’ latest federal budget, experts and analysts alike share their wish lists for the coming financial year.

Budget 2026: Expectations around AI, SMB resilience, and national defence

Every year, Australians wait on bated breath for what new measures, costs, and savings will be handed down by the Treasurer, and this year, Jim Chalmers is facing a series of rolling international crises and domestic challenges.

But clear priorities stand out for the nation when it comes to defence, cyber security, and resilience.

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Here’s what some observers are hoping to see.

Professor Yiannis Ventikos
Dean, faculty of engineering at Monash University

As ​the federal budget​ approaches, the National Defence Strategy sets a clear direction around greater self-reliance. The opportunity now is to support a comprehensive ecosystem that brings together the research and development needed to integrate critical technologies for sovereign capability, alongside the training required to address the significant skills and workforce gaps in engineering. Universities play a central role in delivering both.​


Professor Dana Kulić
Director of Monash Robotics

Productivity has become a focus of this federal budget, yet despite Australia’s National Robotics Strategy recognising robotics and AI as critical to economic growth, they are still not being treated as core economic infrastructure.

Internationally, robotics is seen as a strategic capability underpinning productivity gains across sectors like manufacturing, healthcare, agriculture and infrastructure. Australia risks falling behind if investment and policy settings don’t keep pace.

One of the key gaps is in translating robotics into real-world use. While the underlying technology is advancing rapidly, deploying robots in complex environments, such as hospital wards or construction sites, remains difficult because systems need to operate safely and reliably alongside people, under changing conditions.

In Australia, this challenge is amplified by the structure of the economy. Most companies are small and medium-sized enterprises, which typically don’t have the capital or in-house expertise to deploy and manage complex robotic systems.

That means robotics strategies that work internationally in large companies don’t translate directly to the Australian context. If productivity is the goal, policy needs to support approaches that lower the barriers to adoption for companies, making robotic systems easier to integrate, adapt, manage and use without requiring specialised robotics expertise.


Daniel Garcia
Vice president and general manager of Kaseya APAC

Small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs) are the lifeblood of the Australian economy. SMBs expect more than just the anticipated cost-of-living relief or modest energy rebates. The focus for many SMBs has shifted towards long-term operational efficiency and the ability to serve customers profitably within a more streamlined business model.

Current data suggests that cyber incidents can have a significant impact on productivity, with roughly 40 per cent of SMBs losing a full day of operations. A single day of zero productivity can be the catastrophic difference between continued survival and permanent closure. In a tightening market, bridging the gap between basic defence and proactive security is an increasingly important priority for business owners. Collaborative support that helps SMBs harden their security stacks can play a vital role in maintaining broader economic stability.

Additionally, as the industry explores the productivity potential of AI, establishing clear ethical frameworks and training resources will be key to addressing the current trust gap and encouraging wider adoption.

Providing a stable environment with clear incentives for digital investment allows SMBs to better automate their workflows and meet the evolving expectations of the modern business landscape.

Cyber Daily will be waiting for the budget to drop this evening and will provide a special report on what Chalmers will be delivering in terms of cyber resilience as soon as we can.

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David Hollingworth

David Hollingworth has been writing about technology for over 20 years, and has worked for a range of print and online titles in his career. He is enjoying getting to grips with cyber security, especially when it lets him talk about Lego.