Multiple funding cuts and freezes were implemented:
**Direct Budget Cuts:**
- In May 2014, the Abbott government announced $254 million in cuts over five years from the ABC budget [1]
- A 1% "efficiency dividend" cut was imposed in May 2014, followed by cross-portfolio cuts [2]
- The Australia Network international broadcasting service was cancelled in 2014, resulting in a loss of $186 million in funding [2]
**Indexation Freeze:**
- In 2018, the Turnbull government announced a three-year indexation pause (freeze) on ABC operational funding [3]
- This freeze kept funding at 2018-19 levels without adjustment for inflation
- The accumulated cost of the indexation freeze was $83.4 million from 2019-2022 [2]
**Total Funding Impact:**
According to ABC responses to Senate Estimates and independent analysis, total accumulated funding reductions from 2014 to 2022 amounted to $783 million [4].
The specific "2.5%" figure mentioned in the claim likely refers to the approximate annual real-terms reduction in funding when accounting for inflation and the indexation freeze.
The 2014 budget cuts directly contradicted this promise, which became a significant political controversy.
**Semantic Distinction Used by Coalition:**
Coalition ministers, including Communications Minister Paul Fletcher, argued that ABC funding was "rising every year" in nominal terms [5].
This claim was based on:
- Looking only at operational funding within specific triennial cycles
- Ignoring the 2018-19 to 2019-20 decrease
- Omitting projected declines in 2022-23
- Most importantly, completely ignoring inflation and real funding levels [5]
**The Indexation Mechanism:**
The ABC had received indexation since the mid-1980s to maintain real funding levels.
The freeze meant that while nominal funding stayed flat, rising costs (wages, production, technology) effectively reduced purchasing power by approximately 2-2.5% annually [5].
**The Examiner (Original Source):**
The Examiner is a regional newspaper based in Launceston, Tasmania, owned by Fairfax Media (now Nine Entertainment).
The 2014 article about Abbott breaking his "no cuts" promise was factual reporting on a documented political commitment.
**RMIT ABC Fact Check:**
The RMIT ABC Fact Check unit is an independent, non-partisan fact-checking organization that has assessed similar claims.
**Did Labor do something similar?**
Search conducted: "Labor government ABC funding cuts history"
**Howard Government (Coalition precedent):**
In 1996, the Howard government implemented a 2% funding cut to the ABC, removing $55 million from triennial funding.
* * * *
This was referenced in a 2020 Per Capita report as the previous major funding reduction to the ABC [4].
**Labor Government (2007-2013):**
During the Rudd/Gillard Labor governments, ABC funding was generally maintained or modestly increased.
The "Enhanced News Services" program providing $69.4 million over four years was initiated under Labor and later extended by the Coalition [5].
**Historical Context:**
The Coalition's 2014-2022 funding reductions represent the most significant sustained cuts to the ABC since the 1996 Howard cuts.
When adjusted for inflation, the ABC's operational budget in 2019-20 represented a decrease in real funding of $367 million per annum (29.5%) since 1985-86 [4].
In nominal terms, funding figures in budget papers showed marginal increases within specific periods [5]
**Independent Assessment:**
RMIT ABC Fact Check found the Coalition's claims that "funding is rising" to be "misleading" because:
- The claim ignored inflation and real funding declines
- It omitted years where funding decreased
- The indexation freeze reduced the ABC's ability to maintain services despite rising costs (wage increases of 2% per year, production cost increases of 7% for drama) [5]
**Expert Analysis:**
According to the Grattan Institute, "real funding is declining whichever way you look at it" [5].
The Parliamentary Library noted that historically, ABC funding has been cut during a cycle on at least 2 occasions - in 1996-97 (Howard government) and 2014-15 (Abbott government) [3].
**The Semantics Debate:**
The claim hinges on whether a freeze in nominal funding that results in real-terms reductions (due to inflation) constitutes a "cut." The Coalition argued it did not; critics, including independent fact-checkers, argued that in the context of rising costs, it effectively was a cut.
The Coalition's claim that the ABC funding reductions were "not a cut" relies on a narrow technical definition that ignores the economic reality of inflation and rising operational costs.
While nominal funding may have shown marginal increases in specific years within triennial cycles, the indexation freeze and cumulative funding reductions resulted in significant real-terms cuts to the ABC's operational capacity.
RMIT ABC Fact Check assessed a similar claim by Communications Minister Paul Fletcher that "ABC funding is rising every year" and found it "misleading" [5].
The accumulated funding losses of $783 million from 2014-2022, the loss of over 640 jobs, and the documented reduction in programming all demonstrate the practical impact of these "non-cuts."
The claim is particularly problematic given Tony Abbott's explicit pre-election promise of "no cuts to the ABC or SBS" [6], which was broken within the first year of government.
The Coalition's claim that the ABC funding reductions were "not a cut" relies on a narrow technical definition that ignores the economic reality of inflation and rising operational costs.
While nominal funding may have shown marginal increases in specific years within triennial cycles, the indexation freeze and cumulative funding reductions resulted in significant real-terms cuts to the ABC's operational capacity.
RMIT ABC Fact Check assessed a similar claim by Communications Minister Paul Fletcher that "ABC funding is rising every year" and found it "misleading" [5].
The accumulated funding losses of $783 million from 2014-2022, the loss of over 640 jobs, and the documented reduction in programming all demonstrate the practical impact of these "non-cuts."
The claim is particularly problematic given Tony Abbott's explicit pre-election promise of "no cuts to the ABC or SBS" [6], which was broken within the first year of government.