While border controls will limit the immediate take-up of the new scheme,the government is pitching the incentive as a way to bring work to a safe location in Australia when productions have stalled in Hollywood and elsewhere.
The taxpayer aid for the entertainment business is contentious at a time when other industries are seeking help,but the government argues the support has paid off in the past with thousands of jobs.
Government modelling suggests the $400 million would attract about $3 billion in foreign expenditure in Australia and would create 8000 new jobs over the seven years of the new program.
The new offer,called the Location Incentive,adds to an existing Location Offset that gives film and television producers a tax break for big-budget productions.
The government estimates 10 productions have gained support worth $123 million from the Location Offset for productions including the Thor and Godzilla movies,as well as Marvel film Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings.
The 10 projects were estimated to support 8500 local jobs – a figure that suggests the subsidy was worth roughly $14,500 per job.
The new $400 million incentive is estimated to support 8000 jobs per year over seven years,suggesting a subsidy worth about $7100 per job per year.