Prime Minister Scott Morrison has dismissed a call from Labor to backtrack on the Australian Broadcasting Corporation's funding freeze.

During Question Time in federal parliament on Wednesday, Labor leader Anthony Albanese asked Mr Morrison about the ABC's funding, saying the broadcaster played an essential role in providing information to the public during this summer's bushfire season and the coronavirus pandemic.

"Australians relied on the ABC to give them emergency updates during the bushfire crisis. Now Australians are relying upon the ABC to keep them informed, stay safe, and to support the ongoing education of their children during this health crisis," Mr Albanese said.

AAP

"Will the Prime Minister restore funding so the ABC can keep doing its job so effectively?"

Mr Morrison responded: "The ABC is doing an excellent job and they’ll continue doing that job with the resources that have been provided to them."

"Like all agencies, like all Australians, they will all do the best job they can with the resources they have available to them."

The federal government in 2018 announced it would freeze the ABC's funding for three years, costing the broadcaster almost $84 million.

Mr Morrison - who was treasurer at the time - said the freeze was because "everyone has to live within their means".

ABC managing director David Anderson told Senate Estimates in October last year the freeze would mean job losses.

Carey from NSW says:



ABC emergency broadcasts have proved vital to many.



Please stop cutting funding.#FundOurABC #Auspol pic.twitter.com/VoTFnFuTBp — ABC Friends (@FriendsoftheABC) March 19, 2020

"There will be job losses," Mr Anderson said.

"It's not something I can quantify at this point in time, there's still more work to be done."

In the wake of the bushfire crisis, calls for the federal government to provide more funding to the ABC intensified.

"We are all dependent on the ABC for communicating health advice and pandemic information as our lives are dramatically changing every day," ABC Friends, a group that has been lobbying for greater funding for the broadcaster, said in a statement last month.

"We must insist that the Prime Minister and his Cabinet colleagues include the ABC in their stimulus responses as Australia faces this national [coronavirus] crisis."