UK Defence Plan Requires Extra £4.7bn, Defence Minister Says
Quick Look
- A UK defence minister stated that the incoming government, likely led by Andy Burnham, will need to find an additional £4.7bn to fund a defence investment plan announced by outgoing PM Sir Keir Starmer.
- The Treasury has identified £10.3bn in savings, leaving a funding gap.
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
Outgoing UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer announced a £15bn defence investment plan over four years. The Treasury has identified £10.3bn in savings, leaving a £4.7bn gap that the next government must fund.
Andy Burnham's government will have to find an extra £4.7bn to fund the defence investment plan announced by the outgoing prime minister Sir Keir Starmer, a defence minister has said.
Luke Pollard told the BBC the next chancellor "whoever that may be" will have to "find the resources" in their autumn Budget.
In one of his final acts as PM, Sir Keir announced £15bn of spending over the next four years to support a long-awaited plan to boost the UK's defences.
But the Treasury said only £10.3bn in savings had currently been identified, meaning Burnham, who is widely expected to take over as prime minister on 20 July, will have to find the resources to plug the gap.
Pollard told BBC Breakfast: "Just over £4bn will be set out in the autumn Budget.
"Of course, this is pretty standard fare for the government to make an announcement and set out the details at the forthcoming budget.
"The last government did it a number of times."
Burnham is widely expected to replace Rachel Reeves as chancellor if he becomes PM, with Energy Secretary Ed Miliband seen as the front-runner to step into the crucial role.
Pollard said Reeves had set aside more cash for emergencies and "shocks" - known as headroom - in her Budget last November and it would be "up to the next chancellor, whoever that may be, to allocate both the headroom and the resources in the budget this year".
He said he was a "big supporter" of Burnham and hoped he would become prime minister, but also revealed that the former Greater Manchester mayor had only been told about the £4.7bn defence funding gap on Tuesday.
"Downing Street have a close dialogue with Andy's team … I understand they've been keeping him close to the process, and told him yesterday when the Treasury published the statement and the breakdown of the financial costs," he told Sky News.
Defence Secretary Dan Jarvis said there would have to be "conversations" with the next prime minister about funding the armed forces, but insisted it was "not unreasonable" to set out those plans at a "major fiscal event" like the next Budget.
Speaking to reporters on a visit to missile manufacturer Cambridge Aerospace, Jarvis said: "I think we made really good progress yesterday with the publication of the plan, and that was helpful because it ended the uncertainty that had been around it.
"But yes, I will want to do more and go further, and it's my job, working with the chiefs, to make sure that we secure the resource, the investment that we need into defence to honour the commitments that we have made, which I am absolutely determined that we will keep."
Burnham has yet to comment on where he will find the extra money - or whether he would be open to increasing the defence budget further.
One Burnham ally told the BBC the funding gaps in Tuesday's defence plan were "another spending pressure" he will have to face.
In a speech on Tuesday, Sir Keir said the defence investment plan (DIP), initially expected last autumn, would reverse the "corrosive hollowing out" of the armed forces under the Conservatives.
What to Watch
AI outlook — possibilities, not facts
The next chancellor will allocate the £4.7bn defence funding gap in the autumn budget.
Very likely · Within months
Open Questions
- Where will the extra £4.7bn be found?
- Will the defence budget increase further?





