Reeves grudgingly resorts to departmental salami slicing to fund UK defence budget
Starmer shows no will to pursue the main options for rising commitments: spending cuts, tax rises or borrowing When Keir Starmer wanted to promise Donald Trump that the UK would increase defence spending, he decided to fund it by slashing the UKโs aid budget โ losing a cabinet m
Starmer shows no will to pursue the main options for rising commitments: spending cuts, tax rises or borrowing
When Keir Starmer wanted to promise Donald Trump that the UK would increase defence spending, he decided to fund it by slashing the UKโs aid budget โ losing a cabinet minister , Anneliese Dodds, in the process.
This time around, with John Healeyโs Ministry of Defence (MoD) demanding an additional ยฃ18.5bn over four years to fund the defence investment plan , there was no such lever to hand.
Instead, asked to find the money, the chancellor, Rachel Reeves , grudgingly resorted to classic Treasury salami slicing: asking Whitehall departments to pare about 1% off capital budgets they painstakingly negotiated less than a year ago.
That sits uneasily with the governmentโs promises on the public services โ repairing crumbling hospitals and overcrowded schools, for example โ and the chancellorโs hopes of using investment in green energy to kickstart economic growth.
In another well-worn manoeuvre, alongside demanding cuts elsewhere, Reeves also promised to use her departmentโs reserve to pay for ยฃ3.5bn worth of projects the MoD had expected to have to fund.
When Healey saw the end result โ a ยฃ13.5bn uplift over four years โ he was horrified at what he saw as penny-pinching, and duly resigned .
Defending the cautious approach, Treasury insiders point to the MoDโs notorious profligacy and tend to shrug at some of the dire warnings from military chiefs, who have an inbuilt bias towards higher spending.

