UK defence firms ‘bleeding cash’ as delayed spending plan leaves industry in ‘paralysis’
Summary
Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/AP View image in fullscreen Keir Starmer has said Britain ‘needs to go faster’ on military spending. Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/AP UK defence firms ‘bleeding cash’ as delayed spending plan leaves industry in ‘paralysis’ Industry groups say delay to defence investment plan (DIP) leaving UK behind in global race for funding Defence manufacturers are going bust while others have been left in “paralysis” and “bleeding cash” as they wait for a long-delayed UK military spending plan for the next decade, MPs have heard. Industry groups said that a more than six-month delay to the defence investment plan (DIP) has also left the UK behind Germany and the US in attracting cash from global investors. “The ecosystem is not in a great place, it’s what I would call paralysis,” said Samira Braund, defence director of the ADS Group trade body, speaking to the defence select committee on Tuesday. “I don’t think that [the government] have put effective mitigation plans in place at all.” The DIP, originally expected last autumn, has been repeatedly postponed amid warnings that the military faces a £28bn funding gap over the next four years. Keir Starmer has also said Britain “needs to go faster” on military spending amid plans to reach 3% of GDP going towards defence.
Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/AP View image in fullscreen Keir Starmer has said Britain ‘needs to go faster’ on military spending. Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/AP UK defence firms ‘bleeding cash’ as delayed spending plan leaves industry in ‘paralysis’ Industry groups say delay to defence investment plan (DIP) leaving UK behind in global race for funding Defence manufacturers are going bust while others have been left in “paralysis” and “bleeding cash” as they wait for a long-delayed UK military spending plan for the next decade, MPs have heard. Industry groups said that a more than six-month delay to the defence investment plan (DIP) has also left the UK behind Germany and the US in attracting cash from global investors. “The ecosystem is not in a great place, it’s what I would call paralysis,” said Samira Braund, defence director of the ADS Group trade body, speaking to the defence select committee on Tuesday. “I don’t think that [the government] have put effective mitigation plans in place at all.” The DIP, originally expected last autumn, has been repeatedly postponed amid warnings that the military faces a £28bn funding gap over the next four years. Keir Starmer has also said Britain “needs to go faster” on military spending amid plans to reach 3% of GDP going towards defence.
## Article Content
Keir Starmer has said Britain ‘needs to go faster’ on military spending.
Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/AP
View image in fullscreen
Keir Starmer has said Britain ‘needs to go faster’ on military spending.
Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/AP
UK defence firms ‘bleeding cash’ as delayed spending plan leaves industry in ‘paralysis’
Industry groups say delay to defence investment plan (DIP) leaving UK behind in global race for funding
Defence manufacturers are going bust while others have been left in “paralysis” and “bleeding cash” as they wait for a long-delayed UK military spending plan for the next decade, MPs have heard.
Industry groups said that a more than
six-month delay to the defence investment plan
(DIP) has also left the UK behind Germany and the US in attracting cash from global investors.
“The ecosystem is not in a great place, it’s what I would call paralysis,” said Samira Braund, defence director of the ADS Group trade body, speaking to the defence select committee on Tuesday. “I don’t think that [the government] have put effective mitigation plans in place at all.”
The DIP, originally expected last autumn, has been repeatedly postponed amid warnings that the military faces a £28bn funding gap over the next four years.
It has left large companies calling for clarity. The boss of BAE Systems, Europe’s biggest defence contractor, last month
urged ministers to publish the plan
, while some smaller firms have been forced out of business amid the uncertainty.
One of them was MTE Heat Treatment, a Yorkshire-based manufacturer with just over 30 employees that helped make turbine blades for jet engines, but fell into administration in February.
Andrew Kinniburgh, head of trade body Make UK’s defence arm, said: “The inevitable consequence of that little 30-person company going bust is that the company that is procuring those blades will almost inevitably say: ‘Actually, it’s a bit easier just to do it in the [United] States, because that we can get the machining done there’.”
He added that smaller companies were “desperately trying to hang on to their people and keep their factories alive. The trouble for them is they’re just bleeding cash. There’s cash out the door every day to feed the baby birds, and they’re just on pause.”
The DIP will show how the government plans to fund its strategic defence review, the blueprint for
transforming the military
amid growing threats from Russia, rising commitments to Nato and against the backdrop of the
US-Israel war on Iran
.
Ministers accepted all the review’s recommendations when it was published last June. But the head of the military, Air Chief Marshal Sir Richard Knighton, told MPs in January that defence cuts would be needed without more funding.
Keir Starmer has also said Britain
“needs to go faster”
on military spending amid plans to reach 3% of GDP going towards defence.
Kinniburgh added that the delays risked deterring investment into the UK at a time when the US and Europe are also hiking military spending.
“We are absolutely in a global race to get money from these big defence companies. They have many options,” he said.
Kinniburgh added that big defence firms “can go and invest in Germany or in Poland or in the US”, and “with the UK delaying … on the defence investment plan, we are basically telling those companies, perhaps you should invest somewhere else.”
Last week the Ministry of Defence’s top civil servant, Jeremy Pocklington, told MPs that officials are “working hard to deliver it … we will publish it as soon as we can.”
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## Expert Analysis
### Merits
- Industry groups said that a more than six-month delay to the defence investment plan (DIP) has also left the UK behind Germany and the US in attracting cash from global investors. “The ecosystem is not in a great place, it’s what I would call paralysis,” said Samira Braund, defence director of the ADS Group trade body, speaking to the defence select committee on Tuesday. “I don’t think that [the government] have put effective mitigation plans in place at all.” The DIP, originally expected last autumn, has been repeatedly postponed amid warnings that the military faces a £28bn funding gap over the next four years.
### Areas for Consideration
- Industry groups said that a more than six-month delay to the defence investment plan (DIP) has also left the UK behind Germany and the US in attracting cash from global investors. “The ecosystem is not in a great place, it’s what I would call paralysis,” said Samira Braund, defence director of the ADS Group trade body, speaking to the defence select committee on Tuesday. “I don’t think that [the government] have put effective mitigation plans in place at all.” The DIP, originally expected last autumn, has been repeatedly postponed amid warnings that the military faces a £28bn funding gap over the next four years.
### Implications
- Andrew Kinniburgh, head of trade body Make UK’s defence arm, said: “The inevitable consequence of that little 30-person company going bust is that the company that is procuring those blades will almost inevitably say: ‘Actually, it’s a bit easier just to do it in the [United] States, because that we can get the machining done there’.” He added that smaller companies were “desperately trying to hang on to their people and keep their factories alive.
- There’s cash out the door every day to feed the baby birds, and they’re just on pause.” The DIP will show how the government plans to fund its strategic defence review, the blueprint for transforming the military amid growing threats from Russia, rising commitments to Nato and against the backdrop of the US-Israel war on Iran .
- Kinniburgh added that big defence firms “can go and invest in Germany or in Poland or in the US”, and “with the UK delaying … on the defence investment plan, we are basically telling those companies, perhaps you should invest somewhere else.” Last week the Ministry of Defence’s top civil servant, Jeremy Pocklington, told MPs that officials are “working hard to deliver it … we will publish it as soon as we can.” Explore more on these topics Defence policy Manufacturing sector Ministry of Defence Arms trade news Share Reuse this content
### Expert Commentary
This article covers defence, military, spending topics. Notable strengths include discussion of defence. Areas of concern are also raised. Readability: Flesch-Kincaid grade 0.0. Word count: 606.
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