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THU · 2026-07-02 · 18:46 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0702-89521
News/Infrastructure cuts to pay for defence will cost UK 10,000 j…
NSR-2026-0702-89521Analysis·EN·Economic Impact

Infrastructure cuts to pay for defence will cost UK 10,000 jobs, analysis shows

An analysis by the Transition Security Project suggests that Keir Starmer's plan to increase defense spending by £15 billion by cutting infrastructure programs will result in a net loss of approximately 10,000 jobs in the UK. While the defense investment is projected to create around 10,000 jobs by 2029-30, the analysis indicates that the reallocation of funds from other sectors will lead to nearly double that number of job losses.

Kiran Stacey Policy editorThe Guardian - World NewsFiled 2026-07-02 · 18:46 GMTLean · Center-LeftRead · 4 min
Infrastructure cuts to pay for defence will cost UK 10,000 jobs, analysis shows
The Guardian - World NewsFIG 01
Reading time
4min
Word count
943words
Sources cited
4cited
Entities identified
12entities
Quality score
100%
§ 01

Briefing Summary

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NEWSAR · AI

An analysis by the Transition Security Project suggests that Keir Starmer's plan to increase defense spending by £15 billion by cutting infrastructure programs will result in a net loss of approximately 10,000 jobs in the UK. While the defense investment is projected to create around 10,000 jobs by 2029-30, the analysis indicates that the reallocation of funds from other sectors will lead to nearly double that number of job losses. This contradicts claims by Starmer and Chancellor Rachel Reeves that the reallocation will boost British jobs. The funding for the defense plan includes £6.8 billion from unidentified cuts to departmental investment and another £4.7 billion that is unaccounted for. The government maintains that defense spending is an engine for growth, supporting numerous jobs and businesses.

Confidence 0.90Sources 4Claims 5Entities 12
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Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Economic Impact
Political Strategy
Tone
Mixed Tone
AI-assessed
CalmNeutralAlarmist
Factuality
0.60 / 1.00
Mixed
LowHigh
Sources cited
4
Well sourced
FewMany
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Key claims

5 extracted
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The prime minister announced an extra £15bn into defence investment.

factualPrime Minister
Confidence
1.00
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Far more jobs are created when investing in public needs like health, education and addressing the climate crisis.

quoteKhem Rogaly
Confidence
0.90
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The analysis shows that while extra defence investment will generate about 10,000 jobs by 2029-30, taking money from other sectors will cost nearly double that.

statisticTransition Security Project
Confidence
0.90
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Infrastructure cuts to pay for defence will cost UK 10,000 jobs, according to an analysis.

statisticTransition Security Project
Confidence
0.90
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Defence is an engine for growth – supporting 272,000 jobs and over 25,000 MoD apprenticeships.

statisticGovernment spokesperson
Confidence
0.80
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Full report

4 min read · 943 words
Keir Starmer’s decision to cut billions of pounds of infrastructure spending to pay for more Defence equipment will end up costing the UK 10,000 jobs, according to an analysis of the government’s own figures.The prime minister announced this week he was putting an extra £15bn into Defence investment to revamp the country’s armed forces and boost British manufacturing.The long-awaited Defence investment plan (Dip) was designed to cement Starmer’s legacy in foreign policy and security as he prepares to depart Downing Street. But it also raised questions about where the funding would come from, given £6.8bn is being raised by unidentified cuts to departmental investment programmes and another £4.7bn is entirely unaccounted for.The analysis, by researchers at the Transition Security Project, shows that while the extra Defence investment will generate about 10,000 jobs by 2029-30, taking the money away from other sectors will cost nearly double that.The findings cast doubt on claims by Starmer and his chancellor, Rachel Reeves, that they are boosting British jobs by reallocating large chunks of government spending to the Defence" class="entity-link entity-organization" data-entity-id="5849" data-entity-type="organization">Ministry of Defence.Khem Rogaly, the co-author of the report, said: “The idea that military spending can provide a Defence dividend is misleading: job losses will result from this latest funding settlement while the opportunity cost of military spending is sharp.“Far more jobs are created when investing in public needs like health, education and addressing the climate crisis. This latest data suggests that the turn towards Autonomous weapons and AI could also mean that military spending creates even fewer jobs per pound than before.”Andrea Egan, the general secretary of Unison, the country’s largest trade union, said: “This timely analysis highlights how making cuts to government departments to bankroll more military spending will result in job losses. This costly and wasteful plan means extra cash for war and overseas interventions, but less for schools and hospitals.”A government spokesperson said: “Defence is an engine for growth – supporting 272,000 jobs and over 25,000 MoD apprenticeships. The plan will back British workers, businesses and innovation, generate economic growth, create nearly 60,000 new jobs and increase Defence exports.“But we are in a new era of threat, which demands a new era of Defence, and crucially our Defence investment plan will energise the transformation of our armed forces to rebuild war-fighting readiness and target our resources, ensuring we are ready to face future threats.”Starmer unveiled the Dip on Tuesday after nearly a year of internal arguments over how much extra money the military needed and where it would come from. The disagreements ended up with the resignation of the Defence secretary, John Healey, just as the plan was due to be announced.Military bosses originally asked for an additional £28bn over four years, but Starmer and Reeves eventually agreed to put in an extra £15bn, much of which will be spent on maintaining and upgrading the UK’s nuclear weapons.The announcement prompted another row after it emerged £6.8bn was being taken from unidentified parts of other departments’ capital spending, while another £4.7bn was due to be allocated at the next budget.The funding gap will have to be solved by Starmer’s successor as prime minister, most likely to be Andy Burnham. The new MP for Makerfield ⁠said on ​Thursday ‌he ‌was committed to ensuring ⁠Defence spending ​commitments were ​properly ​financed if he ​became ‌prime ​minister.Andy Burnham told Andrew Marr on LBC radio he would take his responsibility to fully fund the Defence spending plan seriously. Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/PA“I will take my responsibility to fully fund the Defence spending plan seriously,” he told Andrew Marr on LBC radio, while also confirming he had not been made aware of the shortfall before Starmer’s announcement.The government has said the biggest cuts will come from the energy and transport departments, both of which have high levels of capital spending. Two road improvement projects have already been stopped, while energy officials are looking at reductions to schemes such as home insulation and carbon capture and storage.Part of the reason for boosting the Defence budget, even at the expense of other departments, according to Reeves and Starmer, was to create new British jobs. The prime minister said on Tuesday: “Every pound in this plan will work twice, delivering economic growth and opportunity for the British people, and supporting more than half a million jobs by the end of the decade, as well as reinforcing our national security.”However, the research by the Transition Security Project, which was spun out of Common Wealth, a thinktank with close links to Burnham, shows that putting money into Defence creates far fewer jobs than other sectors.According to the government’s own calculations, increasing the Defence budget by £25.2bn over a six-year period will create an additional 60,000 jobs. By that calculation, every extra million pounds worth of government investment will create 2.4 direct and indirect UK jobsOther sectors generate far more jobs per pound spent. Figures from the Office for National Statistics show every million pounds spent on transport generates 11.5 jobs, while every million pounds spent on energy and net zero creates 10 jobs.This disparity means that taking away £2bn from other departments in 2029-30, as the government plans, will cost a total of nearly 20,000 jobs – double those generated in the Defence sector.Researchers believe the different Job creation numbers may reflect the fact that Defence supply chains are highly international, suggesting the government is spending billions of pounds creating jobs in other countries.The government is spending more than £2bn, for example, on new fighter jets to carry nuclear bombs which are mainly made in the US. They also say the figures show the increasingly automated nature of high-end Defence manufacturing.The Defence" class="entity-link entity-organization" data-entity-id="5849" data-entity-type="organization">Ministry of Defence has been contacted for comment.
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Entities

12 identified
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Keywords & salience

10 terms
defence spending
1.00
infrastructure cuts
0.90
job losses
0.80
economic impact
0.70
military investment
0.60
public spending
0.50
autonomous weapons
0.40
ai
0.40
keir starmer
0.40
british manufacturing
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