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UK defense spending plans may fall short by 21 billion pounds

Europe Materials 1 February 2018 12:30 (UTC +04:00)

The budget set by Britain’s defense ministry to support new equipment needed in the next decade could fall short by 20.8 billion pounds ($29.5 billion), Britain’s independent government spending watchdog has said, Reuters reports.

A National Audit Office report published on Wednesday found there was a shortfall of at least 4.9 billion pounds ($7 billion), potentially rising by another 15.9 billion pounds, if all the risks identified by the Ministry of Defence arise and it is unable to make the savings assumed under the plan.

The report, which could affect government spending decisions and private contractors such as Serco and Babcock, said some of the costing expectations had been over-optimistic and that foreign exchange rates used had not been accurate.

Earlier this month the head of Britain’s armed forces expressed concerns that defense spending is being too tightly squeezed because of wider public spending cuts.

Government spending plans issued in late 2015 foresaw defense spending expected to rise slightly above inflation over a five-year period.

The National Audit Office review found that the department had understated forecast costs related to the purchase of five Type 31e frigates not included in the plan, while the cost of nuclear-related projects continues to grow.

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