MoneyAM MoneyAM
 Home   Log In   Register   Our Services   My Account   Contact   Help 
 Stockwatch   Level 2   Portfolio   Charts   Research   Share Price   Awards   Indices   Market Scan   Company Zone   Traders' Room 
 Funds   Trades   Terminal   Alerts   Heatmaps   News   Stock Screener   Forward Diary   Forex Prices   Director Deals   Investors' Room 
 CFDs   Shares   SIPPs   ISAs   Forex   ETFs   Videos   Comparison Tables   Spread Betting   Broker Notes   Shares Magazine 
You are NOT currently logged in

 
Filter Criteria  
Epic: Keywords: 
From: Time:  (hh:mm) RNS:  MonAM: 
To: Time:  (hh:mm)
Please Note - Streaming News is only available to subscribers to the Active Level and above
 


UK government announces £86 billion for science, tech and defence

ALN

The UK government on Sunday announced £86 billion of investment in science and technology and defence by 2030, days before it unveils its spending plan for the coming years. 

Labour Chancellor Rachel Reeves has announced drastic cuts to public budgets in recent months amid tight fiscal conditions and has also authorised more borrowing for investment, unlocking a total of £113 billion by the end of the decade. 

Within this framework, £86 billion will be invested ‘to turbo-charge our fastest growing sectors, from tech and life sciences, to advanced manufacturing and defence,’ the government said in a statement. 

Reeves is also set to announce a funding boost of up to £30 billion for the under-pressure National Health Service on Wednesday, when she presents the government’s broader review of UK public spending over the coming years, according to The Times newspaper. 

The £86 billion investment will target ‘people’s priorities: health, security and the economy,’ the government said. 

The investment plan will enable the development of ‘innovation clusters’ across the UK and give local government leaders powers to decide where their funding goes, it added. 

Reeves hopes the spending will boost sluggish growth, which is also likely to suffer from the trade war launched by US President Donald Trump. 

The government announced earlier this week that the review would include plans to double investment in public transport in England’s urban regions by 2030, to over £15 billion. 

The defence ministry also seems certain to receive a budget boost in Wednesday’s review, but other departments will have to tighten their belts beyond the cuts already announced in March.

Areas expected to be targeted include support for disabled people and government operating costs. 

Thousands gathered in central London on Saturday to protest against those anticipated measures, with many holding placards reading ‘tax the rich, stop the cuts  welfare not warfare’.

source: AFP

Copyright 2025 Alliance News Ltd. All Rights Reserved.